Serious question.
Do any clubs or players pay taxes on wages in the NPL? If not, then why not and how is that legal?
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Serious question.
Do any clubs or players pay taxes on wages in the NPL? If not, then why not and how is that legal?
Edgy V Valo 3-1 half time
Cash money!
Most clubs around these parts aren't registered for GST.
There's 'hobby money' which doesn't attract tax. That what what my reputable
accountant (oxymoron?) told me when I was gigging regularly....before kids :sigh:
Same goes for refs too I think.
Would depend on how the clubs are actually transferring them the money I suppose
If the cash was coming in brown paper bags for argument's sake then there would be the onus on the players to declare their income to the ATO
That would be as optional as a trade getting paid cash for services rendered. It is there choice which accounts to put on the books so to speak
If the clubs were paying players by bank transfer from club account to players personal account then taxation would most likely be done as it is a bit more open to notice by the authorities
Maybe need a player or club to enlighten us as to how the players get coin here
http://www.theherald.com.au/story/40...-shift/?cs=305
Interesting read...the point of raising revenue makes me laugh a little.
Hope Northern tell them to **** Off
This is an FFA mandated thing across the country.
Yet we have these clubs putting their own self interest above the good of the game in the future.
If they want to have Open sides for loyal club players not good enough to play NPL first grade go field sides in the Zone Leagues like Olympic and Magic do.
Not ****ing rocket science
Yet they want to keep run of the mill footballers in the NPL instead of letting them go to New FM or Zone where they belong
If you ain't playing first grade or not in the clubs plans by 20 reality is your pushing shit up the hill to get there anyway.
Move on and give someone younger their chance
How is it FFA mandated across the country when it even says in the article that the South Australian NPL still has reserve grade. Clubs were told 3 years ago at the commencement of the npl by Eland and Co that the nnsw competition had to go to 1st 20s and 18s or we couldn't compete in the npl. Yet here we are , 3 years down the track and South Australia are still playing with a reserve grade comp and guess what ? They are still in the NPL. Reserve grade would be great to be back in the competition as the gulf between 1st grade and under 20s will be massive. Not every player has to be playing 1st grade by the time they are 18 and not every player is past their use by date at the age of 20 or 22 or 25. This shit about move aside and give a young kid a go cracks me up. If the young kid is good enough he should earn the spot or take it off a reserve grader. Not be entitled to it because he is only 18 years old. **** me
How many years has reserve grade been gone now?
The thing i got out of it is that clubs are losing players before they get old enough to retire and become a committee member or volunteer in some way. If you're only at a club for a couple of years you're not going to grow attached and want to give back to the club. It is a real problem.
The main reason this won't happen is the baby jets. What comp do they then play in ? Are northern really going to let 15-16 year old "elite " kids run around against reserve grade players. Wake up and smell the roses, the npl is structured purely to aid the A league clubs. Northern or ffa don't give two xxxxs about any of the local clubs or volunteers running these clubs
Run Reserve Grade on a Friday Nights. It will allow the Clubmen to be apart of the club as a player and then be available all day on Sunday to volunteer.
Also I don't think many players would mind playing on Friday Nights either for obvious reasons.
And still have 13-14-15-16-18-20-1sts to keep the FFA happy.
Have to disagree with this, nnswf fought hard to have the local NPL set up to suit Newcastle in its initial years, if FFA had their way it would have been 18, 20 and firsts from the start, your comments that nnswf football don't care about clubs is ludicrous and wrong
Wasn't aware of this from 3 years ago Forever. But if it's a massive FFA push then why have SA football listened to their member clubs and stuck with reserve . You were there with Southy 3 years for the original npl licence. Did clubs not want reserve grade or were they happy to keep 22s ?
So if the clubs were told 3 years ago it would be 20s and 18s what the **** is the problem with Northern actually now trying to implement it??
3 Years is ample ****ing warning don't you think??
As for SA. Who gives a **** if they are being obstinate and diiiicult. Doesn't mean that NNSW has to follow suit. Other Feds have fallen into line with the 20s and 18s after resistance and moved on . Why shouldn't we do same same??
As for your remarks that the gulf between 20s and first will be massive. So what?? It will then be up to the clubs to improve their Yoof development to bridge the gap
The exact thing the NPL structure is trying to deliver.
No one has said a kid should be entitled to a spot based on age being young. If they are not good enough the clubs will fill the void with senior players from outside the NPL
As for entitlement you are also claiming a 20 years plus player not good enough for first grade in NPL is entitled to stay part of the NPL elite competition and shouldn't have to go back to Zone or NewFM despite not being elite player??
How contradictory is that.
It is an elite competition after all and you wish to have a level which isn't elite as a component of it
We should do what is best for our region and the player talent we have (or don't have). These types of implementations take decades to improve on not 2-3 years.
You will be the first one with the keyboard lit up when the standard of the so called 'Elite' competition is suffering due to the lack of quality depth in our league. A compromise needs to be made to make sure that we balance development with quality football that we all so desperately want to see every week.
If it is going take decades to see improvement as you put it then no time like the present to start the change
Why put it off any longer with some band aid solutions for the short term instead of fixing the problem now??
I will disagree that it will take decades to see the change.
The change will arrive as soon as clubs see that strong yoof development on their part needs to be undertaken
Reserve grade has already been gone for a decade and where has all of this so called yoof development gotten us . The competition has gone backwards in standard since the inception of under 22s /23s . It hasn't improved at all. Everyone has opinions and imo the standard has dropped due to too many youth players being pushed into first grade football too early and too many good players having to be moved on from clubs due to age restrictions. Like tucker's said , a player doesn't become obsolete or useless because they turn 30, but you want them to xxxxs off to newfm or Zone league to give little 10 year old timmy an opportunity in 1st grade. Like I said, everyone has opinions , but please , show me evidence where the standard is improving because we have 20s or 22s instead of reserve grade
If we take the last 4-5 years as an example of what happens when you cut down the age limits for teams, with 4-5 years being enough time for players to go through the entire youth structure from U/15s up through into U22s, do we think that these generations of players have come out the back end of it as better players?? Compare this to players who came up through the prior structure up into reserve grade, which 'generation' produced better players?
Personally I believe the reserve competitions were stronger than the current u22, however i cannot comment on the younger grades. In my eyes the quality of players has more to do with coaching than it does the competition structure. Coaching accreditation needs to have easier access & obviously be financially viable. I'm also quite worried by the quality of these coaching courses, it's important that we get all coaching staff across Australia on the same board for what's important for players to learn & how to implement sessions etc but I get worried by the 'our way or the highway' style of 'brainwashing' I've been seeing as a product of these courses. Blokes like Van Egmond are the textbook example of the style of coaches the current licences breeds & we've all seen the effects on the jets and the jets youth the single minded philosophy of play has had.
Personally, I would rather see either we go back to previous structures or stay with the current. The idea of moving to u20s etc is a sound concept but in my mind Newcastle is not ready for it. We need to focus on improving coaching along with increasing extra-curricula training/development for both players & coaches in the off season. These are the fundamentals that will see quality of players improve.
All clubs were aware that this day would come, the initial player points system was brilliant for a level playing field in both quality and evenness, however, a bright sparke from FFA decided to change it, we didn't hear the big clubs complaining then, no, because it suited them, we hear them complaining now, yes, because it doesn't suit them, both parties, nnswf and NPL clubs are at fault in my opinion, the need for change is never pleasant nor does it make every one happy, but it will make our NPL more even if the original points system is returned, for clubs to submit a letter of grievance so late in the piece tells me they have not prepared their 3 year strategic business plan well which would have been governed by nnswf, in my opinion the NPL needs to revert to an 8 team Comp with a strict player points system which requires clubs to develope players, then, and only then can we see the quality and evenness appear, after 3 years we may look at expansion, nnswf have had 3 years to put a structure in place for the future but 2 weeks out from the final year we having nothing, I'm glad they don't run my buisness
I find myself agreeing with FR (again!).
Another interesting point is that 8 clubs have signed this letter to NNSWF.
Now I was of the understanding that we have 12 currently licenced NPL clubs (including the EJs) - so why didn't the other four sign the letter?
FT: Jaffas 0-3 Jets Youth.
Your precisely right about the coaching.
Watching the Jets the other night it is almost like Miller is trying to continue the GvE philosophy.
For a bloke brought up on English football i find it bizarre that he is embracing this Dutch Mango sucking crap and turning into a clone of it.
Problem with this 4-3-3 shit is that it isn't the problem. It is the halfwits trying to coach it that fail a few of the key fundamentals with it.
You look at GVE Millertime ad the way they do it
A lack of forward runs past the last man,
Fear of through balls
Fear of dribbling
A Lack of movement off the ball
Fear of playing the ball into tight areas
Fear of playing the ball forward at speed
Fear of playing the ball forward into advanced areas
All keys things that successful 4-3-3 sides do
Yet here it is all about passing it side to side and side to side until they either find a hole or cough up the ball.
Any one who can get a side to do something beyond the GvE style of 4-3-3 like Ange Gombau etc is deemed a ****ing coaching genius
Any news of games on or off today
Magic won 22s 2-0 V Azurri
Currently 1-0 in First Grade
Michael Kantarovski with a goal in the first minute.
No Kale today
No party
Haynes is on the bench
Magic with a weakened side with a lot of squaddies getting a run