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Lachlan Galvin could sign a $20m deal


Galvin is managed by Isaac Moses. He’ll drive the hardest of hard bargains. Mitch Moses is also managed by Isaac, who is his uncle. Moses has signed for life at Parramatta and needs a halves partner now that Brown is leaving, which also means his cash is available in their cap.

The Eels are in a dire situation and Galvin, a Parramatta junior, would be a natural fit to play alongside Moses.

Galvin helped the Tigers to an impressive victory over the Dolphins on Saturday.

Galvin helped the Tigers to an impressive victory over the Dolphins on Saturday.Credit: Getty Images

Over at Manly, Daly Cherry-Evans is, at 36, nearing the end of his career. His groundbreaking ten-year contract is over at the completion of this season.

With Galvin available in 2027, the Sea Eagles might fancy their chances of signing another ten-year-half. Manly coach Anthony Seibold is another managed by Isaac Moses.

Then there’s another desperate club, St George Illawarra – whose coach, Shane Flanagan, is yet another Moses client. Judging by the way Flanagan has been talking in public recently, he too might be needing a long-term halfback solution.

Currently, his son Kyle is the Dragons’ five-eighth, and Lachie Ilias the halfback. But Flanagan raised eyebrows throughout the game when he publicly threw Ilias under the bus following the Dragons’ 25-24 capitulation to the Rabbitohs in round two.

Asked about his No.7’s display, a grumpy Flanagan told reporters, “You can make your own assessment.”

The Dragons recruited Ilias in the off-season after Flanagan’s relationship with the Dragons’ last halfback, Ben Hunt, fell to pieces. In Ilias, he and the club knew they were taking on a player whose confidence needed rebuilding after a turbulent time at his previous club.

Having been tipped by former Souths coach Jason Demetriou to become “the best halfback the club has had in a long time”, Ilias was dropped to reserve grade early last season and snapped his leg in two playing NSW Cup.

Flanagan picked up the phone to Ilias the following day to personally apologise, but the damage was done. Ilias’s agent, Braith Anasta, rightly summed it up when he said Flanagan had now put a target on Ilias’s back.

No one likes a public bake, especially one laced with anger, and a promising young half might now be wary of Flanagan’s short fuse.

Lachlan Ilias had an ordinary afternoon against the Rabbitohs, but did it warrant the treatment from his coach?

Lachlan Ilias had an ordinary afternoon against the Rabbitohs, but did it warrant the treatment from his coach?Credit: NRL Photos

Galvin would be a good fit for the Roosters alongside Sam Walker, provided Walker recovers from his second knee reconstruction. However, the Roosters dislike Isaac Moses and won’t deal with him.

Then there’s Galvin’s current club, the Wests Tigers. With Jarome Luai on the books on a five-year, $6m deal, they can’t afford to lose his potential long-term halves partner.

Especially with Luai having an exit clause after next year, which means he’s effectively on a two-year deal.

CEO Shane Richardson might have to go all Godfather and make Galvin “an offer he can’t refuse” if the club wants him off the market before other clubs can talk to him.

The new television deal ARL Chairman Peter V’Landys wants done in the next few months looms as Richardson’s biggest problem.

Rather than lock in long-term deals for their clients, every manager in the game will sit back and wait to see what the rights package looks like.

The current deal, which was worth about $2 billion over five years, runs to the end of the 2027 season.

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The NRL has begun its public campaign to soften up potential suitors. There talk of a $3 billion target over five years, with the 50 per cent increase to be driven by the possibility global players such as Netflix, Paramount+, Disney and Amazon Prime might be in the mix to challenge Fox Sports’ hold on pay TV rights.

By then, Fox Sports will be owned by global sports brand Dazn, which takes over from Foxtel (News Corporation) as new owner on July 1.

Dazn simply has to throw money at, and keep, the NRL rights – otherwise it will be a bit-part player on the Australian eastern seaboard.

In the free-to-air space, Nine, the publisher of this masthead, and Seven are the two most likely candidates, and there’s the possibility of splitting finals matches and State of Origin from the home and away season to maximise revenue.

Whatever happens, there’ll be more money – and more money means a higher salary cap.

In 2026, the cap will be $11.55 million. If rights go up 40 to 50 per cent, the players will demand the cap goes by the same amount.

So if the cap sits at $15 million or more for 2027, when Galvin is available, and even more again after 2032 in the next rights cycle, what is Galvin worth to a desperate club over ten years?

Michael Chammas and Andrew “Joey” Johns dissect the upcoming NRL round, plus the latest footy news, results and analysis. Sign up for the Sin Bin newsletter.


Galvin is managed by Isaac Moses. He’ll drive the hardest of hard bargains. Mitch Moses is also managed by Isaac, who is his uncle. Moses has signed for life at Parramatta and needs a halves partner now that Brown is leaving, which also means his cash is available in their cap.

The Eels are in a dire situation and Galvin, a Parramatta junior, would be a natural fit to play alongside Moses.

Galvin helped the Tigers to an impressive victory over the Dolphins on Saturday.

Galvin helped the Tigers to an impressive victory over the Dolphins on Saturday.Credit: Getty Images

Over at Manly, Daly Cherry-Evans is, at 36, nearing the end of his career. His groundbreaking ten-year contract is over at the completion of this season.

With Galvin available in 2027, the Sea Eagles might fancy their chances of signing another ten-year-half. Manly coach Anthony Seibold is another managed by Isaac Moses.

Then there’s another desperate club, St George Illawarra – whose coach, Shane Flanagan, is yet another Moses client. Judging by the way Flanagan has been talking in public recently, he too might be needing a long-term halfback solution.

Currently, his son Kyle is the Dragons’ five-eighth, and Lachie Ilias the halfback. But Flanagan raised eyebrows throughout the game when he publicly threw Ilias under the bus following the Dragons’ 25-24 capitulation to the Rabbitohs in round two.

Asked about his No.7’s display, a grumpy Flanagan told reporters, “You can make your own assessment.”

The Dragons recruited Ilias in the off-season after Flanagan’s relationship with the Dragons’ last halfback, Ben Hunt, fell to pieces. In Ilias, he and the club knew they were taking on a player whose confidence needed rebuilding after a turbulent time at his previous club.

Having been tipped by former Souths coach Jason Demetriou to become “the best halfback the club has had in a long time”, Ilias was dropped to reserve grade early last season and snapped his leg in two playing NSW Cup.

Flanagan picked up the phone to Ilias the following day to personally apologise, but the damage was done. Ilias’s agent, Braith Anasta, rightly summed it up when he said Flanagan had now put a target on Ilias’s back.

No one likes a public bake, especially one laced with anger, and a promising young half might now be wary of Flanagan’s short fuse.

Lachlan Ilias had an ordinary afternoon against the Rabbitohs, but did it warrant the treatment from his coach?

Lachlan Ilias had an ordinary afternoon against the Rabbitohs, but did it warrant the treatment from his coach?Credit: NRL Photos

Galvin would be a good fit for the Roosters alongside Sam Walker, provided Walker recovers from his second knee reconstruction. However, the Roosters dislike Isaac Moses and won’t deal with him.

Then there’s Galvin’s current club, the Wests Tigers. With Jarome Luai on the books on a five-year, $6m deal, they can’t afford to lose his potential long-term halves partner.

Especially with Luai having an exit clause after next year, which means he’s effectively on a two-year deal.

CEO Shane Richardson might have to go all Godfather and make Galvin “an offer he can’t refuse” if the club wants him off the market before other clubs can talk to him.

The new television deal ARL Chairman Peter V’Landys wants done in the next few months looms as Richardson’s biggest problem.

Rather than lock in long-term deals for their clients, every manager in the game will sit back and wait to see what the rights package looks like.

The current deal, which was worth about $2 billion over five years, runs to the end of the 2027 season.

Loading

The NRL has begun its public campaign to soften up potential suitors. There talk of a $3 billion target over five years, with the 50 per cent increase to be driven by the possibility global players such as Netflix, Paramount+, Disney and Amazon Prime might be in the mix to challenge Fox Sports’ hold on pay TV rights.

By then, Fox Sports will be owned by global sports brand Dazn, which takes over from Foxtel (News Corporation) as new owner on July 1.

Dazn simply has to throw money at, and keep, the NRL rights – otherwise it will be a bit-part player on the Australian eastern seaboard.

In the free-to-air space, Nine, the publisher of this masthead, and Seven are the two most likely candidates, and there’s the possibility of splitting finals matches and State of Origin from the home and away season to maximise revenue.

Whatever happens, there’ll be more money – and more money means a higher salary cap.

In 2026, the cap will be $11.55 million. If rights go up 40 to 50 per cent, the players will demand the cap goes by the same amount.

So if the cap sits at $15 million or more for 2027, when Galvin is available, and even more again after 2032 in the next rights cycle, what is Galvin worth to a desperate club over ten years?

Michael Chammas and Andrew “Joey” Johns dissect the upcoming NRL round, plus the latest footy news, results and analysis. Sign up for the Sin Bin newsletter.

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