North Newcastle Bluebags to commence Training on Saturday 6th January

Foundation Club the North Newcastle Bluebags will commence the 2018 season campaign with a view to fielding 2 Teams.
We welcome all existing and prospective new players.
Our first training session under new Coach Tony Delaney will be held this Saturday 6th January from 9 – 11am on the Tafe No 1 Oval at Tighes Hill and will continue every Saturday morning through to the 3rd March.For midweek training sessions,we will confirm later.
Committee and Coaching staff will be on hand to answer any questions.

Merry Christmas

On behalf of everyone here at www.northbluebags.com and on behalf of the North Newcastle RLFC Committee,we would like to wish all our Supporters,players from both ours Mens and womens teams,former players,families and friends a very Merry Christmas.
Looking forward to an exciting 2018 season.
Up the Bluebags!

Carol Campbell elected Life Member of the North Newcastle RLFC.

It is with great pleasure we announce our newly elected Life Member,Carol Campbell. It is a privilege and honour that the North Newcastle BlueBags have inducted Carol as a Life Member at last weekends AGM. Carol from a teenager has supported the BlueBags and although ill health this year has stopped her attending a lot of games, it is her North spirit, support and loyalty echoes around the ground whether at Passmore or at home. Also over the years when us Two Blues have struggled financially most seasons,.Carol has dug deep and helped our beloved club and from the bottom of our hearts we thank you.Congratulations Carol. A well deserved North Newcastle BlueBags Life Member.

Rugby League: Newcastle-based World Cup champions Caitlin Moran, Bec Young welcome introduction of Women’s NRL Premiership

LOOKING UP: Newcastle-based World Cup champions Caitlin Moran and Bec Young welcome the NRL Women's Premiership. Picture: Josh Callinan

LOOKING UP: Newcastle-based World Cup champions Caitlin Moran and Bec Young welcome the NRL Women’s Premiership. Picture: Josh Callinan

Caitlin Moran is already fielding offers from teams that don’t yet exist.

Bec Young has a seven-year-old daughter who may well follow in her parent’s footsteps.  

And kick-off in the inaugural NRL Women’s Premiership remains more than nine months away.

The buzz from claiming a World Cup title on home soil continues for these two Newcastle-based Jillaroos, also riding the high following this week’s announcement to introduce a professional female rugby league competition onto the Australian sporting landscape in 2018.

“It’s pretty much a fairytale,” Moran said.

“I still can’t believe it all [World Cup and NRL Women’s Premiership]. I’m only 21 and there’s so much opportunity now. It’s exciting to see what 2018 has in store.”

Upper Hunter-bred, Wallsend-based Moran was pivotal to the Australian women’s squad success at the international tournament, slotting in seamlessly at halfback throughout the five matches and sealing the 23-16 final victory over New Zealand in Brisbane on Saturday with a last-minute field goal.  

It makes the 2017 NSW Women’s Premiership player of the year highly sought after with 40 contracts on offer and NRL clubs, including the Newcastle Knights, currently getting together bids for the six available franchises.  

“After the announcement it’s all kind of happening,” Moran, who was in Windale on Thursday attending a junior gala, said.

“Everyone is obviously over the moon about it and I’ve already had a lot of offers from other places.

“I’d love to play for the Knights, especially being from here … but we’ll just have to wait and see.”

Wests Group/Knights CEO Phil Gardner told the Newcastle Herald this week that the NRL Women’s Premiership was “a great concept and we want to be part of it”.  

NRL chief executive Todd Greenberg said “in a perfect world, we would consider geography within all of our tender documentation” and grouped Newcastle alongside other regions like Canberra and Melbourne.  

Young, an Adamstown 34-year-old with two children, now feels reinvigorated to go around again next season and buoyed by the possibility of wearing the red and blue jersey for real. 

“It’s so good to hear the Knights are being proactive and getting the ball rolling like that,” Young said.

“It would be an honour to run out with them.

“Playing an exhibition match this year [with the Knights] was unreal, but after the World Cup and the announcement this week, to have Newcastle in that competition as well would take things to another level.

“And how amazing to be able to turn to my seven-year-old girl and say if you want to play rugby league as a sport like her dad [Mick] did, then it’s going to be there as an option.”

Talks are also underway about a potential women’s tackle competition for the greater Hunter region following the recent November Nines, which included under-18 trials for the Knights’ first Tarsha Gale Cup side. 

http://www.theherald.com.au/story/5106872/fairytale-feel-around-historic-league-goals/?cs=4783

Newcastle Knights officials will bid for a team in the inaugural women’s NRL competition next year.

Newcastle Knights officials will bid for a team in the inaugural women’s NRL competition next year.

NEW CHALLENGE: Jillaroos Caitlin Moran and Bec Young will be hoping to feature in the inaugural women's NRL competition.

NEW CHALLENGE: Jillaroos Caitlin Moran and Bec Young will be hoping to feature in the inaugural women’s NRL competition.

THE Newcastle Knights will bid for a team in the inaugural women’s NRL premiership that will be launched next season.

Up to six clubs will be granted franchises in the new elite women’s competition, which is expected to run from August until September and was described by NRL chief executive Todd Greenberg as the “first step” towards a 24-round, fully professional league to run in conjunction with the men’s.

Greenberg said the tendering process would be finalised by March and predicted there would be fierce competition for franchises.

Wests Group/Knights CEO Phil Gardner confirmed Newcastle hope to field a team that could potentially feature Jillaroos Caitlin Moran, Bec Young and Isabelle Kelly.

“We’ll put a tender in for a franchise and see where that ends up,” Gardner told the Newcastle Herald.

“Obviously not all clubs can have one, but we think it’s a great concept and we want to be part of it. Hopefully, over time, every NRL club will have a women’s side.”

Under the proposal, 40 elite players would be offered central contracts on top of their match fees, and the NRL would try to ensure the talent was evenly shared.

Given that North Newcastle made the grand final of this year’s NSW women’s rugby league grand final, losing 26-16 to Redfern All Blacks, Gardner was hopeful of building a squad around home-grown players.

“Absolutely they will be considered, if they are at that standard,” Gardner said.

He was unsure how much it would cost to fund a women’s team.

“The same support mechanisms you need for a men’s side, you will need for the women as well,” he said.

“Training facilities, conditioners, coaches, doctors and all those things. So it won’t be a cheap exercise.

“And at this stage, nobody has seen the financial proposal from the NRL. Obviously there’s a fair bit of detail to be worked out.”

Moran and Kelly played in Australia’s 23-16 World Cup final triumph against New Zealand, while veteran Young was also in the Jillaroos squad.

Kelly scored two tries in the tournament decider and Moran, voted NSWRL player of the year, kicked a field goal at the death.

Rugby league is Australia’s last mainstream sport to announce an elite women’s competition, following the likes of the AFL Women, W-League (soccer), Women’s Big Bash League (cricket) Super Netball and Women’s National Basketball League.

Greenberg described Wednesday’s announcement as “a momentous day for the game” but admitted launching the new competition would be a challenge.

“We’ve got to be very careful and prudent about how we put these systems in place because rugby league is a tough sport and we want to make sure we have all the care around our players and the physical training that’s needed, the technique that’s needed. We’re starting with one step at a time.”

Matches will be played alongside NRL play-off games, and the final will be played as a curtain-raiser to the men’s grand final at ANZ Stadium on September 30.

The annual Queensland v NSW match, formerly known as the Women’s Interstate Challenge, will be rebranded as State of Origin and will be played on the stand-alone representative weekend ahead of Origin II in July.

There will also be a national combine designed to attract and poach the best talent from other sports including Australian Rules, soccer, cricket, netball and rugby union.

“I dreamt about this,” Jillaroos co-captain Ruan Sims said at Wednesday’s announcement.

“It’s something that we’ve been discussing as more of a tangible opportunity in the last 12 months.

“I honestly thought it would be 2020 by the time we got there.

“These kinds of opportunities, it excites me so much.

“I just want to start training, I want to start playing.”

http://www.theherald.com.au/story/5105737/knights-bid-for-franchise-in-womens-nrl/?cs=4783

North Newcastle Rugby League Football Club est 1910
Website Hosted and Developed by Your IT Master - Web Design Newcastle