Quote ="Beverley red"Their best players when their coach & club might need them for their league fixtures, The local clubs are struggling to raise teams as it is. The player pool is just not big enough with all the changes to working patterns that now confront todays young players. Back in the day we had it a lot simpler with employers a lot more sympathetic to players, now some risk their livelihood by playing or are called in to work with little or no warning & face sanctions for not turning in to work. I love this game of ours & our club but I fear that as in the 1960's the pro game is taking to much out of the amateur game with very little being put back. That is main reason BARLA came into existence & the clubs & RFL have done their best to undermine them. I still think the pro clubs would be better served by supporting the local youth at their amateur club by providing top quality youth coaches & training for the coaches & officials of those clubs & schools while scouting out & monitoring the best players coming through.'"
I completely agree on your point on clubs not putting enough back into the communities. The first block of your reply I don't agree with, it's way over the top for what would be a handful of local lads getting the chance to pull on an FC/KR shirt a few weeks a year.
I'm based in Leeds, playing for an amateur club and I'm on the committee, so I have some insight into how the grassroots game works here at least. The Rhinos have been excellent for us, instrumental in helping us attract new juniors, holding coaching masterclasses & touchline manager courses, sending players & coaches down when we ask etc.
Basically, they're really engaged in driving participation levels up in the area, and in recent years we've gone from two junior sides to nine. That's nearly 100 more kids playing RL that wouldn't have been playing 3/4 years ago. We're seeing this at clubs all over the city too, and they now have 34 affiliated community clubs (Hull as a city I think have around 12?).
From what I understand, neither Hull or Rovers do enough in the city to really drive participation, and that's why I disagree with the merger of the academies. I understood that it was a response to the shallowing of the player pool in Hull, but it was a reactive action, rather than both clubs being proactive to actually address and fix the problem.