FORUMS FORUMS






RLFANS.COM
Celebrating
25 years service to
the Rugby League
Community!

   WWW.RLFANS.COM • View topic - Railway strikes
::Off-topic discussion.
RankPostsTeam
International Star5123
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 23 201410 years87th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
20th May 24 00:2519th May 24 15:43LINK
Milestone Posts
5000
10000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: Railway strikes : Sat Jun 25, 2022 9:32 am  
Pumpetypump wrote:
After watching all the media clips I was a paid up member of the fan club and ready to get the Lynch t-shirt. But then I saw him asked if he regretted urging his membership to vote to leave the EU, and he said he did not.

Now personally left wing brexiters make my skin crawl. We already know right-wing littler England types have a warped world view but for the left to be quitlings is utterly disgusting. It is perfectly legitimate for socialists to be ideologically opposed to the EU as constructed. However, they have a duty to ask themselves a fundamental question, is the working man and woman better off in the EU or out of it. I'd argue that of he thinks the working classes are better off out of the EU he's either a liar or he's unhinged.

So the fact that Lynch was a committed brexiter back then, and he is unapologetic for it to this day, more than cancels out the goodwill I had based on his sparring. A little Friday rant as I'm way too hot.


I guess it’s called being honest a rare commodity in de Pfeffel world.
Cokey 
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Club Owner21224
JoinedServiceReputation
Aug 19 201113 years58th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
20th May 24 08:4819th May 24 20:48LINK
Milestone Posts
20000
25000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Across The Universe....... Jai guru deva om - Nothings gonna change my world.
Signature
Image

Re: Railway strikes : Sat Jun 25, 2022 8:00 pm  
Superblue wrote:
Same old tories. Always wasting billions then blaming somebody else and taking from the poor and pandemic key workers :D

£4Bn wasted on PPE
£11Bn wasted servicing debt because Sunak didn't act
£40Bn wasted on track & trace
£10Bn handed to criminals
£6Bn wasted on overheating armoured cars
£100M wasted on tagging criminals

And at the same time removing the cap on fat cats pay :D

Yep levelling up, were all in it together :lol:

Never, ever trust the tory.


I believe it's costing around £7m a day to look after the Dinghy Divers. :shock:
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Board Member18060No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 27 200222 years297th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
11th Jun 23 20:4411th Jun 23 20:53LINK
Milestone Posts
15000
20000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
On the road
Signature
Your job is to say to yourself on a job interview does the hiring manager likes me or not. If you aren't a particular manager's cup of tea, you haven't failed -- you've dodged a bullet.

Re: Railway strikes : Mon Jun 27, 2022 11:36 am  
The difference with the private sector is wage inflation impacts costs - these costs have to be passed - this is resulting in much higher costs across all industries. We are not getting 2/3% increases we are getting 10%+ this is just for firms to standstill.

If you add the costs of raw material and transportation to wage inflation you have a toxic mix that will fuel further inflation or drive job losses as firms who can't pass on these increases go under.

The public sector is different HMRC/DVLC/NHS/DWP wage increases don't drive anything significantly other than taxation to pay for it i.e. it isn't passed on
RankPostsTeam
International Star5123
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 23 201410 years87th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
20th May 24 00:2519th May 24 15:43LINK
Milestone Posts
5000
10000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: Railway strikes : Mon Jun 27, 2022 11:54 am  
Cokey wrote:
I believe it's costing around £7m a day to look after the Dinghy Divers. :shock:


The new Rwandan plan which other countries have stopped due to costs does not bode well. I would think if it was so economical compared to the existing arrangements they would be shouting it from the rooftops but no not a mention, I wonder why. We have already paid Rwanda 120 million before we even start and £500,000 on a plane just to make de Pfeffel and the Home Secretary appeal to certain voters prior to two by-elections.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Player Coach3092No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 26 200618 years69th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
10th Mar 23 22:1119th Feb 23 21:41LINK
Milestone Posts
2500
5000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
"Brian McDermott, with a wry smile, nods when asked if he remembers a specific incident which made him realise he was a prick. 'I do', he murmurs."

Re: Railway strikes : Mon Jun 27, 2022 12:30 pm  
Unfortunately for the Tories, who are encouraging this strike for all they're worth because they perceive huge electoral advantage from it, the world has moved on a long, long way since the 1970s.

Most people simply don't find trade unions to be terrifying bogeymen any more, they don't see working people fighting for decent wages and working conditions and conclude they are the enemy. Because they are fights so many would love to have, if only they had the power.

40 years of Thatcherite and post-Thatcherite policies have created a country with vast wealth inequality and insurmountable social mobility issues. A country in which the Conservative-supporting elites bribe their way to have the ear of government officials, are in happy receipt of lucrative government contracts (where they deliver worse results for more cost than when things were done in-house) and who pay low, little or no taxes. And where, perhaps most important of all, the free market has been so corrupted that companies like Amazon, the big supermarkets and giant conglomerates and oligopolies are able to drive small businesses out of existence and drive wages down across the board with their anti-competitive behaviour.

The country's economic model has clearly fundamentally failed. The generation for whom the mention of "unions" drove them to voting for Thatcher is sadly largely dead now and younger people simply don't have the same perspectives. The upcoming fight will inevitably be similar to France: between a band of hard core extremists of the far right (who have taken over the Tory party), the young who are jaw droppingly left wing and the centre for whom the fight to preserve and restore free market values will generate a very large, quite unsatisfactory big tent. The Tory party's grievence-based politics, their culture wars and their attempts to find wedge issues will only take them so far, but they will milk it for all they're worth in the hope of getting enough voters to vote for them or not vote for the opposition to enable their minority rule to continue. Labour's task is to try and knit together a coalition of the centrists, increasingly appalled by the extremism of the Tory party, and the left - and that will be difficult indeed.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Board Member18060No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 27 200222 years297th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
11th Jun 23 20:4411th Jun 23 20:53LINK
Milestone Posts
15000
20000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
On the road
Signature
Your job is to say to yourself on a job interview does the hiring manager likes me or not. If you aren't a particular manager's cup of tea, you haven't failed -- you've dodged a bullet.

Re: Railway strikes : Thu Jun 30, 2022 11:44 am  
The Ghost of '99 wrote:
Unfortunately for the Tories, who are encouraging this strike for all they're worth because they perceive huge electoral advantage from it, the world has moved on a long, long way since the 1970s.

Most people simply don't find trade unions to be terrifying bogeymen any more, they don't see working people fighting for decent wages and working conditions and conclude they are the enemy. Because they are fights so many would love to have, if only they had the power.

40 years of Thatcherite and post-Thatcherite policies have created a country with vast wealth inequality and insurmountable social mobility issues. A country in which the Conservative-supporting elites bribe their way to have the ear of government officials, are in happy receipt of lucrative government contracts (where they deliver worse results for more cost than when things were done in-house) and who pay low, little or no taxes. And where, perhaps most important of all, the free market has been so corrupted that companies like Amazon, the big supermarkets and giant conglomerates and oligopolies are able to drive small businesses out of existence and drive wages down across the board with their anti-competitive behaviour.

The country's economic model has clearly fundamentally failed. The generation for whom the mention of "unions" drove them to voting for Thatcher is sadly largely dead now and younger people simply don't have the same perspectives. The upcoming fight will inevitably be similar to France: between a band of hard core extremists of the far right (who have taken over the Tory party), the young who are jaw droppingly left wing and the centre for whom the fight to preserve and restore free market values will generate a very large, quite unsatisfactory big tent. The Tory party's grievence-based politics, their culture wars and their attempts to find wedge issues will only take them so far, but they will milk it for all they're worth in the hope of getting enough voters to vote for them or not vote for the opposition to enable their minority rule to continue. Labour's task is to try and knit together a coalition of the centrists, increasingly appalled by the extremism of the Tory party, and the left - and that will be difficult indeed.


A very interesting post - some of which I agree with.

It is no surprise that big business wanted to stay in Europe - this had nothing with supply chain it was all about cheap labour. Having access to our labour market for all Europeans create plenty of labour and a simple supply/demand model tells you what happens when supply exceeds demand and visa versa. No shock wages are rising. A positive from Brexit.

I agree about the Tories all policies have gone out of the window as all energies seem to be focussing on protecting "Big Dog". How they think they can go into the next GE with him as leader and defend the 19 Manifesto defies any kind of logic. The party needs a reset and quick if it to avoid decimation.

I agree about trade unions - they are not the militant force they were - their membership is so far down on what it was challenging for them to have the same impact they once did. The problem I have with unions is they cannot deal with local disputes effectively as they are scared of setting precedents for future disputes. I would have more respect if the union leaders had to survive on strike pay when they call out their members.

I don't agree about the Amazon's/supermarkets etc - they provide good value - the smaller shop has to change their model to compete - offer something the customer wants to buy - it does have to be cheap. Amazon/Ebay have shown the way regarding on line and there are millions of small retailers now operating in this way. They just can't afford to pay the rent/business element of a retail operation.

The general public know that if the high wage settlements cannot be passed on there will be fewer jobs - a pragmatic approach is what is needed - will unions provide that? The part of the model that is wrong is the underpinning by property - this is what is causing the real cost issue. Nurses don't use food banks because their wages are low its because their rent/council tax is too high. We need cheap housing that can be accessed easily - and a lot of it. We also need to make it easier for young people to get on the property ladder - huge deposits are unachievable - if the potential purchaser can demonstrate a history of paying rent at an appropriate level surely a small deposit should be sufficient.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Player Coach3092No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 26 200618 years69th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
10th Mar 23 22:1119th Feb 23 21:41LINK
Milestone Posts
2500
5000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
"Brian McDermott, with a wry smile, nods when asked if he remembers a specific incident which made him realise he was a prick. 'I do', he murmurs."

Re: Railway strikes : Thu Jun 30, 2022 8:23 pm  
Sal Paradise wrote:
I don't agree about the Amazon's/supermarkets etc - they provide good value - the smaller shop has to change their model to compete - offer something the customer wants to buy - it does have to be cheap. Amazon/Ebay have shown the way regarding on line and there are millions of small retailers now operating in this way. They just can't afford to pay the rent/business element of a retail operation.

Amazon and the supermarkets are operating continually in anti-competitive ways. They need to be broken up to restore our free market.

A client of mine used to supply Tesco with tomatoes. Tesco would come to them and set the price, no negotiation and they set terms of something like 180 days. This isn't a free market of supply and demand, it's big businesses hammering small suppliers because they have all the power in the world.

Amazon is even more egregious. They have been allowed to expand into the marketplace. You would no doubt laud small entrepreneurs bringing products they have conceived to sell on Amazon Marketplace. However... if a product does well, suddenly an Amazon equivalent will appear. And the product of the entrepreneur will mysteriously fall down the rankings so that nobody goes to it any more. Amazon shouldn't be both the biggest retailer in the world and the biggest marketplace for goods in the world. It's a blatant anti-trust violation.

https://ec.europa.eu/commission/pressco ... ip_20_2077

Let's not even get started on how Amazon sells books. But like all huge companies its main aim is to drive competitors out of business after which it can jack up its prices. Likewise we know about the working conditions at Amazon warehouses.

If there's one ethical thing you can do today, one stand you can make it's to stop buying at Amazon, stop using Tesco and Asda and walk down the street to your local shops and buy there, or use second tier internet sellers. And encourage everyone you know to do the same. Because the dream of these big, unregulated monsters is to have no competition and the ability to jack up prices and profits in the long run, all at our expense.
Sal Paradise wrote:
I don't agree about the Amazon's/supermarkets etc - they provide good value - the smaller shop has to change their model to compete - offer something the customer wants to buy - it does have to be cheap. Amazon/Ebay have shown the way regarding on line and there are millions of small retailers now operating in this way. They just can't afford to pay the rent/business element of a retail operation.

Amazon and the supermarkets are operating continually in anti-competitive ways. They need to be broken up to restore our free market.

A client of mine used to supply Tesco with tomatoes. Tesco would come to them and set the price, no negotiation and they set terms of something like 180 days. This isn't a free market of supply and demand, it's big businesses hammering small suppliers because they have all the power in the world.

Amazon is even more egregious. They have been allowed to expand into the marketplace. You would no doubt laud small entrepreneurs bringing products they have conceived to sell on Amazon Marketplace. However... if a product does well, suddenly an Amazon equivalent will appear. And the product of the entrepreneur will mysteriously fall down the rankings so that nobody goes to it any more. Amazon shouldn't be both the biggest retailer in the world and the biggest marketplace for goods in the world. It's a blatant anti-trust violation.

https://ec.europa.eu/commission/pressco ... ip_20_2077

Let's not even get started on how Amazon sells books. But like all huge companies its main aim is to drive competitors out of business after which it can jack up its prices. Likewise we know about the working conditions at Amazon warehouses.

If there's one ethical thing you can do today, one stand you can make it's to stop buying at Amazon, stop using Tesco and Asda and walk down the street to your local shops and buy there, or use second tier internet sellers. And encourage everyone you know to do the same. Because the dream of these big, unregulated monsters is to have no competition and the ability to jack up prices and profits in the long run, all at our expense.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Club Coach17895
JoinedServiceReputation
Apr 24 201113 years49th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
20th May 24 07:1118th May 24 09:15LINK
Milestone Posts
15000
20000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: Railway strikes : Fri Jul 01, 2022 8:36 am  
Sal Paradise wrote:
The difference with the private sector is wage inflation impacts costs - these costs have to be passed - this is resulting in much higher costs across all industries. We are not getting 2/3% increases we are getting 10%+ this is just for firms to standstill.

If you add the costs of raw material and transportation to wage inflation you have a toxic mix that will fuel further inflation or drive job losses as firms who can't pass on these increases go under.

The public sector is different HMRC/DVLC/NHS/DWP wage increases don't drive anything significantly other than taxation to pay for it i.e. it isn't passed on


It's a difficult conundrum, for sure.

The Tory ethos has been to squeeze the public sector wages and cut back services over the past 10+ years.
The absolute bare faced lies from Government Ministers and the PM suggesting that their pay has kept up with inflation is f****** shocking and is a deliberately
repeated lie to try and put those workers in a bad light and its ridiculous that the media dont call them out on this.

There is an horrendous double standard where limits on city bosses bonuses are being scrapped at a time when public and private sector workers are seeing massive real terms pay cuts.

The use of incorrect numbers to suggest that the average pay in certain sectors is much higher than the actual average is another tactic being used and again, needs calling out.

One of the drivers to inflation in the UK, putting our inflation above many of our European neighbours is the plummeting value of the £, making ALL dollar based imports much more expensive.

It's strange that in years gone by, a cheap £ would help drive exports but at the moment, largely due to Brexit, this isn't happening.

Certainly interesting and worrying times.
RankPostsTeam
International Star5123
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 23 201410 years87th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
20th May 24 00:2519th May 24 15:43LINK
Milestone Posts
5000
10000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: Railway strikes : Fri Jul 01, 2022 9:31 am  
I believe de Pfeffel is now blaming Public sector pay demands for the higher inflation and a longer cost of living crisis. The man is completely clueless he and his bunch of the unemployable who have made things worse and yes my wife went several years with a pay freeze or increases of 1%.
The problem this time is that the unions are no longer perceived to be an enemy so he will need to find another group to blame. With Brexit not going well that rules them out, the opposition, no they have not been in power for 12 years, what about immigration but we are suppose to have this under control.
RfE 
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
Club Captain950
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 05 20186 years158th
OnlineLast PostLast Page
17th May 24 11:0412th May 24 18:44LINK
Milestone Posts
500
1000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Signature
Rise like Lions after slumber
In unvanquishable number--
Shake your chains to earth like dew
Which in sleep had fallen on you--
Ye are many -- they are few.'

Percy Bysshe Shelley - 'The Mask of Anarchy'



' ITS OVER' - Roy Orbison

Re: Railway strikes : Fri Jul 01, 2022 10:45 am  
The Ghost of '99 wrote:
Unfortunately for the Tories, who are encouraging this strike for all they're worth because they perceive huge electoral advantage from it, the world has moved on a long, long way since the 1970s.

Most people simply don't find trade unions to be terrifying bogeymen any more, they don't see working people fighting for decent wages and working conditions and conclude they are the enemy. Because they are fights so many would love to have, if only they had the power.

40 years of Thatcherite and post-Thatcherite policies have created a country with vast wealth inequality and insurmountable social mobility issues. A country in which the Conservative-supporting elites bribe their way to have the ear of government officials, are in happy receipt of lucrative government contracts (where they deliver worse results for more cost than when things were done in-house) and who pay low, little or no taxes. And where, perhaps most important of all, the free market has been so corrupted that companies like Amazon, the big supermarkets and giant conglomerates and oligopolies are able to drive small businesses out of existence and drive wages down across the board with their anti-competitive behaviour.

The country's economic model has clearly fundamentally failed. The generation for whom the mention of "unions" drove them to voting for Thatcher is sadly largely dead now and younger people simply don't have the same perspectives. The upcoming fight will inevitably be similar to France: between a band of hard core extremists of the far right (who have taken over the Tory party), the young who are jaw droppingly left wing and the centre for whom the fight to preserve and restore free market values will generate a very large, quite unsatisfactory big tent. The Tory party's grievence-based politics, their culture wars and their attempts to find wedge issues will only take them so far, but they will milk it for all they're worth in the hope of getting enough voters to vote for them or not vote for the opposition to enable their minority rule to continue. Labour's task is to try and knit together a coalition of the centrists, increasingly appalled by the extremism of the Tory party, and the left - and that will be difficult indeed.


Sadly the Labour Party under Starmer has decided to take against the strikers- although now that they are on the wrong side of public opinion there seems to be a bit of a climb down. Immediate divisions were seen with Labour deputy Angela Rayner front and centre of the recent TUC demonstration in London.Tough action threatened against frontbenchers joining picket lines seems to have been no more than a slap on the wrist.
Already after berating BA workers on strike on the BBC shadow frontbencher David Lammy has subsequently made a weasel word apology.

The strikes threatened in many sectors, both public and private, was a chance for Starmer to take charge of the agenda, show some leadership and actually demonstrate that he is on the side of ordinary working people who are suffering the biggest loss of earnings in real terms for decades.
But he has failed-again.
PreviousNext

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 43 guests

REPLY

Subject: 
Message:
   
Please note using apple style emoji's can result in posting failures.
Use the FULL EDITOR to better format content or upload images, be notified of replies etc...

Return to The Sin Bin


RLFANS Recent Posts
FORUM
LAST
POST
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
0m
Bottle Throwing
Fantastic Mr
12
1m
Fans Forum
Trojan Horse
44
5m
Walters
bazdev
13
8m
Swinton Lions
Trojan Horse
82
9m
Going down
Faxlore
27
12m
Ticket for the final
BarnsleyGull
67
13m
Todays game v Giants
matt_wire
49
28m
Wigan v Sts discussion - THIS THREAD ONLY PLEASE
Stu M
2207
Recent
Shopping list for 2025
Dave K.
2066
Recent
Kais Off
Snowy
17
FORUM
LAST
VIEW
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
29s
Transfer Talk / Rumour thread V4
Manheim
9069
31s
So What end are we in
Big lads mat
3
33s
Swinton Lions
Trojan Horse
82
35s
Game - Song Titles
Boss Hog
36574
39s
Going down
Faxlore
27
51s
Castleford Away
Dave K.
7
52s
HKR CC semi-final
Cruncher
56
1m
Ticket for the final
BarnsleyGull
67
1m
BORED The Band Name Game
Boss Hog
58524
1m
Fitzgibbon
Abe Froman
125
FORUM
NEW
TOPICS
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
TODAY
WIRE YED Prediction Competition Catalans Away
Uncle Rico
1
TODAY
Bottle Throwing
Fantastic Mr
12
TODAY
Could 2009 be repeated
Wires71
2
TODAY
Castleford Away
Dave K.
7
TODAY
Danny Walker
Howfenwire
2
TODAY
Tai Fighter
fez1
3
TODAY
Rowdy Roddy Tai-per
morleys_deck
5
TODAY
So What end are we in
Big lads mat
3
TODAY
Warrington Wolves Destroy Huddersfield To Secure Wembley Spot
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
Leeds Rhinos To Meet Saints At Wembley In Womens Challenge Cup Final
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
Todays game v Giants
matt_wire
49
TODAY
Tommy Makinson leaving Saints
Mr Snoodle
4
TODAY
Kais Off
Snowy
17
TODAY
Walters
bazdev
13
TODAY
Wire SL Coaches in a Word
Wires71
8
TODAY
Problems using this Website
Wires71
5
TODAY
Easy Does It As Wigan Thrash Hull KR To Get To Wembley
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
St Helens Cruise Past York Valkyrie To Make Wembley Final
RLFANS News
1
NEWS ITEMS
VIEWS
Warrington Wolves Destroy Hudd..
426
Leeds Rhinos To Meet Saints At..
264
Easy Does It As Wigan Thrash H..
490
St Helens Cruise Past York Val..
422
Katherine Jenkins OBE to perfo..
1195
London Broncos First Win Of 20..
1495
Catalans Dragons Nil The Rhino..
1433
Wigan Warriors Sensational Sec..
1397
Leigh Leopards Destroy Salford..
1555
Warrington Wolves Frustrate Hu..
1631
Widnes Vikings Win Thriller Ag..
2724
Leigh Leopards and Castleford ..
2955
Simple Rhinos Victory Compound..
2076
Stunning Second Half Sees Wiga..
2347
Leeds Rhinos Battle Hard for W..
4132
POSTSONLINEREGISTRATIONSRECORD
19.59M 2,113 ↑4680,05214,103
LOGIN HERE
or REGISTER for more features!.

When you register you get access to the live match scores, live match chat and you can post in the discussions on the forums.
RLFANS Match Centre
 Thu 23rd May
National Rugby League 2024-R12
10:50
Canterbury
v
St.George
 Fri 24th May
National Rugby League 2024-R12
07:05
NZ Warriors
v
Dolphins
09:00
NQL Cowboys
v
Wests
11:00
Manly
v
Melbourne
Womens Super League 2024-R4
17:00
St.HelensW
v
LeedsW
Championship 2024-R9
19:30
Sheffield
v
Dewsbury
Mens Super League XXVIII-R12
20:00
Castleford
v
Hull FC
20:00
Huddersfield
v
Leigh
20:00
St.Helens
v
Leeds
 Sat 25th May
National Rugby League 2024-R12
06:00
Canberra
v
Sydney
08:30
Cronulla
v
Penrith
10:35
Souths
v
Parramatta
Womens Super League 2024-R4
13:00
Wire W
v
WiganW
Mens Super League XXVIII-R12
17:30
Catalans
v
Warrington
Championship 2024-R9
18:00
Toulouse
v
Widnes
ALL SCORES PROVIDED BY RLFANS.COM (SETTINGS)
Matches on TV
Fri 24th May
WSL2024
17:00
St.HelensW-LeedsW
SL
20:00
Castleford-Hull FC
SL
20:00
Huddersfield-Leigh
SL
20:00
St.Helens-Leeds
Sat 25th May
SL
17:30
Catalans-Warrington
Sun 26th May
SL
15:00
LondonB-Hull KR
SL
15:00
Salford-Wigan
Fri 31st May
SL
19:45
Huddersfield-Hull FC
SL
20:00
Leeds-Castleford
SL
20:00
St.Helens-Catalans
Sat 1st Jun
SL
15:00
Warrington-Wigan
SL
17:30
Hull KR-Leigh
Sun 2nd Jun
SL
15:00
Salford-LondonB
Sat 8th Jun
1895
17:45
Wakefield-Sheffield
WOMCC2024
11:45
St.HelensW-LeedsW
CC2024
15:00
Wigan-Warrington
Fri 14th Jun
SL
20:00
Castleford-Wigan
SL
20:00
Hull KR-Huddersfield
SL
20:00
Warrington-Salford
Sat 15th Jun
SL
15:00
Hull FC-Leeds
Sun 19th May
CH 8 Bradford28-10Sheffield
CH 8 Dewsbury12-46Featherstone
CH 8 Doncaster26-0Batley
CH 8 Wakefield46-22Swinton
CH 8 Widnes28-28Whitehaven
NRL 11 NZ Warriors22-20Penrith
NRL 11 Melbourne48-16Parramatta
NRL 11 Wests12-24Dolphins
L1 8 Cornwall0-42Oldham
L1 8 Midlands66-4Newcastle
L1 8 Crusaders10-30Keighley
L1 8 Rochdale56-12Workington
CH 8 York40-18Halifax
CC2024 8 Huddersfield10-46Warrington
WOMCC2024 5 WiganW20-34LeedsW
Sat 18th May
NRL 11 Gold Coast24-28Newcastle
NRL 11 Cronulla38-30Sydney
NRL 11 Souths22-28NQL Cowboys
CC2024 8 Hull KR6-38Wigan
WOMCC2024 5 St.HelensW32-2York V
This is an inplay table and live positions can change.
Mens Betfred Super League XXVIII ROUND : 1
 PLDFADIFFPTS
Wigan 10 312 132 180 16
St.Helens 11 289 114 175 16
Warrington 11 286 143 143 16
Catalans 11 244 152 92 16
Hull KR 11 262 169 93 14
Salford 11 210 226 -16 14
 
Leeds 11 204 198 6 12
Huddersfield 11 240 229 11 10
Leigh 10 228 184 44 7
Castleford 11 184 352 -168 5
Hull FC 11 122 386 -264 2
LondonB 11 116 412 -296 2
This is an inplay table and live positions can change.
Betfred Championship 2024 ROUND : 1
 PLDFADIFFPTS
Wakefield 8 298 94 204 16
Widnes 8 218 125 93 13
Sheffield 8 234 126 108 12
Featherstone 8 238 144 94 12
Bradford 8 173 139 34 10
Doncaster 8 182 168 14 8
 
Whitehaven 8 161 217 -56 7
Toulouse 7 158 130 28 6
Swinton 8 162 200 -38 6
Barrow 7 102 207 -105 6
York 9 153 207 -54 4
Batley 8 109 180 -71 4
Halifax 8 112 239 -127 4
Dewsbury 9 131 211 -80 2
RLFANS Recent Posts
FORUM
LAST
POST
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
0m
Bottle Throwing
Fantastic Mr
12
1m
Fans Forum
Trojan Horse
44
5m
Walters
bazdev
13
8m
Swinton Lions
Trojan Horse
82
9m
Going down
Faxlore
27
12m
Ticket for the final
BarnsleyGull
67
13m
Todays game v Giants
matt_wire
49
28m
Wigan v Sts discussion - THIS THREAD ONLY PLEASE
Stu M
2207
Recent
Shopping list for 2025
Dave K.
2066
Recent
Kais Off
Snowy
17
FORUM
LAST
VIEW
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
29s
Transfer Talk / Rumour thread V4
Manheim
9069
31s
So What end are we in
Big lads mat
3
33s
Swinton Lions
Trojan Horse
82
35s
Game - Song Titles
Boss Hog
36574
39s
Going down
Faxlore
27
51s
Castleford Away
Dave K.
7
52s
HKR CC semi-final
Cruncher
56
1m
Ticket for the final
BarnsleyGull
67
1m
BORED The Band Name Game
Boss Hog
58524
1m
Fitzgibbon
Abe Froman
125
FORUM
NEW
TOPICS
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
TODAY
WIRE YED Prediction Competition Catalans Away
Uncle Rico
1
TODAY
Bottle Throwing
Fantastic Mr
12
TODAY
Could 2009 be repeated
Wires71
2
TODAY
Castleford Away
Dave K.
7
TODAY
Danny Walker
Howfenwire
2
TODAY
Tai Fighter
fez1
3
TODAY
Rowdy Roddy Tai-per
morleys_deck
5
TODAY
So What end are we in
Big lads mat
3
TODAY
Warrington Wolves Destroy Huddersfield To Secure Wembley Spot
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
Leeds Rhinos To Meet Saints At Wembley In Womens Challenge Cup Final
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
Todays game v Giants
matt_wire
49
TODAY
Tommy Makinson leaving Saints
Mr Snoodle
4
TODAY
Kais Off
Snowy
17
TODAY
Walters
bazdev
13
TODAY
Wire SL Coaches in a Word
Wires71
8
TODAY
Problems using this Website
Wires71
5
TODAY
Easy Does It As Wigan Thrash Hull KR To Get To Wembley
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
St Helens Cruise Past York Valkyrie To Make Wembley Final
RLFANS News
1
NEWS ITEMS
VIEWS
Warrington Wolves Destroy Hudd..
426
Leeds Rhinos To Meet Saints At..
264
Easy Does It As Wigan Thrash H..
490
St Helens Cruise Past York Val..
422
Katherine Jenkins OBE to perfo..
1195
London Broncos First Win Of 20..
1495
Catalans Dragons Nil The Rhino..
1433
Wigan Warriors Sensational Sec..
1397
Leigh Leopards Destroy Salford..
1555
Warrington Wolves Frustrate Hu..
1631
Widnes Vikings Win Thriller Ag..
2724
Leigh Leopards and Castleford ..
2955
Simple Rhinos Victory Compound..
2076
Stunning Second Half Sees Wiga..
2347
Leeds Rhinos Battle Hard for W..
4132


Visit the RLFANS.COM SHOP
for more merchandise!