FORUMS FORUMS






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

  

Home The Sin Bin Strikes Revisited



Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 71 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ... 8  Next
Author Message
 Post subject: Strikes Revisited
PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 6:46 pm 
Club Owner
Club Captain

Joined: Feb 29 2004
Posts: 4195
With another 'day of action' approaching two articles have today caught my attention:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-15722791

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpres ... 271814444A


What is it with public sector workers at the moment? Their pay and pensions are, generally, far superior to their private sector counterparts yet they are complaining about paying slightly more towards their pensions, or working for a couple more years. Outside of the small protected bubble that they live in their strikes have very little public support.

Then we have tube drivers, demanding a whopping quadruple pay for working boxing day. That is a whopping £700 for one day work!

Public sector pay and pensions is unsustainable in its current format. The previous Government realised this, but was too afraid to do anything about it for fear of losing key voters.
With another 'day of action' approaching two articles have today caught my attention:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-15722791

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpres ... 271814444A


What is it with public sector workers at the moment? Their pay and pensions are, generally, far superior to their private sector counterparts yet they are complaining about paying slightly more towards their pensions, or working for a couple more years. Outside of the small protected bubble that they live in their strikes have very little public support.

Then we have tube drivers, demanding a whopping quadruple pay for working boxing day. That is a whopping £700 for one day work!

Public sector pay and pensions is unsustainable in its current format. The previous Government realised this, but was too afraid to do anything about it for fear of losing key voters.

Top
   
 
 Post subject: Re: Strikes Revisited
PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 6:52 pm 
International Board Member
Player Coach
User avatar

Joined: Jun 19 2002
Posts: 14970
Location: Campaigning for a deep attacking line
Really?
So those public sector teachers are paid more than private sector teachers?
Public sector doctors & nurses are paid more than private sector doctors & nurses?

I'm sure they'll be delighted to hear that.

As for the tube drivers on boxing day, why shouldn't they demand a high rate of pay for working on a public holiday and such an important one like boxing day. I know I'd demand at least quadruple pay to work on boxing day.

Top
   
 
 Post subject: Re: Strikes Revisited
PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 6:58 pm 
Club Owner
Club Captain

Joined: Feb 29 2004
Posts: 4195
Him wrote:Really?
So those public sector teachers are paid more than private sector teachers?
Public sector doctors & nurses are paid more than private sector doctors & nurses?

I'm sure they'll be delighted to hear that.

As for the tube drivers on boxing day, why shouldn't they demand a high rate of pay for working on a public holiday and such an important one like boxing day. I know I'd demand at least quadruple pay to work on boxing day.


There will always be exceptions to every rule and you have highlighted 2 of them. I would hazard a guess that if private sector teachers and doctors are paid more, this is partly to compensate for the fact they don't have a state pension.

Top
   
 
 Post subject: Re: Strikes Revisited
PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 7:02 pm 
International Chairman
International Chairman
User avatar

Joined: May 25 2002
Posts: 37704
Location: Zummerzet, where the zoider apples grow
The Video Ref wrote:
Then we have tube drivers, demanding a whopping quadruple pay for working boxing day. That is a whopping £700 for one day work!



Is it?

Where do your figures come from? They're certainly not in the links you provided.

When I worked in a unionsed environment, the norm for Bank Holidays was double time + a day in lieu, have things changed?






The older I get, the better I was

Advice is what we seek when we already know the answer - but wish we didn't

I'd rather have a full bottle in front of me than a full-frontal lobotomy
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
kirkstaller wrote: "All DNA shows is that we have a common creator."

cod'ead wrote: "I have just snotted weissbier all over my keyboard & screen"

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"No amount of cajolery, and no attempts at ethical or social seduction, can eradicate from my heart a deep burning hatred for the Tory Party. So far as I am concerned they are lower than vermin." - Aneurin Bevan

Top
   
 
 Post subject: Re: Strikes Revisited
PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 7:06 pm 
International Board Member
Player Coach
User avatar

Joined: Jun 19 2002
Posts: 14970
Location: Campaigning for a deep attacking line
The Video Ref wrote:There will always be exceptions to every rule and you have highlighted 2 of them. I would hazard a guess that if private sector teachers and doctors are paid more, this is partly to compensate for the fact they don't have a state pension.

So what if they don't have a state pension? They get a very good final salary pension, or at least the private teachers do anyway which is at least as high as the state would pay, plus they get better wages.

Which public sector workers aren't exceptions to the rule?

Top
   
 
 Post subject: Re: Strikes Revisited
PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 7:07 pm 
Club Owner
International Star
User avatar

Joined: Apr 27 2003
Posts: 8633
I wish I could get more for working boxing day than time and two thirds.

Some people don't know they're born.






God is nothing more than an imaginary friend for grown ups.

Top
   
 
 Post subject: Re: Strikes Revisited
PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 7:09 pm 
All Time Great
All Time Great
User avatar

Joined: May 10 2002
Posts: 47951
Location: Die Metropole
I'm curious: should ordinary working people simple accept what's thrown at them and be prepared to suffer?

It's a fact that the income gap in the UK over the last 30 years has widened. Is this good? Is this acceptable? Do working people have to take something that those at the top don't have to?

We're all in this together, right?






"You are working for Satan." Kirkstaller

"Dare to know!" Immanuel Kant

"Do not take life too seriously. You will never get out of it alive" Elbert Hubbard

"We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars." Oscar Wilde

The Voluptuous Manifesto – thoughts on all sorts of stuff.

Top
   
 
 Post subject: Re: Strikes Revisited
PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 7:18 pm 
Player Coach
Club Captain

Joined: Apr 04 2009
Posts: 2833
Thing is you have a generalised viewpoint that covers ALL public sector workers, which is misguided.
For example, the Teacher's Pension Scheme (TPS) is actually wholly self-funding in it's current format and changes were madein 2007 to ensure sustainability. The fact is the amount paid in by current teachers exceeds that going out to retired teachers and all forecasts maintain that this will continue to be the case indefinately. The trouble will come if young teachers decide they can't afford to pay into the pension, or decide not to in the early years of their career, which may result in the government having to then compensate this loss. The givernment are risking a self-funding scheme actually changing to a scheme that is not self-funding!
However, other public sector pensions are not sustainable and need changing, just not all of them.

Top
   
 
 Post subject: Re: Strikes Revisited
PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 7:18 pm 
In The Arms of 13 Angels
In The Arms of 13 Angels
User avatar

Joined: Mar 05 2002
Posts: 48326
Location: Londinium
The Video Ref wrote:With another 'day of action' approaching two articles have today caught my attention:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-15722791

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpres ... 271814444A


What is it with public sector workers at the moment? Their pay and pensions are, generally, far superior to their private sector counterparts yet they are complaining about paying slightly more towards their pensions, or working for a couple more years. Outside of the small protected bubble that they live in their strikes have very little public support.

Then we have tube drivers, demanding a whopping quadruple pay for working boxing day. That is a whopping £700 for one day work!

Public sector pay and pensions is unsustainable in its current format. The previous Government realised this, but was too afraid to do anything about it for fear of losing key voters.


With all due respects: b*llocks.

Public sector pay has been frozen for two years, following decades of below inflation rise.

Even the Hutton report accepted that public sector pensions are sustainable.

Before the 2007 reforms to the schemes, the costs of pensions were expected to peak at just below 2% of GDP around 2020, and then fall again (the Baby boom generation is a bulge, not a permanent increase).

After the 2007 reforms - which were negotiated, unlike the current attempt at diktat - that peak has already happened (the cost peaked iin 2009 at around 1.8%, iirc, and is already falling). The 2007 reforms cut the future costs of pensions by 10% (Hutton's figures) - and the Chancellor's unilaterial decision to base future increases on CPI rather than RPI* inflation has cut future costs by another 15%)

Incidentally, some figures on the two largest schemes:

The NHSPS is a 'pay as you go' scheme where pensions are funded by current contributions - over the past 10 years or more, contributions have exceeded payouts by £2bn a year, money that goes straight to the Treasury.

The LGPS is a 'funded' scheme - contributions are invested and pensions paid out of the investment funds: the scheme invests about £4bn a year in the UK economy - the various invesment funds are currently responsible for a total investment in the UK economy of £140bn. The scheme has enough funds to pay out its commitments for the next 20 years, even even if it received not another penny from either contributions or investment income[/b].

Both schemees are 'cash rich'.

What Hutton refused to answer was whether public sector pensions were 'affordable' -saying that was a political question.

And a point to note about the proposal to increase employees' contributions by an average of 3.2% wages (an average 50% or so increase in the amount people will be required to pay): not a penny of that will go into the actual pensions schemes.

In the pay-as-you-go schemes it will go straight tot he Treasury. Ind the funded LGPS, it will fund the £900m reduction in councils' block grant.

The proposal is nothing more than a 3% tax levied for being in a pension scheme and used to pay for reducing a deficit which is the direct result of the banks and financial services industry screwing the economy in 2008 (a tax, incidentally, is being levied at the same time that the government keeps floating the idea of a 10% tax cut for high earners).

But the big danger is that if you increase contributions by that amount, you discourage people to join the pensions scheme and make provision for their old age, so they will rely more on taxpayer** funded benefits, increasing future costs to government, and at the same time risk making the schemes themselves unsustainable if not enough people are paying in.

* There's a particular irony in the Euro-sceptic Tories opting for CPI. RPI is an index designed to measure UK inflation as it affects people who buy things. The CPI index was invented purely as a measure to make like-for-like comparisons across the EU (which is why it doesn't include, eg, housing costs - housing 'markets' being different and therefore not comparable across the EU).

Still, here's Freancis Maude being roundly shown to be talking through his posterior on the 'unaffordability' issue back in the summer.

** Taking both active members and deferred members into account, the pensions schemes in question cover about 20% of the workforce, in both the public and private sectors, who are - of course - taxpayers themselves.

On and some mythbusting:

Quote:Pensions: busting the myths
MYTH - People are living longer which means they're claiming their pensions for longer - this needs to be addressed.

The schemes were revised to take account of this three years ago - so scheme benefits and costs are now 25% lower.

In addition, life expectancy has increased, but less so for manual workers and the low paid.

MYTH - There's a big public sector pensions deficit that has to be repaid.

There is no funding gap - the public sector schemes were assessed for long term risk and adjusted accordingly three years ago and are now very secure.

Both the local government pension scheme and NHS pension scheme are currently cash rich with income far exceeding outgoings - some £2 billion in the case of the NHS pension scheme.

MYTH - Public services and public service pensions are causing the financial crisis.

It was the banking sector's reckless risk taking and excessive greed that caused this global recession.

MYTH - We're all in it together. Everyone has to make sacrifices right now - why not public sector workers?

We are all facing cuts to our public services - on top of this public service workers are facing unprecedented job cuts and a pay freeze.

We will all end up paying more tax if people drop out of the scheme to end up relying on the state in their old age.

MYTH - It's not fair, why should the public sector get good pensions when the private sector doesn't?

The average director of a FTSE 100 company has a final salary pension worth £3.6m or £174,963 a year, while the average occupational pension generally is £9,500 a year and the average public service pension is £7,800 a year. That's the real unfairness.

UNISON thinks everyone deserves an adequate pension, including workers in the private sector. We should improve bad schemes rather than make good ones bad.

Providing adequate pensions means that fewer people will be receiving welfare handouts after retirement, which would cost the taxpayer more money in the long run.

MYTH - Public sector workers have it too good with huge pensions.

The average public service pension is around £7,800 a year, for women working in local government the average is £2,800 a year, while the median for women working in the NHS is £3,500 a year: hardly huge pensions.

Saving towards an occupational pension in many cases means a person is receiving fewer welfare benefits during retirement, saving the taxpayer money.

MYTH - Taxpayers are paying for public service workers' pensions. That's not fair.

Everyone's taxes are used to pay for all public services - stethoscopes in hospitals, the salaries of primary school teachers, people to change the light bulbs in street lamps, and part of these people's pay is their pension.

A pension is part of someone's salary package and is no different than an annual salary, a car, or the London weighting allowance. It's not fair to change something in a job contract after someone accepted the job.

One in five people working in the UK works in public services. They are taxpayers too.

MYTH - Public service workers retire at 60.

The normal retirement age in many of the public service pension schemes is already 65.

Raising the retirement age hurts some people more than others. In general we're living longer, but that doesn't mean everyone will have the same quality of life.

Many public service workers have jobs that are physically demanding or stressful, making it difficult or even impossible to continue working into old age. Similarly many low paid workers simply don't have the option of retiring early because they can't afford it.


Though I'm sure you'll ignore the arguments and facts, and simply dismiss the source. :)

http://www.unison.org.uk/pensions/mythbuster.asp
The Video Ref wrote:With another 'day of action' approaching two articles have today caught my attention:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-15722791

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpres ... 271814444A


What is it with public sector workers at the moment? Their pay and pensions are, generally, far superior to their private sector counterparts yet they are complaining about paying slightly more towards their pensions, or working for a couple more years. Outside of the small protected bubble that they live in their strikes have very little public support.

Then we have tube drivers, demanding a whopping quadruple pay for working boxing day. That is a whopping £700 for one day work!

Public sector pay and pensions is unsustainable in its current format. The previous Government realised this, but was too afraid to do anything about it for fear of losing key voters.


With all due respects: b*llocks.

Public sector pay has been frozen for two years, following decades of below inflation rise.

Even the Hutton report accepted that public sector pensions are sustainable.

Before the 2007 reforms to the schemes, the costs of pensions were expected to peak at just below 2% of GDP around 2020, and then fall again (the Baby boom generation is a bulge, not a permanent increase).

After the 2007 reforms - which were negotiated, unlike the current attempt at diktat - that peak has already happened (the cost peaked iin 2009 at around 1.8%, iirc, and is already falling). The 2007 reforms cut the future costs of pensions by 10% (Hutton's figures) - and the Chancellor's unilaterial decision to base future increases on CPI rather than RPI* inflation has cut future costs by another 15%)

Incidentally, some figures on the two largest schemes:

The NHSPS is a 'pay as you go' scheme where pensions are funded by current contributions - over the past 10 years or more, contributions have exceeded payouts by £2bn a year, money that goes straight to the Treasury.

The LGPS is a 'funded' scheme - contributions are invested and pensions paid out of the investment funds: the scheme invests about £4bn a year in the UK economy - the various invesment funds are currently responsible for a total investment in the UK economy of £140bn. The scheme has enough funds to pay out its commitments for the next 20 years, even even if it received not another penny from either contributions or investment income[/b].

Both schemees are 'cash rich'.

What Hutton refused to answer was whether public sector pensions were 'affordable' -saying that was a political question.

And a point to note about the proposal to increase employees' contributions by an average of 3.2% wages (an average 50% or so increase in the amount people will be required to pay): not a penny of that will go into the actual pensions schemes.

In the pay-as-you-go schemes it will go straight tot he Treasury. Ind the funded LGPS, it will fund the £900m reduction in councils' block grant.

The proposal is nothing more than a 3% tax levied for being in a pension scheme and used to pay for reducing a deficit which is the direct result of the banks and financial services industry screwing the economy in 2008 (a tax, incidentally, is being levied at the same time that the government keeps floating the idea of a 10% tax cut for high earners).

But the big danger is that if you increase contributions by that amount, you discourage people to join the pensions scheme and make provision for their old age, so they will rely more on taxpayer** funded benefits, increasing future costs to government, and at the same time risk making the schemes themselves unsustainable if not enough people are paying in.

* There's a particular irony in the Euro-sceptic Tories opting for CPI. RPI is an index designed to measure UK inflation as it affects people who buy things. The CPI index was invented purely as a measure to make like-for-like comparisons across the EU (which is why it doesn't include, eg, housing costs - housing 'markets' being different and therefore not comparable across the EU).

Still, here's Freancis Maude being roundly shown to be talking through his posterior on the 'unaffordability' issue back in the summer.

** Taking both active members and deferred members into account, the pensions schemes in question cover about 20% of the workforce, in both the public and private sectors, who are - of course - taxpayers themselves.

On and some mythbusting:

Quote:Pensions: busting the myths
MYTH - People are living longer which means they're claiming their pensions for longer - this needs to be addressed.

The schemes were revised to take account of this three years ago - so scheme benefits and costs are now 25% lower.

In addition, life expectancy has increased, but less so for manual workers and the low paid.

MYTH - There's a big public sector pensions deficit that has to be repaid.

There is no funding gap - the public sector schemes were assessed for long term risk and adjusted accordingly three years ago and are now very secure.

Both the local government pension scheme and NHS pension scheme are currently cash rich with income far exceeding outgoings - some £2 billion in the case of the NHS pension scheme.

MYTH - Public services and public service pensions are causing the financial crisis.

It was the banking sector's reckless risk taking and excessive greed that caused this global recession.

MYTH - We're all in it together. Everyone has to make sacrifices right now - why not public sector workers?

We are all facing cuts to our public services - on top of this public service workers are facing unprecedented job cuts and a pay freeze.

We will all end up paying more tax if people drop out of the scheme to end up relying on the state in their old age.

MYTH - It's not fair, why should the public sector get good pensions when the private sector doesn't?

The average director of a FTSE 100 company has a final salary pension worth £3.6m or £174,963 a year, while the average occupational pension generally is £9,500 a year and the average public service pension is £7,800 a year. That's the real unfairness.

UNISON thinks everyone deserves an adequate pension, including workers in the private sector. We should improve bad schemes rather than make good ones bad.

Providing adequate pensions means that fewer people will be receiving welfare handouts after retirement, which would cost the taxpayer more money in the long run.

MYTH - Public sector workers have it too good with huge pensions.

The average public service pension is around £7,800 a year, for women working in local government the average is £2,800 a year, while the median for women working in the NHS is £3,500 a year: hardly huge pensions.

Saving towards an occupational pension in many cases means a person is receiving fewer welfare benefits during retirement, saving the taxpayer money.

MYTH - Taxpayers are paying for public service workers' pensions. That's not fair.

Everyone's taxes are used to pay for all public services - stethoscopes in hospitals, the salaries of primary school teachers, people to change the light bulbs in street lamps, and part of these people's pay is their pension.

A pension is part of someone's salary package and is no different than an annual salary, a car, or the London weighting allowance. It's not fair to change something in a job contract after someone accepted the job.

One in five people working in the UK works in public services. They are taxpayers too.

MYTH - Public service workers retire at 60.

The normal retirement age in many of the public service pension schemes is already 65.

Raising the retirement age hurts some people more than others. In general we're living longer, but that doesn't mean everyone will have the same quality of life.

Many public service workers have jobs that are physically demanding or stressful, making it difficult or even impossible to continue working into old age. Similarly many low paid workers simply don't have the option of retiring early because they can't afford it.


Though I'm sure you'll ignore the arguments and facts, and simply dismiss the source. :)

http://www.unison.org.uk/pensions/mythbuster.asp






Doubt everything, even this

Top
   
 
 Post subject: Re: Strikes Revisited
PostPosted: Mon Nov 14, 2011 7:20 pm 
Club Coach
Club Coach
User avatar

Joined: Oct 12 2004
Posts: 16257
The Video Ref wrote:What is it with public sector workers at the moment? Their pay and pensions are, generally, far superior to their private sector counterparts


If their pay and pensions are far superior to their private sector counterparts then why don't private sector workers just leave and go and take up jobs in the public sector?

It's easier than uprooting to Switzerland or wherever.






Challenge Cup winners 2009 2010 2012 2019
League Leaders 2011 2016

Top
   
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 71 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ... 8  Next





It is currently Wed Sep 18, 2024 1:42 pm


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 127 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  


It is currently Wed Sep 18, 2024 1:42 pm
RLFANS Recent Posts
FORUM
LAST
POST
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
4m
Squad for London
Alffi_7
7
7m
DoR - New Coach - Investor & Adam - New signings
The Dentist
3127
9m
Rumours thread
FOREVERTRIN
2183
9m
This weeks disciplinary
Fantastic Mr
1335
11m
Finn out Murrell in
MP
7
33m
Salford H Moved to Thursday
Mark_P1973
66
39m
Round 27 HKR Away
chapylad
1
41m
Bulls Accounts up to Nov 2023
Scarey71
10
47m
ALL NEW 49ERS ERA LEEDS UTD THREAD
chapylad
2323
48m
New Players
The Curtism
74
FORUM
LAST
VIEW
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
11s
Bulls Accounts up to Nov 2023
Scarey71
10
13s
Shareholders Meeting
Trojan Horse
23
16s
Transfer Talk / Rumour thread V4
chapylad
9884
25s
Who do we want in the play-offs
Captain Hook
55
27s
Huddersfiels to get new stadium
Huddersfield
1
29s
Staying or Not
Backwoodsman
25
30s
Salford H Moved to Thursday
Mark_P1973
66
32s
Matt Parcell to leave at seasons end
Huddersfield
1
56s
Recruitment rumours and links
Moe syslak
3054
1m
Le Cats at home - Los Alomos Custers Last Stand
Marcus's Bic
22
FORUM
NEW
TOPICS
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
TODAY
Round 27 HKR Away
chapylad
1
TODAY
Squad for London
Alffi_7
7
TODAY
Hull FC preview
Jimmythecuck
1
TODAY
Halifax A
Bullseye
2
TODAY
East stand
FIL
7
TODAY
Locations of League
Wollo-Wollo-
1
TODAY
Matt Parcell to leave at seasons end
Huddersfield
1
TODAY
Huddersfiels to get new stadium
Huddersfield
1
TODAY
IMG
Fantastic Mr
2
TODAY
Leaving players
Murphy
1
TODAY
bulls on Sunday
Hudd-Shay
11
TODAY
Concerts at Stadiums
Fantastic Mr
11
TODAY
Finn out Murrell in
MP
7
TODAY
Playoff Semi Final
MattyB
3
TODAY
Bulls Accounts up to Nov 2023
Scarey71
10
TODAY
Shareholders Meeting
Trojan Horse
23
TODAY
James Clark
Jake the Peg
6
TODAY
Le Cats at home - Los Alomos Custers Last Stand
Marcus's Bic
22
TODAY
Realistic targets for 2025
the cal trai
31
TODAY
2024 Southstandercom Prediction Competition Week 27
JMT
11
TODAY
Club Statement
UllFC
49
TODAY
Wakefield Trinity Sweep Aside York Knights Challenge
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
Old FC when we knew how to play rugby
mk_fc
5
TODAY
WIRE YED Prediction Competition London Home
Barbed Wire
6
TODAY
Dons v Widnes - Sunday 15 September 2024
Kick and cha
6
TODAY
Catalans Keep Season Alive With Victory Over The Broncos
RLFANS News
1
NEWS ITEMS
VIEWS
Wakefield Trinity Sweep Aside ..
672
Catalans Keep Season Alive Wit..
472
Salford Ensure Play-Offs And S..
473
Ruthless Wigan Thrash the Rhin..
542
Huddersfield Giants Hold Off L..
957
Salford Close In On The Play O..
925
Leigh Leopards Up To Fourth Af..
1048
Leeds Rhinos Into the Six Afte..
1008
Wigan Warriors Defeat Hull KR ..
1044
Wane Names Provisional Squad f..
1423
Leeds Rhinos Ride Their Luck F..
1367
Wigan Warriors Level Top As Ca..
1448
Castleford Tigers Inflict Anot..
1435
Leigh Into the Six After Beati..
1634
Five Into Three - Our Top Six ..
2205
RLFANS Match Centre
Matches on TV
Thu 19th Sep
SL
20:00
Huddersfield-Castleford
SL
20:00
Wigan-Salford
Fri 20th Sep
SL
20:00
Hull KR-Leeds
SL
20:00
Leigh-St.Helens
SL
20:00
Warrington-LondonB
Sat 21st Sep
SL
15:00
Hull FC-Catalans
Sun 27th Oct
MINT2024
14:30
England M-Samoa M
Sat 2nd Nov
MINT2024
14:30
England M-Samoa M
Sun 15th Sep
WSL2024 14 FeatherstoneW6-32York V
WSL2024 14 Hudds W36-0Wire W
CH 26 Barrow34-14Whitehaven
CH 26 Bradford16-14Batley
CH 26 Dewsbury16-28Swinton
CH 26 Doncaster30-14Widnes
CH 26 Featherstone6-20Sheffield
CH26 Wakefield20-4York
NRL 28 Canterbury22-24Manly
L1 23 Midlands24-22Workington
L1 23 Rochdale30-18Hunslet
Sat 14th Sep
SL 26 Hull FC4-58Salford
SL 26 Catalans12-8LondonB
SL 26 Huddersfield0-66Warrington
CH 26 Toulouse38-18Halifax
NRL 28 Melbourne37-10Cronulla
NRL 28 NQL Cowboys28-16Newcastle
Fri 13th Sep
SL 26 Leigh0-24Hull KR
SL 26 St.Helens40-4Castleford
SL 26 Wigan38-0Leeds
This is an inplay table and live positions can change.
Mens Betfred Super League XXVIII ROUND : 1
 PLDFADIFFPTS
Wigan 26 657 336 321 42
Hull KR 26 693 311 382 40
Warrington 26 684 319 365 38
Salford 26 550 483 67 32
St.Helens 26 584 370 214 30
Leigh 26 548 386 162 29
 
Leeds 26 514 462 52 28
Catalans 26 451 423 28 28
Huddersfield 26 434 648 -214 18
Castleford 26 415 701 -286 15
LondonB 26 317 862 -545 6
Hull FC 26 324 870 -546 6
This is an inplay table and live positions can change.
Betfred Championship 2024 ROUND : 1
 PLDFADIFFPTS
Wakefield 24 892 256 636 46
Bradford 24 618 373 245 32
Toulouse 23 662 340 322 31
Sheffield 24 594 472 122 28
Widnes 24 513 433 80 27
York 25 613 439 174 26
 
Featherstone 24 566 472 94 26
Doncaster 24 470 527 -57 23
Batley 24 378 513 -135 20
Halifax 24 475 617 -142 20
Barrow 23 418 648 -230 19
Swinton 24 446 606 -160 18
Whitehaven 24 414 806 -392 16
Dewsbury 25 308 821 -513 2
RLFANS Recent Posts
FORUM
LAST
POST
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
4m
Squad for London
Alffi_7
7
7m
DoR - New Coach - Investor & Adam - New signings
The Dentist
3127
9m
Rumours thread
FOREVERTRIN
2183
9m
This weeks disciplinary
Fantastic Mr
1335
11m
Finn out Murrell in
MP
7
33m
Salford H Moved to Thursday
Mark_P1973
66
39m
Round 27 HKR Away
chapylad
1
41m
Bulls Accounts up to Nov 2023
Scarey71
10
47m
ALL NEW 49ERS ERA LEEDS UTD THREAD
chapylad
2323
48m
New Players
The Curtism
74
FORUM
LAST
VIEW
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
11s
Bulls Accounts up to Nov 2023
Scarey71
10
13s
Shareholders Meeting
Trojan Horse
23
16s
Transfer Talk / Rumour thread V4
chapylad
9884
25s
Who do we want in the play-offs
Captain Hook
55
27s
Huddersfiels to get new stadium
Huddersfield
1
29s
Staying or Not
Backwoodsman
25
30s
Salford H Moved to Thursday
Mark_P1973
66
32s
Matt Parcell to leave at seasons end
Huddersfield
1
56s
Recruitment rumours and links
Moe syslak
3054
1m
Le Cats at home - Los Alomos Custers Last Stand
Marcus's Bic
22
FORUM
NEW
TOPICS
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
TODAY
Round 27 HKR Away
chapylad
1
TODAY
Squad for London
Alffi_7
7
TODAY
Hull FC preview
Jimmythecuck
1
TODAY
Halifax A
Bullseye
2
TODAY
East stand
FIL
7
TODAY
Locations of League
Wollo-Wollo-
1
TODAY
Matt Parcell to leave at seasons end
Huddersfield
1
TODAY
Huddersfiels to get new stadium
Huddersfield
1
TODAY
IMG
Fantastic Mr
2
TODAY
Leaving players
Murphy
1
TODAY
bulls on Sunday
Hudd-Shay
11
TODAY
Concerts at Stadiums
Fantastic Mr
11
TODAY
Finn out Murrell in
MP
7
TODAY
Playoff Semi Final
MattyB
3
TODAY
Bulls Accounts up to Nov 2023
Scarey71
10
TODAY
Shareholders Meeting
Trojan Horse
23
TODAY
James Clark
Jake the Peg
6
TODAY
Le Cats at home - Los Alomos Custers Last Stand
Marcus's Bic
22
TODAY
Realistic targets for 2025
the cal trai
31
TODAY
2024 Southstandercom Prediction Competition Week 27
JMT
11
TODAY
Club Statement
UllFC
49
TODAY
Wakefield Trinity Sweep Aside York Knights Challenge
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
Old FC when we knew how to play rugby
mk_fc
5
TODAY
WIRE YED Prediction Competition London Home
Barbed Wire
6
TODAY
Dons v Widnes - Sunday 15 September 2024
Kick and cha
6
TODAY
Catalans Keep Season Alive With Victory Over The Broncos
RLFANS News
1
NEWS ITEMS
VIEWS
Wakefield Trinity Sweep Aside ..
672
Catalans Keep Season Alive Wit..
472
Salford Ensure Play-Offs And S..
473
Ruthless Wigan Thrash the Rhin..
542
Huddersfield Giants Hold Off L..
957
Salford Close In On The Play O..
925
Leigh Leopards Up To Fourth Af..
1048
Leeds Rhinos Into the Six Afte..
1008
Wigan Warriors Defeat Hull KR ..
1044
Wane Names Provisional Squad f..
1423
Leeds Rhinos Ride Their Luck F..
1367
Wigan Warriors Level Top As Ca..
1448
Castleford Tigers Inflict Anot..
1435
Leigh Into the Six After Beati..
1634
Five Into Three - Our Top Six ..
2205


Visit the RLFANS.COM SHOP
for more merchandise!












.