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The Western Bears was a proposed rugby league football club to be based in Perth, Western Australia.The bid was intended as a partnership between the Western Australian Rugby League and the North Sydney Bears for a team from Perth to rejoin an expanded National Rugby League in 2027.
In August 2024, the North Sydney Bears and a Western Australian consortium headed by Cash Converters founders the Cumins family, signed off on an agreement to lodge an application for the Western Bears to enter a team in the 2027 NRL season. The logo will be red, white and black with yellow as a nod to the Western Reds. [10] [11]
In August 2024, the North Sydney Bears and a Western Australian consortium headed by Cash Converters founders the Cumins family, signed off on an agreement to lodge an application for the Western Bears to enter a team in the 2027 NRL season. The logo will be red, white and black with yellow as a nod to the Western Reds. [10] [11]
In August 2024, the North Sydney Bears and a Western Australian consortium headed by Cash Converters founders the Cumins family, signed off on an agreement to lodge an application for the Western Bears to enter a team in the 2027 NRL season. The logo would have been red, white and black with yellow as a nod to Western Australia, not The Western ...
On 27 June 2012 the Western Australian Rugby League announced a new identity for its NRL entry bid. The West Coast Pirates has been released as the team name, with the logo a Pirate Skull over Crossed Cutlasses.
Media in category "Australian rugby league logos" ... 0–9. File:2014 NRL Grand Final logo.svg; File:2016 NRL Auckland Nines logo.jpg ... Western Australian Rugby ...
North Sydney now field a team in the NSW Cup, the competition immediately below NRL level, as a feeder club to the Melbourne Storm. They previously had feeder deals with both the South Sydney Rabbitohs and the Sydney Roosters. There are plans to again be part of the NRL in coming years as the Central Coast Bears or in Perth as the Western Bears.
In 2006, the Central Coast were one of three bidders for the next team to be handed a NRL licence. The Gold Coast were ultimately successful in their bid, beating both the Central Coast and the Wellington Orcas. In 2012, the NRL announced it was opening up talks about expansion again but ultimately decided to close negotiations until the end of ...