They're the big NRL issues generating discussion on the socials and in the fan forums this week, and everyone has an opinion. So let's dive right into ours.
Breaking contracts and changing colours
With news that Reece Walsh will be returning home to the Broncos, and that Charnze Nicoll Klokstad (and potentially) Te Maire Martin will be shifting to the Warriors, social media is buzzing about player loyalty, the point of a contract and the 'shoot now, ask questions later' nature of signing available players.
While Broncos fans were booing in reaction to Payne Haas' requests for release to chase the coin, over at Broncos HQ fan forum, there's nothing but excitement for Walsh cutting his final contracted year at the Warriors short and making the shift to Red Hill.
Walsh's move comes only eight weeks after declaring that he'd fulfil his dedication to the Warriors and play on in 2023.
At the end of the day, fans are fickle, and players play the game ultimately to earn a living. Only in sport do we berate those who change allegiances and welcome with open arms those who we had previously booed.
In every other corporate industry, employees are head-hunted and many spend every other day scanning Seek for their next opportunity, contracts be damned. Players deserve to put their families, futures and bank accounts first, but fans deserve to make a noise when they don't like it. Such is the nature of a career in sport.
Cannonball!
The latest NRL meta-language word to emerge and demand an immediate knee-jerk reaction, like the 'chicken-wing' and 'crusher' tackles before it, the 'cannonball' tackle has sent a lot of players to the sideline this year, with Liam Knight's season finishing up after copping a nasty one down low.
NRL commentators are furiously trying to align themselves to a position, when at the end of the day, it's a tackle that has always existed and only becomes a cannonball when the technique goes wrong.
It provokes the same old questions about how long an offender should be suspended for and whether it should be somehow related to how injured the ball-runner is.
Thus, we get tangled up in trying to define on the run, apply labels, categories and levels, and stipulate penalties. But just with every aspect of the game, the call should be left to the referee on the field and how he or she first responds, based on their assessment of intent, malice or simply sloppiness in technique.
One area that still goes largely unnoticed is player injuries resulting in ball-runners fending with their hands and elbows to the defender's heads and it will be interesting to see if that ever gets the same level of hype and hysteria.
Eligibility for Origin vs Desire to play for country
While the rules regarding Origin eligibility are pretty clear (just ask Ronaldo Mulitano), there has been a furore surrounding players including NSW's Jerome Luai and Brian To'o pledging their allegiance to Samoa over Australia for end of year test matches.
Many areas of the game are commonly subjected to 'tradition', particularly when it comes to the positions of the game's longest-serving commentators and opinion columnists.
Over time, State of Origin has been an audition for a green and gold jumper. But with such high current representation of Pasifika players in the NRL, and the relatively recent emergence of test teams that are now growing in stature, like Samoa and Tonga (1986), many players (who are only in their twenties, generally) are hearing the anthem of their home countries and pledging their devotions.
If a player has grown up in Australia but has alternative heritage, they should make their own choice.
As a Kangaroos supporter, I'd prefer players who want to play for Australia playing for Australia. Huge talents like To'o and Luai playing for their families' country will only enhance and strengthen the international rugby league platform.
NRL 'culture'
So much talk about under-performing clubs like the Wests Tigers, Gold Coast Titans and New Zealand Warriors is about having 'culture' issues at the heart of their failures. But it feels like such a throw-away term that columnists rarely want to delve further into.
Surely a player with 'poor culture' can change, and a team with 'positive culture' can fall.
It would be hard to identify a single club where (to list a few):
So when a particular player with 'poor culture' joins a team with supposed 'impeccable culture', it's hard not to feel that both labels are fluid.
People at all levels within a club need to feel as though they are performing for not only themselves and their team, but also their fans - who are often the most affected when their team is dragged through the muddy media - not just when they're losing matches.