The Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs are entering a critical period for their NRLW program. While the club can take comfort in having kept the bulk of its young, talented core intact for next season, a storm is brewing just over the horizon β and it hits on November 1. With no player currently contracted beyond the end of 2026, the Bulldogs could face a roster crisis that threatens to derail the long-term vision the club has worked so hard to build.
This is the price of success in the rapidly evolving NRLW landscape. The Bulldogsβ debut season turned heads for their grit, unity, and star power β a mix that quickly made them one of the competitionβs most promising sides. However, the modern womenβs game moves fast. With rival clubs circling and player salaries on the rise, Canterburyβs inability to secure early extensions could leave them exposed when the player market officially opens.
At the centre of the Bulldogsβ concerns are key figures like Jesse Southwell, Ellie Johnston, and Hollie-Mae Dodd, whose performances have placed them among the most sought-after players in the NRLW. Each has played an integral role in giving the Bulldogs their identity β Southwellβs game management and poise, Johnstonβs forward leadership, and Doddβs versatility and raw energy. If one of them hits the open market without a firm offer on the table, rival clubs will waste no time in presenting lucrative long-term deals.
The NRLWβs current structure adds another layer of complexity. Unlike the menβs competition, where multi-year contracts are commonplace, many womenβs players are still tied to shorter deals, leaving clubs to renegotiate almost annually. For a side like the Bulldogs, still establishing its culture and cohesion, the potential for mass departures could unravel years of careful recruitment and development work.
Off the field, Bulldogs officials insist theyβre not panicking. Sources within the club suggest that negotiations with several players are ongoing and that an internal plan is in motion to lock in the teamβs spine before the market opens. But the danger lies not only in losing players β itβs in losing control of the narrative. Once November 1 arrives, agents and rival clubs gain the power to dictate terms, and loyalty often takes a back seat to opportunity.
The Bulldogsβ future may ultimately depend on how attractive their environment remains. Theyβve built a reputation for player welfare and development, and their investment in high-performance facilities rivals some NRL teams. Yet, when contracts are up and the chance for pay rises or premiership contention elsewhere emerges, that stability can quickly waver.
If Canterbury wants to avoid becoming the next cautionary tale of the NRLWβs expansion era, it must act fast. Signing their stars to long-term extensions before the November 1 deadline isnβt just about retention β itβs about sending a message of intent to the rest of the league.
Because if they donβt, the Bulldogsβ promising NRLW core β the one that has given the club its first real taste of sustained success β could soon be scattered across rival teams. And once that door opens, itβs nearly impossible to close.
1 Comment
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