FORUMS FORUMS






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

   WWW.RLFANS.COM • View topic - Lies, Lawyers, and a nice little earner.
::Off-topic discussion.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Star3605No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Jul 09 201212 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
20th May 16 14:5420th May 16 10:16LINK
Milestone Posts
2500
5000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
Leeds
Signature
Someday everything is gonna be different, when I paint my masterpiece
----------------------------------------------------------
Online art gallery, selling original landscape artwork
----------------------------------------------------------
JerryChicken - The Blog
----------------------------------------------------------

Re: Lies, Lawyers, and a nice little earner. : Sat Dec 20, 2014 12:43 pm  
rumpelstiltskin wrote:
Littlejohn makes an eloquent point regarding these chancers.


The article raises a couple of good points, and then fills the rest of his contracted commitment to write an article of x-hundred words by simply prattling on about nothing much in particular, and therein lies the skill in deciphering newspaper journalist stories, pick out the relevant facts and disgard the remaining 98% of the story as mere opinion, flim-flam and filler.

He does make one pointed remark though...

But this is simply part of the much wider human rights racket, a scandalous conspiracy by unscrupulous Left-wing lawyers designed to turn justice upside down



Is he suggesting that right-wing lawyers would not deign to "turn justice upside-down", what does he mean by "turn justice upside down" anyway, does he not realise that most court cases, especially those taken under relatively new legislation are designed to challenge the robustness (or not) of those laws and that every single law that we follow, whether British or European or International, has had to face numerous challenges in court, indeed it could be argued that the very job of law practitioners is to challenge the law ?

And if right-wing lawyers would not attempt to "turn justice upside-down" does this mean in consequence that their right wing politics would prefer NOT to have human rights enshrined in international law ?
rumpelstiltskin wrote:
Littlejohn makes an eloquent point regarding these chancers.


The article raises a couple of good points, and then fills the rest of his contracted commitment to write an article of x-hundred words by simply prattling on about nothing much in particular, and therein lies the skill in deciphering newspaper journalist stories, pick out the relevant facts and disgard the remaining 98% of the story as mere opinion, flim-flam and filler.

He does make one pointed remark though...

But this is simply part of the much wider human rights racket, a scandalous conspiracy by unscrupulous Left-wing lawyers designed to turn justice upside down



Is he suggesting that right-wing lawyers would not deign to "turn justice upside-down", what does he mean by "turn justice upside down" anyway, does he not realise that most court cases, especially those taken under relatively new legislation are designed to challenge the robustness (or not) of those laws and that every single law that we follow, whether British or European or International, has had to face numerous challenges in court, indeed it could be argued that the very job of law practitioners is to challenge the law ?

And if right-wing lawyers would not attempt to "turn justice upside-down" does this mean in consequence that their right wing politics would prefer NOT to have human rights enshrined in international law ?
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman28357
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 17 200223 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
2nd May 24 20:2424th Oct 19 15:32LINK
Milestone Posts
25000
30000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
MACS0647-JD
Signature
Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total

Re: Lies, Lawyers, and a nice little earner. : Sat Dec 20, 2014 2:08 pm  
The crass Littlejohn, whose job is of course to be the standard bearer Wail reader on crack and stir the loins of Outraged of Chiping Sodbury, deliberately misses the point entirely. No sane person would dispute that it is reprehensible to advance fraudulent claims, as the claimants have reportedly done. The question is simple; do we or do we not want a system where IF a foreign prisoner has been abused / tortured etc., he can take any action against his abusers who even Littlejohn would concede ought not to break the law and torture prisoners. The fact that these claimants tried to pursue fake claims id irrelevant to the question of whether a person with a valid claim should be able to pursue it. Human Rights - as imbecilic ranters like Littlejohn know - is hardly a "conspiracy: The Human Rights Act 1998 was enacted by the sovereign Parliament of this country. It codifies into our law European Convention on Human Rights protections, into UK law. The Convention itself came into force in, er, 1953 so after 45 years of it, the government decided to formally incorporate it into law. To suggest that any of this is therefore a "racket" or some "conspiracy" is, frankly, nuts.
RankPostsTeam
Club Owner4195No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 29 200421 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
21st May 21 19:369th Apr 21 11:01LINK
Milestone Posts
2500
5000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: Lies, Lawyers, and a nice little earner. : Sat Dec 20, 2014 10:45 pm  
Ferocious Aardvark wrote:
On what basis does "it seem" so? Unless you have some evidence, I'm assuming that making a false claim is likely to get you collar felt in the normal way.

Or not. What do you think a "grope" in a restaurant would be worth? It is obvious you've no idea on what basis a claim might be valued, or how that process would work.

Not to me, it isn't. Why would they? Not only are such likely to lose, and very likely hit such lawyers hard in the pocket, they would risk getting struck off. Again, do you have a basis for this claim, - maybe even, god forbid, an "example" - or just a Daily Wail reader?

The reforms to employment rights were nothing more than a cynical windfall for the Tories big business chums. Tribunal claims are something like 80% down, simply because sacked people (who can now be sacked at a whim within 2 years) don't have any income with which to pay the fees. But maybe you can give examples of borderline vexatious claims that have won?

Don't worry, the government is putting 80% of them out of work too.


I have spent enough time around the legal profession to have witnessed:

Vexatious claims issued in the Employment Tribunal (prior to the introduction of fees). Because claimant solicitors knew respondent first would pay a few grand for to get rid of the claim, rather than fight it.

Letters of claim sent on near hopeless personal injury cases, in the hope the insurer would offer a quick settlement, most probably on a 50/50 basis. If it looked like the claim was going to be contested, it would be ditched.

Costs being grossly inflated.

As for the Savile stuff, it appears there is a fund in place that pretty much anyone can claim from. There are serious concerns that there is no proper mechanism to place to test the credibility of claimants. Considering the large amount of people claiming, it is inevitable that a number are fraudulent. Which is exactly what has happened with all the Phil Shiner / Leigh Day stuff.

I hope Shiner and Leigh Day get smashed by the SRA, and that a lot of the money paid to them is recovered by the public purse.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman28357
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 17 200223 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
2nd May 24 20:2424th Oct 19 15:32LINK
Milestone Posts
25000
30000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
MACS0647-JD
Signature
Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total

Re: Lies, Lawyers, and a nice little earner. : Sun Dec 21, 2014 2:09 am  
The Video Ref wrote:
I have spent enough time around the legal profession to have witnessed:

Vexatious claims issued in the Employment Tribunal (prior to the introduction of fees). Because claimant solicitors knew respondent first would pay a few grand for to get rid of the claim, rather than fight it.


There is a world of difference between such things occasionally happening, and your seeming view that it's nothing else but fraudulent applications. However your claim is plainly wrong since if this was really true, then why would these bent lawyers not simply sub the fees temporarily, get their payout and trebles all round as normal? It would just be a slightly different business model, adding some funding for fees wouldn't it?

The Video Ref wrote:
Letters of claim sent on near hopeless personal injury cases, in the hope the insurer would offer a quick settlement, most probably on a 50/50 basis. If it looked like the claim was going to be contested, it would be ditched.

Again, this can hardly be taken seriously. Whilst occasionally odd lawyers may waste their time and money flying hopeless kites, the plain fact is that no insurer is going to offer a quick settlement unless they think the chances of losing and paying more make it worth while. So plainly not a "near hopeless" case.

If there were lots of such "near hopeless" letters then there would be an almost identical number of near hopeless lawyers with near hopeless overdrafts, as there is a considerable cost involved just to reach the stage of even putting in a claim.

The Video Ref wrote:
Costs being grossly inflated.

Now you are just being stupid. Anyone who knows about the law, knows that solicitors' costs are - by a huge margin - THE most closely scrutinised of any job in the world. If there is a dispute, then a bill has to be filed, listing if necessary every letter written, every telephone call made, and accounting for every minute of time spent. Each of which can be and are analysed and assessed in detail at lengthy assessments. You also know the harsh penalties if a bill of costs is "grossly inflated" and you also know the cash penalties that canand do follow, regardless of the amount claimed, if a reasonable offer on costs turns out to have been wrongly refused. You also know that insurance companies invariably employ specialist lawyers whose sole skill and job is in relation to attacking each and every single element of solicitors bills. So if there are any costs being "grossly inflated" on occasion, it is irrelevant, what would be a problem is if such "grossly inflated" costs were actually being paid. You talk as if paying insurers were some sort of helpless ingenues that stump up, baffled at the enormity of the sums. You could not be more wrong.

The Video Ref wrote:
As for the Savile stuff, it appears there is a fund in place that pretty much anyone can claim from. There are serious concerns that there is no proper mechanism to place to test the credibility of claimants. Considering the large amount of people claiming, it is inevitable that a number are fraudulent.

Sadly for your argument though, these "serious concerns" were considered and dismissed by the Court of Appeal, no less, which was satisfied, despite you continuing to present the losing argument, that there were sufficient checks and balances in place. You are, of course, free to disagree with the Court of Appeal judges but I'll take their view over yours if that's OK.

The Video Ref wrote:
Which is exactly what has happened with all the Phil Shiner / Leigh Day stuff.

You seem to conflate a fraudulent claimant with fraudulent lawyers. What if the fraudulent claimant deceived the lawyers, though?

The Video Ref wrote:
I hope Shiner and Leigh Day get smashed by the SRA, and that a lot of the money paid to them is recovered by the public purse.

If they turn out to have been complicit, or failed in their duties, then at least we can agree on that, but with the caveat that so far nothing has yet been proved against them, so far as I know.
RankPostsTeam
Club Owner4195No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 29 200421 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
21st May 21 19:369th Apr 21 11:01LINK
Milestone Posts
2500
5000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530

Re: Lies, Lawyers, and a nice little earner. : Sun Dec 21, 2014 11:38 am  
Ferocious Aardvark wrote:
There is a world of difference between such things occasionally happening, and your seeming view that it's nothing else but fraudulent applications. However your claim is plainly wrong since if this was really true, then why would these bent lawyers not simply sub the fees temporarily, get their payout and trebles all round as normal? It would just be a slightly different business model, adding some funding for fees wouldn't it?


Because no law firm wants to pay hundreds (or thousands) of pounds in upfront fees, to fund a claim that will probably get struck out or ultimately defeated. Anyone would issue anything when there was no fees, and thus no risk to do so, since costs are almost never awarded in the ET. The idea was based around the fact that the Respondent would pay a few grand for the Claimant to go away, rather than thousands of pounds in legal fees to fight the claim. Back in 2012 I saw some research that the average cost in legal fees for responding to an ET claim was £8,500. If you can offer the Claimant £3,000 to go away, it made good business sense.

Again, this can hardly be taken seriously. Whilst occasionally odd lawyers may waste their time and money flying hopeless kites, the plain fact is that no insurer is going to offer a quick settlement unless they think the chances of losing and paying more make it worth while. So plainly not a "near hopeless" case.


I have personally seen hopeless cases settled on a 50/50 basis. Also, there are (or were) entire business models based on paralegals writing speculative letters of claim on complete and utter rubbish cases, with the intent being the claim would be ditched should the insurer deny liability.

If there were lots of such "near hopeless" letters then there would be an almost identical number of near hopeless lawyers with near hopeless overdrafts, as there is a considerable cost involved just to reach the stage of even putting in a claim.


Agreed. And there are. Many small law firms run 'in the red'. Also, there is no shortage of law firms going out of business.

Now you are just being stupid. Anyone who knows about the law, knows that solicitors' costs are - by a huge margin - THE most closely scrutinised of any job in the world. If there is a dispute, then a bill has to be filed, listing if necessary every letter written, every telephone call made, and accounting for every minute of time spent. Each of which can be and are analysed and assessed in detail at lengthy assessments. You also know the harsh penalties if a bill of costs is "grossly inflated" and you also know the cash penalties that canand do follow, regardless of the amount claimed, if a reasonable offer on costs turns out to have been wrongly refused. You also know that insurance companies invariably employ specialist lawyers whose sole skill and job is in relation to attacking each and every single element of solicitors bills. So if there are any costs being "grossly inflated" on occasion, it is irrelevant, what would be a problem is if such "grossly inflated" costs were actually being paid. You talk as if paying insurers were some sort of helpless ingenues that stump up, baffled at the enormity of the sums. You could not be more wrong.


Your argument is self-defeating. The fact there is so much scrutiny of solicitors' bills, and an entire industry built around arguing over costs, reflects the concerns about grossly inflated legal bills. This is also another reason that the Government has introduced fixed-fees for many types of cases.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman28357
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 17 200223 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
2nd May 24 20:2424th Oct 19 15:32LINK
Milestone Posts
25000
30000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
MACS0647-JD
Signature
Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total

Re: Lies, Lawyers, and a nice little earner. : Sun Dec 21, 2014 3:17 pm  
The Video Ref wrote:
...
I have personally seen hopeless cases settled on a 50/50 basis.

You still don't get it. A settled claim is what everyone but you calls a "WIN". By definition it was not therefore "hopeless".

The Video Ref wrote:
...Agreed. And there are. Many small law firms run 'in the red'. Also, there is no shortage of law firms going out of business.

Indeed and it is accelerating, kind of torpedoes the argument that fat cat lawyers are making easy millions doesn't it?

The Video Ref wrote:
...Your argument is self-defeating. The fact there is so much scrutiny of solicitors' bills, and an entire industry built around arguing over costs, reflects the concerns about grossly inflated legal bills. [/quote
No it doesn't. You either are being deliberately obtuse, or else you know zero about the history of legal csts and the development of the taxation system (now assessment). Also, the system has been in place for so long and become so established largely because paying parties, usually insurers, seized on every chance to attack costs and delay payment. It does not reflect anything of the sort. It reflects that historically it has been difficult for parties to reach agreement as to costs. The fact that in the majority of cases they did eventually reach agreement and the fact that the majority of taxations were settled in favour of the receivinbg party debunks your argument.
The Video Ref wrote:
.. This is also another reason that the Government has introduced fixed-fees for many types of cases.

ROFL. You probably know perfectly well that the government is in the pockets of big business, of which insurers are part, and are cynically seeking to remove as far as possible the ability of ordinary people with little or no money from having equal access to justice. It is the same in injury claims, as it is in employment claims, as it is in criminal cases, as it is in judicial review, as it is in human rights. These shysters are intent on dismantling what was once the best legal system and most just legal system in the world, and are doing a damn good job for their paymasters, even if Grayling keeps getting a pasting from the courts and has to lie to parliament to con legislation through.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman18060No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 27 200223 years327th
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: Lies, Lawyers, and a nice little earner. : Sun Dec 21, 2014 10:46 pm  
Who agrees the hourly rate? is it a fixed amount or can a firm charge what they like an hour? I would imagine the hourly rate of a partner at Clifford Chase or DLA will be somewhat higher than for Whittaker Firth in Bradford for the same work?
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman28357
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 17 200223 yearsN/A
OnlineLast PostLast Page
2nd May 24 20:2424th Oct 19 15:32LINK
Milestone Posts
25000
30000
Milestone Years
0510 1520 2530
Location
MACS0647-JD
Signature
Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total

Re: Lies, Lawyers, and a nice little earner. : Mon Dec 22, 2014 4:26 pm  
Sal Paradise wrote:
Who agrees the hourly rate? is it a fixed amount or can a firm charge what they like an hour? I would imagine the hourly rate of a partner at Clifford Chase or DLA will be somewhat higher than for Whittaker Firth in Bradford for the same work?


The client agrees the hourly rate. It most often comes into question when it comes to someone else paying (though clients have the same right to ask a court to asses any solicitors bill anyway). The Court Service publishes guideline rates for different grades of lawyers, and for different areas of the country, they are only guidelines but you'd do very well to get higher than guideline rates paid.
User avatar
RankPostsTeam
International Chairman18060No
Team
Selected
JoinedServiceReputation
Feb 27 200223 years327th
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: Lies, Lawyers, and a nice little earner. : Tue Dec 23, 2014 10:01 pm  
Ferocious Aardvark wrote:
The client agrees the hourly rate. It most often comes into question when it comes to someone else paying (though clients have the same right to ask a court to asses any solicitors bill anyway). The Court Service publishes guideline rates for different grades of lawyers, and for different areas of the country, they are only guidelines but you'd do very well to get higher than guideline rates paid.


So the top firms will be subsidising cases as there is no way the fees they charge for non court stuff i.e. M&A work would be stomached by the courts? So DLA have charge less for work in Yorkshire than for the exact same work in London?
Previous

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 158 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
1m
Accounts
Ckt2487
134
32m
How many games will we win
Kirmudgeonly
8
40m
Game - Song Titles
Boss Hog
40737
42m
BORED The Band Name Game
Boss Hog
63226
43m
Film game
Boss Hog
5644
45m
2024
imwakefieldt
6
Recent
2025 KIT Thread
dddooommm
3
Recent
Salford
TF and the w
13
Recent
New Players
Halfdan of t
138
Recent
2025 Recruitment
dddooommm
199
FORUM
LAST
VIEW
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
1m
Shopping list for 2025
mwindass
5578
1m
New Players
Halfdan of t
138
1m
War of the Roses
ratticusfinc
30
2m
BORED The Band Name Game
Boss Hog
63226
2m
Rumours thread
Scarlet Pimp
2515
2m
Noah Booth out on loan
Trin e ti
21
2m
2025 Recruitment
dddooommm
199
3m
Leeds away first up
Butcher
41
3m
Assistant Coach - Langley
exiledrhino
30
3m
2025 fixtures
Smiffy27
15
FORUM
NEW
TOPICS
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
TODAY
2024
imwakefieldt
6
TODAY
Dan Norman Retires
Cokey
1
TODAY
How many games will we win
Kirmudgeonly
8
TODAY
Leigh Leopards - 2025 Fixtures
ColD
2
TODAY
Catalan Away
Dannyboywt1
6
TODAY
2025 Betfred Super League Fixtures
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
2025 fixtures
Smiffy27
15
TODAY
Fixtures
Willzay
13
TODAY
Salford
TF and the w
13
TODAY
WCC Off
Choc Ice
11
TODAY
Leeds away first up
Butcher
41
TODAY
Jake McLoughlin
Wanderer
1
TODAY
Assistant Coach - Langley
exiledrhino
30
TODAY
Noah Booth out on loan
Trin e ti
21
TODAY
Luke Gale testimonial match
BarnsleyGull
2
TODAY
England 5 - 0 Ireland
Sadfish
1
TODAY
Magic Weekend 2025 - Back To Newcastle
RLFANS News
1
NEWS ITEMS
VIEWS
2025 Betfred Super League Fixt..
543
Magic Weekend 2025 - Back To N..
537
England Beat Samoa To Take Tes..
1279
England's Women Demolish The W..
1107
England Beat Samoa Comfortably..
1349
Operational Rules Tribunal –..
1136
IMG-RFL club gradings released..
1405
Wakefield Trinity Win Champion..
1939
Hunslet Secure Promotion After..
2153
Trinity Into Play Off Final Af..
2395
Wigan Warriors Crowned Champio..
1963
York Valkyrie Win Back to Back..
2201
Hunslet Book Relegation Play O..
2666
Penrith Panthers Secure Fourth..
2097
Wigan Humiliate Leigh For Gran..
2170
RLFANS Match Centre
Matches on TV
Thu 13th Feb
SL
20:00
Wigan-Leigh
Fri 14th Feb
SL
20:00
Hull KR-Castleford
SL
20:00
Catalans-Hull FC
Sat 15th Feb
SL
15:00
Leeds - Wakefield
SL
17:30
St.Helens-Salford
Sun 16th Feb
SL
15:00
Huddersfield-Warrington
Thu 20th Feb
SL
20:00
Wakefield - Hull KR
Fri 21st Feb
SL
20:00
Warrington-Catalans
SL
20:00
Hull FC-Wigan
Sat 22nd Feb
SL
15:00
Salford-Leeds
SL
20:00
Castleford-St.Helens
Sun 23rd Feb
SL
14:30
Leigh-Huddersfield
Thu 6th Mar
SL
20:00
Hull FC-Leigh
Fri 7th Mar
SL
20:00
Castleford-Salford
SL
20:00
St.Helens-Hull KR
Sat 8th Mar
SL
17:30
Catalans-Leeds
Sun 9th Mar
SL
17:30
Warrington - Wakefield
SL
17:30
Wigan-Huddersfield
Thu 20th Mar
SL
20:00
Salford-Huddersfield
Fri 21st Mar
SL
20:00
St.Helens-Warrington
This is an inplay table and live positions can change.
Mens Betfred Super League XXVIII ROUND : 1
 PLDFADIFFPTS
Wigan 29 768 338 430 48
Hull KR 29 731 344 387 44
Warrington 29 769 351 418 42
Leigh 29 580 442 138 33
Salford 28 556 561 -5 32
St.Helens 28 618 411 207 30
 
Catalans 27 475 427 48 30
Leeds 27 530 488 42 28
Huddersfield 27 468 658 -190 20
Castleford 27 425 735 -310 15
Hull FC 27 328 894 -566 6
LondonB 27 317 916 -599 6
This is an inplay table and live positions can change.
Betfred Championship 2024 ROUND : 1
 PLDFADIFFPTS
Wakefield 27 1032 275 757 52
Toulouse 26 765 388 377 37
Bradford 28 723 420 303 36
York 29 695 501 194 32
Widnes 27 561 502 59 29
Featherstone 27 634 525 109 28
 
Sheffield 26 626 526 100 28
Doncaster 26 498 619 -121 25
Halifax 26 509 650 -141 22
Batley 26 422 591 -169 22
Swinton 28 484 676 -192 20
Barrow 25 442 720 -278 19
Whitehaven 25 437 826 -389 18
Dewsbury 27 348 879 -531 4
Hunslet 1 6 10 -4 0
RLFANS Recent Posts
FORUM
LAST
POST
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
1m
Accounts
Ckt2487
134
32m
How many games will we win
Kirmudgeonly
8
40m
Game - Song Titles
Boss Hog
40737
42m
BORED The Band Name Game
Boss Hog
63226
43m
Film game
Boss Hog
5644
45m
2024
imwakefieldt
6
Recent
2025 KIT Thread
dddooommm
3
Recent
Salford
TF and the w
13
Recent
New Players
Halfdan of t
138
Recent
2025 Recruitment
dddooommm
199
FORUM
LAST
VIEW
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
1m
Shopping list for 2025
mwindass
5578
1m
New Players
Halfdan of t
138
1m
War of the Roses
ratticusfinc
30
2m
BORED The Band Name Game
Boss Hog
63226
2m
Rumours thread
Scarlet Pimp
2515
2m
Noah Booth out on loan
Trin e ti
21
2m
2025 Recruitment
dddooommm
199
3m
Leeds away first up
Butcher
41
3m
Assistant Coach - Langley
exiledrhino
30
3m
2025 fixtures
Smiffy27
15
FORUM
NEW
TOPICS
TOPIC
POSTER
POSTS
TODAY
2024
imwakefieldt
6
TODAY
Dan Norman Retires
Cokey
1
TODAY
How many games will we win
Kirmudgeonly
8
TODAY
Leigh Leopards - 2025 Fixtures
ColD
2
TODAY
Catalan Away
Dannyboywt1
6
TODAY
2025 Betfred Super League Fixtures
RLFANS News
1
TODAY
2025 fixtures
Smiffy27
15
TODAY
Fixtures
Willzay
13
TODAY
Salford
TF and the w
13
TODAY
WCC Off
Choc Ice
11
TODAY
Leeds away first up
Butcher
41
TODAY
Jake McLoughlin
Wanderer
1
TODAY
Assistant Coach - Langley
exiledrhino
30
TODAY
Noah Booth out on loan
Trin e ti
21
TODAY
Luke Gale testimonial match
BarnsleyGull
2
TODAY
England 5 - 0 Ireland
Sadfish
1
TODAY
Magic Weekend 2025 - Back To Newcastle
RLFANS News
1
NEWS ITEMS
VIEWS
2025 Betfred Super League Fixt..
543
Magic Weekend 2025 - Back To N..
537
England Beat Samoa To Take Tes..
1279
England's Women Demolish The W..
1107
England Beat Samoa Comfortably..
1349
Operational Rules Tribunal –..
1136
IMG-RFL club gradings released..
1405
Wakefield Trinity Win Champion..
1939
Hunslet Secure Promotion After..
2153
Trinity Into Play Off Final Af..
2395
Wigan Warriors Crowned Champio..
1963
York Valkyrie Win Back to Back..
2201
Hunslet Book Relegation Play O..
2666
Penrith Panthers Secure Fourth..
2097
Wigan Humiliate Leigh For Gran..
2170


Visit the RLFANS.COM SHOP
for more merchandise!