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Sevens superstars tell Rugby Australia they want to play NRLW
A tug-of-war for the services of rugby sevens golden girls Maddison and Teagan Levi has broken out after Rugby Australia rejected an approach from the pair to play in the NRLW next year.
The sisters, who have become the faces of Australian women’s rugby following their starring roles at the Paris Olympics, have attracted interest from NRLW clubs Wests Tigers and Gold Coast Titans for the 2025 season.
Teagan, 21, and Maddison, 22, stand to earn up to $100,000 as marquee players for a maximum 13-week stint in the competition next year, when the NRLW expands to 12 teams with the introduction of the Bulldogs and Warriors.
That sum is almost as much as the sisters earn in a year under their fulltime contracts with Rugby Australia, which expire at the end of 2026.
There is no crossover between the Sevens circuit and the NRLW season, which goes from the end of July through to the grand final on the first weekend in October.
But Rugby Australia chief executive Phil Waugh and director of high-performance Peter Horne have knocked back the sisters’ request, saying the sisters should make themselves available for the Wallaroos’ World Cup campaign next year.
The women’s World Cup will be played in the UK in August and September – the same time as the NRLW competition will be running.
Sources with knowledge of the situation talking on the condition of anonymity told the Herald the sisters – who have also played for the Gold Coast Suns in AFLW – have indicated they are reluctant to play 15-a-side rugby and would prefer to earn the extra money available in rugby league.
Australia are not expected to be major contenders at the World Cup, with New Zealand, England, Canada and France the world’s top four sides, according to the rankings.
An RA official said the sisters were contracted to rugby and head office expected them to fulfil their obligations.
The sisters’ manager Mat Rogers, a decorated dual international with the Wallabies and the Kangaroos, said on Tuesdays that conversations with RA were ongoing.
“Our priority at Rogers Sports Management is Maddie and Teagan Levi,” Rogers said. “We understand that rugby has afforded them an amazing opportunity, but these young women are phenomenal athletes in demand in three codes; AFL, rugby league and rugby union. They are currently contracted to rugby union.
“There’s no doubt we will honour that contract but we’re always exploring ways to maximise the earning capacity of our girls that best suits their future. There has been an appetite to explore it, but with the Women’s Rugby World Cup on the horizon, it doesn’t look likely they will be afforded the opportunity to play.”
There is a limited window for the sisters to maximise their potential earnings by juggling rugby and NRLW.
The NRLW’s 11-round regular season won’t clash with the Sevens tour in 2025, but the NRL has plans to move to a 17-team competition in the near future and any expansion of the women’s season would cause an overlap with sevens, closing the window for athletes to compete in both competitions.
Waugh said he expected the Levis to remain in rugby for the long term.
“Maddison and Teagan are world-class players and highly valued by Australian rugby,” Waugh told the Herald. “They were the talk of the rugby world after their brilliant performances at the Paris Olympics.
“We look forward to the Levis playing leading roles in more major tournament success in rugby in the years ahead.”
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