Cue the outrage, Green Machine fans. The NRL is hoping to come back earlier than most expected but it's set to come with a major pricetag.
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The NRL is reportedly considering wiping the slate clean for all teams when the competition restarts, which means stripping the Canberra Raiders of their four competition points.
The Raiders beat the Gold Coast Titans and the New Zealand Warriors in their first games of the season before play was stopped because of coronavirus concerns.
Canberra was one of six unbeaten teams when the competition was suspended. And while it's only a minimal amount, it is already dividing fans for what is set to divide players, coaches and supporters.
You only have to look back at the past 15 years to understand how big the decision is for the Raiders.
The Raiders have won back to back games to start a season just twice since 2005. Twice. And now they face the prospect of having those wins stripped away.
Raiders players are training in pairs or individually to stay fit as the NRL works on models to restart the season as early as possible.
One option being considered is splitting the competition into two conferences, with the Raiders to be put in a pool with non-Sydney teams.
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Paul Gallen doubts whether players will last a month under an NRL proposal to house teams in compounds in a bid to resume the competition, saying they may not come out the other side as "normal human beings".
The NRL is believed to be discussing plans to build four "bubble" communities to adhere to the government's strict self-isolation policy to help curb the spread of the coronavirus.
The "bubble" will feature four teams each as the NRL explores ways to re-start the competition by June.
Melbourne Storm football boss Frank Ponissi revealed north Queensland, Brisbane/Sunshine Coast, NSW's Central Coast and Canberra were proposed locations.
If we lock players away in isolated communities for three or four months, maybe more, do you expect them just to be normal human beings coming out the other side?
- Paul Gallen
Gallen claimed players would not last long living together in a compound.
"If we lock players away in isolated communities for three or four months, maybe more, do you expect them just to be normal human beings coming out the other side? It's a big question mark," Gallen wrote on the Wide World of Sports website.
"I know they want to do it. They need to earn money to feed their families and pay the bills ... (and) they've got a competitive streak and simply want to play. But I don't think they've thought past the first month. An NRL squad has 30 players, meaning 30 different personalities. Some guys could handle this plan, some couldn't and you could hardly blame them."
Gallen believed he got an insight into what the players would face living in isolation together while on an eight-week 2013 World Cup campaign.
"By the fifth week, some blokes had had enough. And that was when we were touring some of the great cities of the world," he said.
"Blokes were missing home and family so much that they'd had enough, just halfway through.
"So consider the sacrifice that players could be asked to make now. If these guys can get it done ... I take my hat off to them."
Gallen also believed the NRL "bubble" plan faced a financial obstacle: "Who's footing the bill for 20 or more players, plus all the club staff you might need, to go and live in one of these isolated compounds?"