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‘I’d carve up’: NRL star ‘100 per cent’ open to rugby switch

By Finn Morton
(L-R) Hudson Young, Josh Addo-Carr, Nathan Cleary and James Tedesco of the Blues stand during the singing of the national anthem before game one of the 2023 State of Origin series between the Queensland Maroons and New South Wales Blues at Adelaide Oval on May 31, 2023 in Adelaide, Australia. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

NRL star Josh Addo-Carr believes he’d “carve up” rugby union as the New South Wales Blues and Australia Kangaroos representatives expressed an interest in jumping codes.

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Addo-Carr, who was famously branded “the fastest man on the planet” by Phil Gould during a State of Origin clash, is a dual-premiership winner with the Melbourne Storm.

The 28-year-old made a big-money move back to Sydney with the Canterbury Bulldogs ahead of the 2022 NRL season, and the speedster is open to another headline-grabbing move down the track.

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While Addo-Carr has not been publicly identified as a cross-code target for Rugby Australia, the Rugby League World Cup winner is “100 per cent” open to a shock move to the 15-player game.

“Scott Wisemantel did a little pre-season up with them in Lennon Head,” Addo-Carr told Josh Mansour on the Let’s Trot Show.

“I reckon I’d carve up.

“Bruh, 100 per cent… Yeah, 100 per cent. I reckon it’d be fun. Meet new people, travel the world. I’ll give it a crack bro. Yeah, why not?”

Rugby Australia signed Sydney Roosters flyer Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii to a lucrative multi-year deal earlier this year, with the teenager expected to play a leading role against the British and Irish Lions in 2025.

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While that decision made headlines at the time as RA claimed one over their rival code the NRL, CEO Phil Waugh has ruled out throwing big cheques at rugby league’s finest – which is possibly a concern as Addo-Carr would seemingly cost a fair amount to sign.

“I keep talking about being fiscally responsible because the game historically has spent more than we can afford,” Waugh said, as reported by AAP.

“Which is why then I come back to what’s the environment that we’re creating to attract players?

“So it’s not just all about money. You don’t want to be attracting people just because of the money and then you don’t have the environment sorted out.

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“So we can’t ignore the fact that we’ve got athletes, not just rugby league targeting them, but you’ll have overseas clubs target them as well from a rugby perspective.

“And we need to ensure that we’re creating an environment that people want to be here and we’re filling stadiums and it’s a real buzz around the game that we’ve experienced previously.

“But we’re certainly not there right now.”

But the idea that Addo-Carr is interested in a switch comes as a breath of fresh air for rugby union in Australia amidst a transitional period for the sport.

Eddie Jones recently resigned as the Wallabies’ head coach after Australia failed to make it out of the Rugby World Cup pool stage for the first time.

Six member union states also publicly expressed their disapproval of Rugby Australia chairman Hamish McLennan, who has since moved on from the role and been replaced.

Wallabies wing Mark Nawaqanitawase, who is widely considered one of the best young rugby talents in the country, has also reportedly met with the Sydney Roosters over a possible move.

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