Tigers get cap fine halved, Pascoe back

Wests Tigers CEO Justin Pascoe will return from his NRL-imposed ban in June.
Wests Tigers CEO Justin Pascoe will return from his NRL-imposed ban in June.

The Wests Tigers have had their $750,000 salary cap fine halved and been allowed to welcome provisionally deregistered chief executive Justin Pascoe back to the game in June.

The NRL on Friday handed down their final ruling on the Tigers' punishment for failing to declare an ambassadorial role offered to Robbie Farah.

As part of the sanctions, the Tigers will also have $319,500 stripped from both this and next year's salary cap to meet the $639,000 offer to Farah, which was not disclosed to the NRL.

It means the Tigers will likely have to release one player by June 30 in order to fill their 30-man roster and fit under the cap.

However no player will need to be immediately moved on before the start of the season, with their current 29-man squad under the salary cap ahead of their round-one clash with Manly.

That may be partly due to the NRL's refusal to register the contract of forward Zane Musgrove, who is fighting an indecent assault charge.

Yet the news was largely positive for the Tigers, as Pascoe had originally been deregistered by the NRL when the original findings were announced in December.

His ban will now be just six months backdated, meaning he can return to his post as soon as June 19 following the mid-season representative round break.

The NRL says the penalty deduction and Pascoe's reprieve come after the club accepted their fault in the dealings.

According to the NRL's investigation, the Tigers had used the ambassadorial offer to induce Farah to leave the club at the end of the 2016 season.

The club on Friday accepted the sanctions, but insisted they didn't attempt to act against the rules of the game by not disclosing the offer to Farah.

"Our initial instinct that the club had not breached the cap was not correct after assessing all of the compiled evidence alongside the NRL rules," the Tigers board said in a statement.

"We now accept that we should have declared the Ambassador agreement as part of the salary cap. We apologise to the NRL for our initial response.

"We look forward to welcoming back our CEO Justin Pascoe in June and would like to acknowledge the strain this has placed on him and his family."

Australian Associated Press