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One sliding door moment could tip the scales. That is why it matters that Supreme Court justices approach equity seriously and are not swayed by even the loudest of drumbeats. Especially now, after Peter V’landys, the NRL’s Commander-In-Chief and self-proclaimed custodian, along with national coach Kevin Walters, have ventured into territory that invites the Eels’ case to be nuked or trimmed down.

As an Eels supporter of more than 45 years, disappointment barely covers it. I can’t recall ever feeling this let down by the game’s leadership.

For months, V’landys assumed near-biblical authority, publicly championing tougher new anti-tampering laws for contract sanctity, player loyalty over R360 money grabs, and ten-year bans for any player who entered into agreements with R360.

Court discovery documents have been revealing. They shows Zac Lomax entered into a provisional contract with R360 prior to his release from the Eels. Then, after R360 collapsed, he entered into another NRL contract with the Storm, which was officially uploaded before the Eels’ consent and in breach of the release terms. Those matters are capable of supporting an inference of a fait accompli and bad faith.

Against that backdrop, V’landys’ apparent backflips, and the willingness to look the other way —because Lomax is "human" and one of the game's "best players"— is striking. That begs a question: how does contract sanctity, bad-faith deeds, anti-tampering, and tough talk apply to all the other humans in the game?

Prima facie, the Lomax case initially seemed simple.

Lomax wanted out early to leave the NRL and play rugby union with R360. The Eels agreed to a conditional release on strict and express terms that were clear, lawyered, made in good faith, and registered. If he wanted back into the NRL, he needed the Eels’ consent. That was the deal. Everything was by the book.

The restraint was not designed to punish him arbitrarily. It was designed to protect the Eels from a very real and foreseeable risk: losing a contracted marquee player for nothing, only to see him immediately resurface at a rival club. That is a textbook legitimate business interest.

The uncomfortable truth is this case is not a slam dunk. That likely explains why, after weeks of radio silence assessing where the case sits, the game’s regulator weighed in to help frame the public narrative.

The NSW Exception and the Two Limbs

In Australia, restraints of trade do not live solely in contract law. They sit firmly in the courts of equity. The question is not simply what does the contract say, but whether it is fair to enforce the restraint in these circumstances.

NSW is different. Unlike all other states, its courts have the power to read down or trim restraints. A restraint that is too broad or unfairly applied can be narrowed, modified, or set aside altogether. A three-year exclusion is therefore not immune from scrutiny.

Under the Restraints of Trade Act 1976 (NSW), the Supreme Court may uphold or read down a restraint only if two limbs are satisfied:

  • the restraint protects a legitimate business interest and goes no further than is reasonably necessary to protect that interest; and
  • enforcement of the restraint is in the public interest.

V’landys and Walters did not merely support Lomax. They fired missiles at both limbs underpinning the Eels’ case.

“Look, it’s always been my view to keep our best players,” V’landys told Code sport yesterday in a passionate defence of Lomax.

“I’m looking at it in two ways. Firstly, Zac is a human being and secondly, as far as rugby league is concerned, my job is to have the best players playing rugby league,” directly engaging the public-interest limb.

“We all make mistakes. He’s made a mistake in thinking, but let’s not crucify the guy.

“Zac went down a different path, but at the same time, don’t over-penalise him," implicitly cautioning against an overly punitive restraint.

Walters echoed that position. On a nuclear megaphone.

“I bet Zac Lomax is playing in the NRL this year,” Walters said on his Inside Ball podcast dated 4 February.

“Is it fair on them (Parramatta Eels) to say to Zac Lomax you cannot play in the NRL ...(but) it’s a restriction of trade."

“This guy has a timeline of his official capacity to earn money."

“Contracts don’t mean anything. I had a contract with the Broncos (when Walters was dismissed in 2024). I didn’t get paid out. I got paid nowhere near the amount I was owed."

“Yes, Lomax asked to leave. He could go back to the Eels but they don’t want him."

“The clubs don’t care about players, all the time they are getting them on the players’ market."

“I’m defending Zac Lomax (right) to play the game."

“Zac Lomax will be playing for the Melbourne Storm ... but he won’t be playing in round 1 against the Eels."

The good news is none of this decides the case. But in NSW, it is not irrelevant either.

The Central Plank

The case may hinge on a narrow but decisive window — likely sometime in December 2025 — from the moment R360 delayed its launch to the point at which Lomax is proven on the evidence to have committed to the Storm.

If Lomax first approached the Eels seeking to return, but was rejected, as claimed by his camp, it could be problematic. Equity courts may be reluctant to enforce a restraint that effectively says we do not want you and you cannot work at the same time. In that scenario, a three-year restraint running to 31 October 2028 may begin to look punitive rather than protective and could be trimmed or other relief granted.

If, however, Lomax first committed to the Storm, the ground shifts the other way. That would point towards bad faith, a breach of the release agreement, and an attempt to present the Eels with a fait accompli. Equity does not generally protect parties who seek to have it both ways.

Discovery materials points in that direction, as does Lomax’s provisional R360 contract entered into prior to his release.

It also remains an open question whether Lomax was acting in good faith when he allegedly asked to return to the Eels was raised, or whether it followed a familiar pattern shown by court discovery. That question should not be understated. Under Jason Ryles, the Eels have demonstrated flexibility for short-term arrangements such as Jonah Pezet’s one-year deal, and second chances for players who have strayed, such as Bailey Simonsson.

Matt Tripp, Storm CEO, also told the SMH on 4 February 2026, “I engaged with Zac over the two weeks leading up to Christmas (around Dec 11th around the time Lomax was exploring Super Rugby options) and it wasn’t until the new year that he agreed that if Parramatta would release him, he would come to Melbourne, but only after trying to do the right thing by asking Parramatta if they’d take him back."

The key point is the suggestion Lomax approached the Eels after talking to Tripp about his future. It stretches credulity that there wasn't some form of provisional or conditional agreement even if it was verbal. Storm's subsequent lodging of a contract with Lomax without formally approaching the Eels for consent adds more weight to the fait accompli bad-faith argument.

In the end, it may all come down to proof of who moved first.

That is the fork in the road. And whatever the surrounding noise, equity will not be distracted by spin or sideshow. It will ask whether the restraint protects a legitimate business interest, or whether it operates to punish a player who, on one view, had nowhere else to go.

Strip everything else away, and that is the question that matters.

 

 

 

Note: This piece is based on informal discussions and spitballing with an experienced lawyer practising in restraints, equity and contract law. It is speculative opinion only and not legal advice. The analysis may change as further discovery and evidence emerges.

 

 

 

 

LOMAX TIMELINE
BACKGROUND
• 02 Apr 2024 — Lomax granted early release from Dragons (2025–26)
• 16 Apr 2024 — Signs 4-year deal with Eels (2025–28)
R360/ CONDITIONAL RELEASE PHASE 
• July–Nov 25 — Signs provisional R360 contract, conditional on Eels release
• July–Aug 25 — Requests a release from the Eels
• 15  Oct 2025 — ARLC announces 10-year R360 bans on players with R360 agreements
• 16 Nov 2025 — Eels grant release, registered with NRL
• 19 Nov 2025 — Lomax agents cut ties with R360
• 29 Nov 2025 — R360 delays, announce launch in 2028
RUGBY UNION FALLBACK OPTIONS/ STORM TALKS
• 02 Dec 2025 — Meets Western Force
• 11 Dec 2025 — Trip says he talked to Lomax about his future (Tripp tells media)
• 11 Dec 2025 — Lomax tell Tripp he will approach Eels first do the "right thing" (says Tripp)
• 12 Dec 2025 — Rugby Australia confirms interest
• 18 Dec 2025 — Super Rugby offers reportedly ~$400-450k + top-ups
R360 / CONDITIONAL RELEASE PHASE 
• July–Nov 25 — Signs provisional R360 contract, conditional on Eels release
• July–Aug 25 — Requests a release from the Eels
• 15  Oct 2025 — ARLC announces 10-year R360 bans on players with R360 agreements
• 16 Nov 2025 — Eels grant release, registered with NRL
• 19 Nov 2025 — Lomax agents cut ties with R360
• 29 Nov 2025 — R360 delays, announce launch in 2028
RUGBY UNION FALLBACK OPTIONS/ STORM TALKS
• 02 Dec 2025 — Meets Western Force
• 11 Dec 2025 — Trip says he talked to Lomax about his future (Tripp tells media)
• 11 Dec 2025 — Lomax tell Tripp he will approach Eels first do the "right thing" (says Tripp)
• 12 Dec 2025 — Rugby Australia confirms interest
• 18 Dec 2025 — Super Rugby offers reportedly ~$400-450k + top-ups
STORM MAKE CONTRACT MOVES WITHOUT EELS CONSENT (Court Discovery)/ESCALATION
• Early Jan — Storm lodge contract BUT DO NOT formally ask for Eels consent (court discovery)
• 06 Jan 2026 — Lomax seeks Storm move + unconditional release (media release)
• 15 Jan 2026 — Eels refuse unless “appropriate exchange of value” (media release)
• 22 Jan 2026 — Eels commence legal action to enforce Deed of Release

CRITICAL EQUITY WINDOW
• Dec 2025 likely
• Lomax camp says: Lomax/agents asked Eels first about returning
• Eels' allegedly says no (restraint evolves to NRL ban)
BUT
• Discovery shows a Storm contract was uploaded to the NRL “Gateway” portal
• Discovery shows upload occurred before the Storm formally approached Eels (bad-faith)
• Suggestions of bad-faith and possible contract breaches
• Lomax appeared to be in talks with Storm prior to asking the Eels to return (Matt Tripp, Storm CEO)
• This sequencing could be a key equity question

COURT / DISCOVERY
• 03 Feb 2026 — Moses SC tells court discovery shows:
    * Provisional R360 contract pre-release (bad-faith move)
    * Storm agreement pre-consent (bad-faith move)
    * NRL portal upload expecting a fait accompli (bad-faith move)
• 09 Feb 2026 — Directions hearing
• March 2026 — Hearing anticipated (or 12–13 Feb)

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    • A Tripp to the Beach....I hope Matt kicks sand in his face and steals his girlfriend

      • LOL Randy

    • It's Howarth and 400k or see you in court buddy 🤣

    • They met and didn't agree an outcome. Court is still the option.

  • Hearing has now been pushed into March, Storm and Vlandys crying in a corner 🤣🤣

    • Let's make it September LOL.

  • I agree HOE

    I hope the supreme court justice is not some out of touch elite hell bent on some nuanced point of law and lets Lomax and Melbourne off.

    a lot on the line here

    • PG,

      He’s already shown he’s not willing to be rushed into a decision by the Lomax camp to suit them.

      From all accounts, he’s a straight shooter and an excellent judge. I believe he’s a former equity barrister as well, so he’s experienced and understands the entire gamut.

      Also, we couldn’t have hired better counsel in Arthur Moses SC.

      Assuming it gets heard in March, I wouldn’t be surprised if we won, but with some trimmings. A NSW full win or full loss would surprise me more. We’ll have to wait and see. There is also a very narrow window for a swap deal.

      Honestly, I don’t think this will end up being a precedent wrecker for contract sanctity.

      At worst, it could make clubs far more wary of releases and more inclined to play hard ball to protect their interests, particularly given PLV is discretionary and selective and courts aren’t easy on restraints, even when done in good faith and by the book, as ours was.

      Short term, V’landys’ actions may be a sugar hit for broadcasters, and possibly the Storm. Long term, though, the inconsistency of his messaging and application of the rules won’t necessarily be good for the game

      For example, it could mean less flex or give for some players’ personal circumstances at times. A contract with a playing obligation is a lot easier to enforce, as we saw with the SBW and Tallis sit outs. This, potentially more litigation and poorer optics for the game.

      The new anti-tampering laws, which came into effect less than a week before V’landys broke his weeks of radio silence on the matter, were introduced “to preserve the integrity of NRL Playing Contracts” protecting players and clubs. So it says. The Storm’s actions were a breach of that. Yet V’landys sidestepped that in his passionate support for Lomax, while taking aim at our case and the nature of its contract sanctity.

      Could you imagine him doing this to Roosters, Dogs or Rabbits to the likes of Nick Politis, Arthur Laundy, James Packer or Cannon-Brooks? The one thing that we have shown is how a club who may not get V'landys' rub of the green need to stand up for themselves: legal means and public transparency of the bollocks.

      All this could come back to bite both V’landys and the game as clubs quickly learn the lessons from this and adapt.

      If V'landy's is prudent he'll push a swap deal to help the Eels and all parties, a win-win, showing good faith, avoiding the March hearing and putting an end to it. 

      Time will tell with all of this...

      • particularly given PLV is discretionary and selective...that is a super polite way to describe corruption.

        were introduced “to preserve the integrity of NRL...difficult to acheive when the man at the top is discretionary and selective.

        a club who may not get V'landys' rub of the green...back to the congenial corruption

        If V'landy's is prudent...that is one big IF.

        I have been wondering whether Walkers statement, as Aust coach, seriously undermine our argument re  Plank 2: enforcement of the restraint is in the public interestThere are many angles of public interest to choose from.... Does our large fanbase count as "public interest"?  Would the justice give walkers public statements weight? 

        It worries me that the national team holds a large "public interest" factor

         

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