IT has been postponed, but the fourth edition of the Western Women's Rugby League season still promises to be the biggest yet with an expanded draw and a new club on the agenda.
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With the initial kick-off date for the season, September 18, not being possible given the current COVID-19 lockdowns and health regulations in New South Wales, member clubs agreed to postpone the competition until 2022.
At this stage no concrete dates have been set, but NSWRL Western Regional Manager Evan Jones said it is planned to start in late February or early March with an April grand final.
"Hopefully, if everything goes to plan, that timeslot coming off the back of summer when people are outside and hopefully with a high rate of double dose vaccinations as well, we should be fairly safe to commence then," he said.
"That means it won't overlap with the league tag season and we are just waiting on the Western calendar as to where it will sit exactly."
Prior to the COVID-19 lockdown of regional New South Wales, it was planned to run an expanded WWRL competition of eight rounds plus a top four finals series.
Jones said that a longer-format is still a possibility, especially if a new club joins those already involved - the Bathurst-based Panorama Platypi, Orange Vipers, Mid West Brumbies, Wiradjuri Goannas, Castlereagh Cougars and Woodbridge.
"There's a possibility it will still be a longer format and there's the potential of an expansion club to come in given we've got six months before the start of the season as opposed to what we were working on before," he said.
"At the moment there is a bit of an overflow in most age groups from Woodbridge Cup and Wiradjuri Goannas," he said.