Jarome Luai was meant to be the player who helped transform the Wests Tigers. Less than two seasons later, the club is reportedly prepared to let its $1.2 million playmaker leave a year early in one of the biggest contract twists of the NRL season.
According to reports first revealed by Code Sports and confirmed by multiple outlets, the Tigers informed Luai last week that he is free to negotiate with rival clubs for the 2027 season, despite having one year remaining on his contract before joining the PNG franchise in 2028.
At first glance, the decision seems extraordinary.
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Luai was signed as the marquee face of Benji Marshall’s rebuild after helping Penrith win four straight premierships. His five-year deal, worth around $1.2 million per season, was designed to change the culture of a club that had spent years near the bottom of the ladder.
So why would the Tigers be willing to let him walk?
The answer appears to be the salary cap.
With Luai already committed to the PNG franchise from 2028, Wests is reportedly looking to free up significant cap space to secure the long-term futures of its emerging stars, particularly highly rated half Latu Fainu. The club has also recently locked in Jahream Bula, Sunia Turuva, Terrell and Taylan May, Heamasi Makasini and signed Jake Averillo from 2027, signalling a shift towards building around a younger core.
It’s a bold strategy.
Rather than paying top dollar to a player who won’t be part of the club’s long-term future, the Tigers appear prepared to reinvest that money into players they believe can lead the next era.
Luai’s reaction suggested the decision wasn’t his own.
Shortly after the news broke, the four-time premiership winner posted an image to Instagram with the caption:
“God’s plan, not mine.”
The message, accompanied by the song Moving On by Rod Wave, was widely interpreted as Luai acknowledging the club’s decision to move on.
If Luai does leave, there will be no shortage of interested clubs.
A proven premiership-winning five-eighth, State of Origin representative and one of the game’s biggest personalities, Luai would instantly become one of the most sought-after players on the market for 2027.
The bigger question is what this means for the Tigers.
The club has spent years trying to escape the cycle of short-term fixes.
Letting Luai leave early would represent a clear acknowledgement that the next successful Tigers side may not be built around established stars, but around the young talent already coming through the system.
It’s a gamble.
If Fainu develops into the elite playmaker many believe he can become, the decision could be remembered as a masterstroke.
If he doesn’t, questions will inevitably be asked about why the Tigers allowed one of the competition’s most accomplished halves to leave before his contract expired.
Either way, Wests has made one thing clear.
The future now matters more than the past.
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