This is pretty much what we have now except they call it a fine and we have no idea where the money goesI like the idea of a salary cap system similar to the NBA, whereby if you exceed the cap you pay a huge luxury tax.
The point is, as much as I love to sink the boot in to the Roosters, if we're going to vilify them for "cheating the cap" because of the exact same things that our club also claims, we should equally be under suspicion.
Even if we did have every player's salaries known, if a Roosters player is genuinely getting paid less than a rival club offered, they are still no more guilty of cheating the cap than we are, assuming the Bulldogs' offer to Carrigan is genuine.
Why not include their sexual habits as well? If a player doesn't **** his wife/gf often enough, he's probably fucking some piece on the side, that he might be maintaining with the brown paper bag he gets on a weekly/monthly base from his club...Salaries being made public wouldn't be enough IMO. At the moment at least half of them are reported in the media, and though they may not all be 100% accurate, it gives an idea. There are already players that you'd consider to be on "unders", and the explanation is always that they're taking less to play for X club, out of opportunity or loyalty.
Even if you included their 3rd party deals, it doesn't go far enough. Because it's the stuff off the books that is where the real cheating happens. Teams don't do duplicate books anymore, but they still do free boats, fake jobs for family members through third-party companies, fake work/invoices for works that may or may not have been done, and even the ol' paper bag full of cash.
Without doing a complete and exhaustive audit of every player, their family, including income, expenditure, and compare it to their resulting lifestyle, it's too easy to hide payments.