Generated by GPT-5-mini| Gold Coast Titans | |
|---|---|
| Clubname | Titans |
| Fullname | Gold Coast Titans Rugby League Football Club |
| Nickname | Titans |
| Founded | 2007 |
| Ground | Cbus Super Stadium |
| Capacity | 27,400 |
| Chairman | Dennis Watt |
| Coach | Des Hasler |
| Captain | Tino Fa'asuamaleaui |
| League | National Rugby League |
Gold Coast Titans are a professional rugby league club based on the Gold Coast, Queensland. The club competes in the National Rugby League and plays home matches at Cbus Super Stadium in Robina. Since admission in 2007 the club has featured a mix of local juniors, international recruits and high-profile figures from Australian rugby league, rugby union and Pacific Islander communities.
The club's formation followed expansion interest from the National Rugby League board, intervention by the Australian Rugby League Commission and proposals from the Gold Coast City Council. Early governance involved stakeholders such as the National Rugby League CEO and private owners including John O'Neill and later Cypriot-Australian investors. The inaugural seasons were shaped by coaching appointments from figures associated with Canberra Raiders, Brisbane Broncos and Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles. Notable off-field events included salary-cap investigations involving the National Rugby League integrity unit and board restructures influenced by the Australian Sports Commission. Finals appearances were achieved in seasons influenced by recruitment from clubs like the Melbourne Storm, Sydney Roosters and St George Illawarra Dragons.
Home matches are played at Cbus Super Stadium in Robina, a venue developed in partnership with the Gold Coast City Council and private contractors. The stadium has hosted matches involving the Australian national rugby league team, Queensland Maroons State of Origin fixtures, and international tests featuring the New Zealand national rugby league team and England national rugby league team. Training facilities are co-located with high-performance centres used by athletes linked to the Australian Institute of Sport pathway and Gold Coast-based academies bolstered by partnerships with local universities and the Gold Coast Titans Academy program. The precinct has also staged community events with organisations such as Surf Life Saving Queensland and concerts featuring touring artists.
The club identity draws on regional symbolism of the Gold Coast and influences from Pacific Island culture through player demographics and community links to the Samoa national rugby league team, Fiji national rugby league team and Tonga national rugby league team. Club colours—navy, gold and white—have been displayed on jerseys manufactured by suppliers associated with major sporting brands and sold through retail partnerships with Queensland-based outlets. The club emblem and mascot have been used in marketing collaborations with entities including the National Rugby League corporate partners, local tourism campaigns by the Tourism and Events Queensland and charity drives with organisations such as Headspace.
Playing lists have included internationals who represented Australia national rugby league team, New Zealand national rugby league team and Pacific nations. High-profile signings and junior promotions brought players from pathways connected to the National Youth Competition, elite junior clubs on the Gold Coast, and feeder linkages with NSW Cup teams like the Burleigh Bears and Tweed Heads Seagulls. Coaching and management staff have had experience with clubs such as Parramatta Eels, Wests Tigers and South Sydney Rabbitohs. Leadership figures on and off the field have engaged with player welfare programs coordinated with the Rugby League Players Association.
Season outcomes have ranged from wooden spoons to top-eight finishes, influenced by recruitment cycles that involved transfers from Brisbane Broncos, Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs and European Super League clubs. Finals campaigns saw matches against established clubs including Melbourne Storm, Sydney Roosters and Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles. Performance fluctuations correlated with coaching changes, injuries to marquee players who had represented the Prime Minister's XIII or national sides, and salary cap compliance reviews by the National Rugby League.
Club records include most appearances, highest try-scorer and single-season point totals held by players who advanced to play for representative sides such as the Queensland Maroons and Australian Kangaroos. Attendance records at Cbus Super Stadium were set during high-profile fixtures against teams like the Brisbane Broncos and international touring sides. Statistical milestones have been tracked by the National Rugby League statistics bureau and independent analysts associated with Australian sports media outlets.
The club runs community initiatives with partners such as local councils, the Australian Sports Commission and health organisations including Queensland Health. Youth development includes the Titans Academy pathway, school engagement through the School Sport Australia network, and clinics targeted at Indigenous communities in collaboration with Indigenous All Stars programs. Charity partnerships have included fundraising with organisations like RSPCA Queensland and mental health campaigns aligned with Lifeline Australia.
Category:Rugby league teams in Queensland Category:National Rugby League clubs