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Manly owner makes no apologies for Pride jersey

Manly boss Scott Penn wants to speak with the NRL about introducing an inclusion round next season, confident all of his players would participate after a year of dialogue.

The Sea Eagles owner flew back into Sydney from the USA on Thursday, before meeting with the seven Manly players who stood down from the Sydney Roosters match.

Top of Penn's priorities is to ensure the Sea Eagles are unified with all players back to face Parramatta next week and the finals still a reality.

The Manly chair also issued a statement to the club's fans, stating a review would be held into why all staff and players were not aware of the club's jersey before it was released publicly.

But he makes no apologies for the jersey, stressing Manly wanted it to promote inclusivity for all, be it with race, religion, gender, disability or sexual orientation.

Manly owners will also donate $100,000 to the Gotcha4Life charity, with money from the game going to support the mental welfare of the LGBTQI community.

But also on Penn's agenda is speaking to the NRL about next year's calendar, willing to cop the criticism of recent days if it results in long-term change.

ARLC chair Peter V'landys revealed this week he was open to the idea of a pride or inclusion round, stressing the decision was ultimately one for the commission.

And Penn himself said he was fully behind the idea, hoping it was a positive to come out of a week of criticism and drama while also vowing to wear an inclusion jersey again in 2023.

"We will take some learnings out of this but the most important thing is we will be bigger and stronger next year," Penn told AAP.

"We would like that to be with a game-wide initiative. We will be working with the NRL, obviously discussing how we can do it better.

"And then how we can do it better as a game.

"But I think what this week has done has brought us a lot closer to it than we were before. We were maybe shying away from it before.

"And if this conversation takes us further down the pathway to resolving it and hearing everyone's opinions, then I think it is a great outcome."

V'landys conceded this week that could prompt some players to skip such a round next year, stating that they had the freedom to do so if they did not agree with the NRL's values.

But when asked if he thought he would have a greater chance of getting his players involved after a year of conversation around it, Penn was adamant he could.

"Absolutely. It's about mutual respect," Penn said.

"And inclusiveness of everyone. Maybe we call it respect round. Or everyone in league.

"Maybe we didn't get the label right this year. But in the end we have to move forward. And that's my priority."

Penn said he was first made aware of the initiative in April after the club was pitched by jersey designer Dynasty in February.

But the co-owner did not foresee the eventual issues with players, given it was marketed as an "everyone in league" jersey by the club.

"I was supportive of the concept because it was an everyone-in-league one," Penn said.

"It was supporting Gotcha4Life with mental health, it was supporting other community groups, and I went absolutely I would support that.

"I think everyone internally who saw it, including some key people in the football staff, all went 'that is a great initiative'."