The Australian Sex Party says footballers who want to participate in group sex should be encouraged by their clubs to do so at legal brothels.
The National Rugby League's been rocked over the past week by claims by various women they took part in group sex with players.
A number of the incidents have prompted allegations of sexual assault.
Sex party convenor Fiona Patten says the NRL needs to set up a brothel liaison office and conduct brothel information sessions with all players, including those who profess to be religious.
Ms Patten says most teams have a local brothel that could be adopted as their own.
NRL players have been defending Matthew Johns in the wake of the group sex scandal, in which he and other Cronulla Sharks players had sex with a 19-year-old in New Zealand in 2002.
The matter sparked calls from the Prime Minister down for all sports players to treat women with respect.
But sections of the rugby league community have claimed the practice won't end.
“It’s not what you’re doing to them, because they have requested it," an anonymous NRL player told 2GB radio on Thursday.
“And if it is rape – and they haven’t requested it – then we’ll get charged. Matthew Johns hasn’t been charged.
“She requested it and the under-20s player [who told Four Corners the sexual act didn’t matter as long as a woman was treated “right” afterward] was right.
“Some of these girls, they just can’t take rejection.”
Johns' media and coaching career is in tatters after the ABC's Four Corners program aired allegations about his involvement in the group sex incident in Christchurch.
At the time, New Zealand police investigated the woman's claims that the sex was non-consensual, but the investigation cleared all players of wrongdoing.
http://livenews.com.au/news/nrl-players-should-visit-brothels-for-group-sex-asp