I've been reading a few cricket books over Christmas, the best of which is 'Crossing the Line' by Gideon Haigh. Thoroughly recommend it if you are a cricket fan.
The workings of Cricket Australia and their role in the Cape Town fiasco (amongst other things) is a big focus of that book, and it appears to me there are a few real lessons you can draw about sports administration in general.
CA suffers many of the same problems that RA seems to - a focus on the professional game has alienated the grassroots, a domestic competition structure that works against high performance goals, a lack of transparency, a loss of trust and good will, amongst other things.
It makes me wonder if the best practice model for sports administration that has been accepted over the last decade or so is flawed. That being - independent board of directors, a separation of the professional and participatory arms of the game, an increasing professionalisation of 'the pathway' for young players, a decreased reliance on traditional clubs, and a focus on revenue (particularly TV revenue) to drive performance outcomes across all levels.
Not all of these are bad things, and you could make an argument that many or all are necessary in 2019 to survive in a competitive landscape. But it does seem that the major sports (who have all adopted most of these values) are all suffering from the same maladies that I outlined above.
Brett Papworth and his ilk are by no means a rugby-only problem. It's symptomatic of professional sport in Australia, where the traditional stakeholders feel increasingly left behind by modern structures.
I'm not sure how you fix the model, but there are changes that definitely need to be made. I think a few practices of Government need to be introduced - more transparency, better coverage of day-to-day investment and routines, and a focus on sharing the spoils of the game with all participants.
I want to know the work DOs are doing in Western Sydney. I want to know when the Waratahs are doing a school clinic. I want to see what some of the staff at RA actually do - I'm sure it's something, but I don't really know what.
Some of this stuff is cosmetic, and then some of it runs deeper - more open Board processes, for example. But I wonder if it's something that we need to think harder about, something that a consultant's review will never pick up.
It's not 'burn down the joint' or 'sack Clyne/Raelene', it's about watching the problems that all major sports are experiencing, and learning from the mistakes being made. There's an opportunity for rugby here, I think, though I doubt it will be taken.
And yes, I'm bored and we need some rugby to talk about. Should we extend Super Rugby to January?
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