Quick Hands
David Wilson (68)
It's hard to know but I do feel like we have a better chance at a financially successful and thus sustainable competition with NZ than without. I firmly believe the international drawcard is important. Rugby is a global game and having a competition of sufficient quality is important to driving international interest.
A competition that was Australian only with less of our top talent because the funds available are lower and the remaining talent spread more thinly would seem very likely to resemble the NRC in quality, maybe a little better. I don't think that some of the teams involved being the Reds/Waratahs/Brumbies/Rebels is going to increase the interest enough to really change the dynamic. We're already working from a base where there isn't enough interest in those teams.
We're competing with other rugby competitions for our domestic viewers as well as with other sports. I don't think being the best local rugby competition is enough to bring out the fans in enough numbers to make it sustainable. It has to be high enough quality, even if that means that we are generally amongst the weaker teams in the competition (because NZ is stronger).
It's going to be a massive challenge regardless.
No matter what happens next year and at least the five years after that are going to be a massive challenge for rugby in Australia. I actually see this challenge as a massive opportunity, and one which probably won't come again. We have the opportunity to set the foundations for a national domestic competition. Doing so will obviously involve some risk and some tough times, but again they are both in store for us anyway.
To me our current situation provides the opportunity to break free of the shackles of Super Rugby and not have to consult NZ and SA every time we want to do things in the professional space. The Wallabies will still provide the bulk of the income, but without increasing support for the game and trying to attract a wider audience of potential fans then that will eventually dry up. The last super game that I went to about 3 years ago, the vast majority of the crowd were closer to 60 than 50. Tests do slightly better but an ageing demographic and a shrinking grass roots structure cannot continue to provide an long term profitable fan base for the Wallabies.
We need to seize the day with both hands and move forward together as Australian rugby. That is ironically more possible and likely today than it has been in living memory.