So i hope the gang of ten are happy with themselves - we now have left us the laughing stock, probably ensured only Foxtel interested in a broadcast deal to keep rugby with limited exposure and access and ensured private equity or nz have little interest in dealing with us with our political in-fighting and governance issues made clear to all.
To me the simple solution would have been to make wigg chairman, leave castle in - show some unity - get a broadcast deal done and work with other parties such as nz, twiggy and private equity to find some solutions but the gang of 10 and newscorp alliance were never going to let that happen were they. So now we are back to Hamish as our newscorp RA chairman to be with Rob Clarke who is sprouting his great relationship with Foxtel to lead us to salvation (read - entrench us in a long term deal with Foxtel to keep rugby on life support but ensure no hope of recovery from the terminal condition).
And the irony is the gang of ten were out to help oz rugby - so they say - but the reality is yet again these amateurs only have really sought to hammer the final newscorp provided nails on the lid of the coffin of oz pro rugby to ensure its ready for burial and last rites to be administered.
The only one who benefits out of this whole mess is newscorp and can’t help but feel they played a lead role in all this and very successfully. I personally feel somehow to ever find a viable long term solution is to jettison ourselves from newscorp but irony is now with what has gone on while there was a chance of that happening - it seems there is no chance now.
I think you're being naive if you think whole sorry mess was caused by 10 ex-Wallaby captains writing an open letter.
What we're seeing now has been 15 years in the making. Poor decision-making, lack of strategic planning, inflated wages for players and head office staff, profligate spending on ageing league stars, top-down policy which neglected anything below the professional level, lack of accountability at board level, cosy corporate culture where only those in the know are involved, toxic culture of jobs for mates and a complete breakdown in relations between different levels of the game. On turning professional rugby kept the worst parts of the amateur game (jobs for the boys) and took on the worst parts of professionalism (corporate hacks and inflated middle management).
As for Foxtel and Newscorp, there are many on here who have short memories for most of the time that Fox has broadcast rugby, it's presenters and commentators have basically ignored all of the above issues and presented syrupy, sycophantic stories to try to present the game and its leadership in a positive light. To the point where we had then ARU board member John Eales as a paid panelist on the weekly programme assuring us how well things were going. During the Patston/Link/Beale affair the News Ltd papers were held up on these threads as providing sensible coverage while Fairfax and Georgina Robinson in particular were accused of trying to destroy the came for their own commercial purposes.
Let's be clear - all large commercial media companies enter into any agreement to make the most possible money for the company and the shareholders. They have no duty to prop up the game or to protect it from the ineptitude of its own administration, they will do so only when it suits their commercial purpose. It's fanciful to think that Optus would have any less commercial imperatives than Fox. It's also fanciful to think that FTA networks are any better. We only have to look at the NRL where Channel 9 and the Fairfax papers ran a campaign against their CEO Todd Greenberg which was just as relentless as what Castle faced. 9 have barely hidden their desire to drive down the value of NRL broadcast rights so that they can pay less for the next deal.
Pro-rugby has failed in Australia because the administration have never deviated from the pan-continental super rugby model. Even when faced with growing evidence that it wasn't working in Australia, they put their heads down and ploughed on regardless. No change of direction when crowds dropped by 60% or the standard of our teams dropped. Refusal to adapt means death in the commercial world.
Rugby has nobody to blame for our current predicament other than ourselves. And it's not until the game and those running it acknowledge that and rule a line under the whole sorry mess and starting again that there is even a hope of turning it around. We're the laughing stock of the rugby world and trying to deflect the blame onto others just doesn't cut it.
What's even worse is that this whole sorry shambles has been both foreseen and foreseeable. There's been quite a few people predicting this for a decade or more. Coronavirus has just created the perfect storm for it all to come crashing down.