Super Rugby was clearly once a very good and successful comp...
I'm guessing it was the Waratahs 33,740 person average crowd in 2006 which caused most of the worryOut of interest, what were the signs in 2006 that changes were required? I was living overseas for the 2001 to 2007 time period and watched it from afar. It still seemed like a pretty good product back then.
I put this together back in 2020 in relation to crowd figures in Australia (For some years the figures weren't available or were incomplete back in 2020 when I put it together so weren't included.)Out of interest, what were the signs in 2006 that changes were required? I was living overseas for the 2001 to 2007 time period and watched it from afar. It still seemed like a pretty good product back then.
ARC was 2007 so I reckon there were people in the administration that thought the same.A competent and forward looking administration would have noted signs of decline early and taken steps to transition from Super Rugby to a national club competition at some point if not around 2010, then certainly by 2015. No Super Rugby franchise in Australia turns a profit - in the professional era the game has been funded by the Wallabies. Imagine a world where all the millions thrown at Super Rugby (and the ARC and the NRC) had instead been used to set up a national club competition (like most sports in Australia have). Now the Wallabies ability to generate money is damaged by the chaos and dysfunction beneath and as a game we are going to struggle to maintain a full time professional game in the short to medium term.
A competent and forward looking administration would have noted signs of decline early and taken steps to transition from Super Rugby to a national club competition at some point if not around 2010, then certainly by 2015. No Super Rugby franchise in Australia turns a profit - in the professional era the game has been funded by the Wallabies. Imagine a world where all the millions thrown at Super Rugby (and the ARC and the NRC) had instead been used to set up a national club competition (like most sports in Australia have). Now the Wallabies ability to generate money is damaged by the chaos and dysfunction beneath and as a game we are going to struggle to maintain a full time professional game in the short to medium term.
A serious question - how popular was Shute Shield and the other state comps in comparison with the NRL and AFL before Super Rugby?
A competent and forward looking administration would have noted signs of decline early and taken steps to transition from Super Rugby to a national club competition at some point if not around 2010, then certainly by 2015. No Super Rugby franchise in Australia turns a profit - in the professional era the game has been funded by the Wallabies. Imagine a world where all the millions thrown at Super Rugby (and the ARC and the NRC) had instead been used to set up a national club competition (like most sports in Australia have). Now the Wallabies ability to generate money is damaged by the chaos and dysfunction beneath and as a game we are going to struggle to maintain a full time professional game in the short to medium term.
Imagine a world where all the millions thrown at Super Rugby (and the ARC and the NRC) had instead been used to set up a national club competition
ARL was as popular as it ever was in the mid-90s before the super war split. Average crowd of 14000A serious question - how popular was Shute Shield and the other state comps in comparison with the NRL and AFL before Super Rugby?
No, that money was pissed away on Super Rugby which was supposed to have Asian & American conferences by now.You can't get that money without Super Rugby, so a bit of a null point.
If we wanted to go that way, the time to do it was off the back of RWC2003 cash which was pissed away on ARC as you mention
The Reds being quarter finalists & the brumbies being still alive says otherwise…It almost looks like people go to games when they have a competitive team to back....
I don't get your pointThe Reds being quarter finalists & the brumbies being still alive says otherwise…
Remember you asked, its the short version but a long post.Out of interest, what were the signs in 2006 that changes were required? I was living overseas for the 2001 to 2007 time period and watched it from afar. It still seemed like a pretty good product back then.
Pretty good summation Half. that relationship with Fox from the early years was telling, it was the golden child there for a while. But it didn't adapt or head the warning signs which were there from day one, as the other codes evolved with the landscape and changed, rugby didn't, or couldn'tRemember you asked, its the short version but a long post.
Puts on helmet, but its what I have been arguing for over 20 years, kinda use to negative replies.
Why 2006, there were a number of things, and some come from the mid 90's. Some background to why the say 2002 and by 2006 it was SCREAMING.
Super Rugby was born in a media war, when League was at its lowest in years, Football was approaching bankruptcy, and AFL in a rare time of not great management.
Fox paid well over to ensure Rugby could compete with league in the media war, and put many positive articles across News papers. Fox needed Rugby to succeed and put everything into making Super Rugby successful.
The results were obvious, crowds second only to AFL, the best media deal in Australia if measured against games played, all was looking good only blue sky above.
I on the other hand, I was looking at different data, and to explain.
Super Rugby, especially with the News output totally over rode club Rugby, and club Rugby was loosing lots of local ground. This is totally under estimated because when club Rugby was constantly in the news it attracted good players. By 2006 the fall off in player quality was becoming noticeable.
Then their was the recovery by the codes, League was recovering and growing again, AFL got back to its excellence management, Basketball started to get more involved with the USA basketball, Football went bankrupt with the old Soccer Australia unable to fly out the national team and then recovered and started a new competition in the A-League.
The next relative change was Test Cricket started to drop a little, as well as some other more traditional sports.
The above all between say 2002 and 2006, and change continues today. The biggie in 2006 was the Socceroos made their first world cup in decades. The reaction by the media was huge and so were the ratings. Further Football joined the Asian Football Confederation resulting in many regular games as opposed to a game every four years.
News by now had both AFL, and League on Fox, the subscriptions were in, Rugby was no longer critical to Fox. In fact League and AFL were more important to Fox than Rugby. Fox also picked up Football including all national games. E-games where starting to grow.
The GPS schools parent demographic was changing, and although by far still dominate, both Football & AFL were making inroads into these schools.
Effectively the environment Super Rugby was born in and created in which lead to its success not longer existed.
To me it was obvious nay beyond obvious, all the other codes had become stronger than they were, we were no longer Fox's favourite child, Football was now a genuine competitor for the non rugby fans who watched the test matches, in the Socceroo's in Asia. This followed on from the 2002 WC in Japan and Korea when Australians started to realise that our Asian neighbours could play sport.
Further any analysis of any long term growth and success, of sporting codes world over is with National Domestic Competitions.
For me the total change in the environment Rugby found itself in was not only ignored, if questioned it was both laughed at and openly attacked [BTW who was right] . The near cult like support of Super Rugby's systems by Rugby fans, and being run by ""Lunch A Lot" types in Australia, resulted in creating an environment where Rugby was incapable of adapting to the changes happening around it. Whereas League and AFL were constantly making changes.
This has continued and a great non Rugby example is Cricket, which was loosing ratings and crowds especially Test Cricket and not only in Australia. India then stated 20 20 and Australia the Big Bash i.e. a sorta club quick competition. 20 20 is a perfect example of a code reacting to change and moved to a National Domestic Competition.
Without stating the obvious, compare Rugby today, to League, AFL, Football, Basketball, Netball to Rugby in 2000. For me using US sports franchise systems was the perfect model.
I can explain in much more detail if you want, but how those running the show when everything changed around them, showed little to no reaction is the kind would say sad, the cruel would say tragic.
A serious question - how popular was Shute Shield and the other state comps in comparison with the NRL and AFL before Super Rugby?
Shute Shield has never been, and *will* never be, anywhere near the draw of NRL and AFL.
Despite your thesis you have never once proposed a solution apart from ‘national competition’.
Who are these teams? Who supports them? How would it be any different from ARC/NRC?