Rob42
Nicholas Shehadie (39)
@Rob42 - are you sure the jacket in your avatar pic doesn't have leather patches on the elbows?
Well, there's a Thermos flask just out of picture. Perfect for staying warm on those chilly Saturday afternoons.
@Rob42 - are you sure the jacket in your avatar pic doesn't have leather patches on the elbows?
Ok, time to move on I say, before more people look foolish for jumping on the wrong bandwagon (rookie rules - read post so you know what being talked about!).Well, not sure I consider myself an "old-school" supporter but yes, I think the MLB missed cross-promotion was a non-issue. Firstly, because how could it have been fixed by either the Tahs or the ARU? Tell Izzy to break his sponsor commitment? That would have been more counter-productive than missing the photo op. Reschedule the whole thing to fit in with Izzy? Dreamin'. Tell the promoters to accept someone other than Izzy? They tried it, it didn't work.
Secondly, it's one photo op. Yes, it would have been great to have a rugby representative, but these things come and go like the wind. If the photo made big news on US sports websites, I certainly didn't see it. And I'm betting that if it did make it onto those websites, the caption would have included "Sonny Bill Williams, rugby player". The vast majority of Amercicans don't know the difference between league and union, both codes are generally just called rugby there. So we got the promotion anyway.
So that's why I think one missed photo op will make absolutely diddly-squat difference to the success of Australian rugby in the US.
I know live sport has become more and more valuable to broadcasters but rugby crowds and ratings have fallen over the last decade. So why would rugby get a 165% increase? Especially given the proposed model will actually reduce the amount of content.
If they don't then is there a plan B? Or will they have to accept an offer that will lose them millions every year?
Does SANZAR even have a vision of what super rugby will look like in 10 years? Who knows what they're working towards. If the idea is to expand into Asia and the Americas then why are they doing it so slowly? Surely the plan should be to have multiple teams in both as soon as possible so you can have conferences that make sense.
It would appear you are arguing semantics, this thread is about broadcast rights. The MLB photo was well discussed at the time and the majority of people would agree that it was a missed marketing opportunity, i see no point arguing over your interpretation of someone else's opinion on the matter and using that as some sort of analogy as to why SANZAR won't receive increased broadcast rights.
The US is a country of potential, but as it stands there is no professional tournament, the major money in US Rugby currently stands in 7's rugby, there is little evidence to indicate that there would be the financial support needed to run a super rugby team in the US.
Well the US will host 2 very well attended test matches against the AB's and Scotland this year. Rugby's been on a big upward trend there the last few years.
I think the way to do it would be to create a plan for the inclusion of a North American super rugby conference. SANZAR could help support the starting up of a 6-8 team competition played under the super rugby brand but not immediately involved in the SANZAR competition. Establish the teams and the professionalism (at a lower level than what super rugby is) and then add it to the genuine super rugby as a new conference once certain criteria is met.
I think something like that would have a good chance of attracting private investment and that it's better to do it like that than have 1 or 2 really isolated teams playing in a South African conference.
An upward trend yes, but not yet an established professional sport..
Once certain criteria are met ? How long would this take, 10 years? At what cost? Who subsidises the teams through these years?
Any team or competition in the US would represent a potential liability, hence the rather tentative approach by SANZAR to expansion.
JH: Last year, I sat down with Greg Peters, the CEO of Super Rugby. At that point, he was very high on the idea of getting the Super Rugby brand into the United States, and that expansion of Super Rugby franchises was a definite future possibility. What's going on with the possibility of professional rugby in America?
Nigel Melville (CEO of USA Rugby): Well professional rugby takes many forms. Much of this is out of our hands. In regards to Super Rugby, I presented to SANZAR when that competition was still called the Super 14. They went on to add a franchise in Melbourne.
I don't know how that helps break into new markets, I don't know how that improves your television exposure or your commerciality; however, it did allow each of the three SANZAR countries to have five teams each, so they were quite happy with that.
That's their choice.
I did believe that a Pacific Rim conference might be a way forward for them. A conference like that could include America, Canada, Japan and Argentina. I thought that was an option, but it seems to have been written off for now.
Every time I see smoke coming out of the SANZAR or Super Rugby meetings, I hear that expansion to the Americas is on their radar, but it's not something that seems to be on the table at the moment.
They take the majority of the risks, find private investment for 6-8 pro teams. Provide subsidies for those 6-8 teams on an annual basis. Struggle to get the competition established for between 3-10 years.
Why would USA Rugby take all that risk in order to hitch it's fortunes to a competition that may well be seen as a step down from European competition.
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...e-of-americas-rugby-union-with-nigel-melville
So Bardon, there is interest from USA Rugby in entering Super Rugby. SANZAR just haven't done it.
What I doubt is how enthusiastic USA Rugby would be to do all the leg work and then allow SANZAR to reap the reward.
In such a deal I would expect there to be some seed capital coming from SANZAR so they are taking on some of the risk.
USA Rugby along with these private investors will have to prop up 6-8 fully professional franchises including the cost of traveling around the US to play each other. I don't see how new franchises can "live within their means" since starting off they're going to be a money pit with very little actual income. They have to build up a fan base, probably beg a US network to televise the game and build a roster of players that would mean they wouldn't be traveling to SANZAR franchises just to ship an average nearing 100 points per game.
For the record I don't think any organisation other than the IRB should be interfering in the development of rugby in other territories. Not SANZAR nor the 6 Nations body that now runs club rugby in Europe.
This means you probably have a regular season where you play each team in your conference twice and then move into tiered final systems. This is the only way you can include all teams without running up against and compromising the international calendar.