My (long term) wish is for SANZAR to shorten Super Rugby to have it finish before the June Tests, then play The Rugby Championship over July and August, and make available all the Test players for their respective domestic competitions in September and October.
By finishing Super Rugby before the June Tests, it gives Super Rugby a clear window without disruption. The competition can keep its momentum instead of the current stop-start situation. It would also allow the international season to flow from the June Tests into The Rugby Championship.
While there would be a decrease in content and potential revenue from Super Rugby, hopefully having the test players available for their respective national domestic competitions would drive up revenue for these, and help balance the potential loss. There would also be a significant decrease in travel costs for Super Rugby.
To finish Super Rugby before the June Tests, and with 18 teams expected to be part of Super Rugby, there would not be enough time to have a simple round robin format.
Instead, I would have three conferences, with 6 teams each. Each team would play all the other teams in its own conference only once (five weeks). After this, the top two teams in a particular conference would play the bottom two teams in the other two conferences.
At the same time, the two middle teams in a particular conference would play the two middle teams in the other two conferences. And at the same time, the two bottom placed teams in a particular conference would play the top two teams in the other two conferences.
This means that each team would play four cross-conference games – two home and two away (4 weeks). Then the top eight teams on the overall table would move through for the finals using the same finals system as the AFL and NRL (four weeks). Add in a bye week, and the competition would run for 14 weeks.
While there would be less conference derbies, the conference derby games would also become a lot more meaningful because they would determine who you have to play from the other two conferences at the next stage. Players and fans would be a little more excited to win their conference derbies to get an easier run to the finals. This should attract a few more spectators to the conference derby games. Even if a particular team is unlikely to finish in the top two in their conference, there is still the motivation to win their conference games in order to finish in the middle two teams and still end up with an easier run to the finals.
If your team is in the top two teams in your conference, the interest from a fan’s perspective is that you have a real shot at making the final eight and will want to track your team’s progress as they play teams from the other two conferences.
If your team is in the bottom two in your conference, the interest from a fan’s perspective is that you still have a chance of making the final eight and you will be playing the best teams from the other two conferences!
It would also make the rugby calendar more defined and less messy in the Southern Hemisphere. Super Rugby would start on the last weekend in February or the first weekend in March every year. The June Tests would then follow after the completion of Super Rugby.
The Rugby Championship would then start on the first weekend in July every year, and finish at the end of August. This would leave the Test players available for their respective national domestic competitions.
A simpler and more interesting Super Rugby format. An international season which flows from the June Tests into The Rugby Championship. And a stronger national domestic competition for each country.