The NSW team's will be stronger if the one team states are encouraged to develop their own - but that thought always creates hit debate.
More to the point, they would have been much stronger if the Sydney clubs could get on the same page.
It's also not as if Queensland haven't been providing players to the other super rugby franchises either, I spent a good five minutes surfing teh wikipaedia (most would say five minutes too long) and went through the 2015 RWC squad, and it confirmed my hunch: more of non-Reds, non-Tahs, and non-Toulons were developed in Queensland (i.e. played colts or went to high school there; I also included Kane Douglas as a Yamba boy who is now helping out the Reds, and left Folau off, even though he went to Marsden High from the age of 14). I'm sure the pure numbers might be different throughout the entire squads of the Force, Rebels, and Horseys, but the Wallaby sample gives weighting for player quality (and I seriously CBF going through three squads).
Creates debate is a misnomer.
There wouldn't be many who'd disagree that the allocation of Super Rugby players favours the Rising, the Spirit, the Vikings, City and to a lesser extent Queensland Country, and could/should be readjusted.
But at the end of the day, the Super teams pay the wages. If the Rebels want Luke Jones and Jordy Reid playing with their teammates in their home city, rather than spending 10 weeks in Sydney with the Rays, why is that an issue? With the Rebels having run full time training for all the Super players both seasons throughout the NRC, there's an inherent advantage for a players development, both individually and teamwise, to remain at home for that period.
It always devolves into a shitshow, with club loyalist refusing to concede that second point.
Ha reducing the teams. This comp is as good as done then.
If this happened, it *could* be a positive. Wouldn't be pain free but hear me out, people.Although not yet confirmed, it looks as though next season the NSW Waratahs will head the NRC program in its own state and at this point will only register 2 NSW teams to compete in the 2016 NRC Competition.
Oi.
I'm like right here, man.
The more the merrier, BR. A good a idea has a thousand fathers, a dud one is an orphan.I believe I might have beaten you to the punch @Kiap.