I hope that's what he's doing, but with the current uncertainty the cynic in me thinks he is preparing for a glorious defeat in which he pockets a profit on the way out. He could be the only person in a win/win situation in this whole super rugby mess.
I think this is a very interesting proposition in this situation.
For all the emotion involved in this disgraceful situation , the outcome will be a business/slash financially based decision. I would estimate with the current lack of a major sponsor , the poor crowds and poor memebership numbers , without ARU additional support , the Rebels owners are looking at forking out somewhere between 2 mill and 4 mill per year to cover the operating loss of the club, without factoring in any capital invested in facilities ??
Given the dire position of the competition into the foreseeable future , does this look like getting any better . Doubt it especially once the Brodcasters get an opportunity to cut their deal back based on less content .
I'd be amazed if Mr Cox and his cohorts don't have solid gaurantees from the ARU on the Rebels tenure post their takeover ( I'm pretty sure it wouldn't be two years ).
Seems to me that one way or another this is going to get very costly for the ARU and not just in terms of public support .
To quote Tex Perkins "You better get a lawyer son and you better make it a good one !!"
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