It all boils down to this, IMHO: our game, as we play it, is just not attractive enough to the average punter, except at the very highest level. Last night's two games illustrates a sad point: the New Zealand local derby was great to watch, high standards, lots of wonderful, exciting rugby. The Force Rebels game was dire in comparision, by any standards.
Well, honestly, what is the solution then?
Is there any one of us here who thinks league (as that is where masters is coming from) comes even close to rugby in terms of quality?
For mine, about the only thing comparable is perhaps that we play on similar grounds, just as chess and checkers is.
guess which is which in my opinion. Tho tiddleywinks might be a better description of the entertainment value of league.
This line of thinking can only lead to one conclusion, change the rules (ie make it for morons a la league) by dumbing it down...but that has already been done and is out there in the marketplace.
I agree that, for whatever reason, the aussie games do not come up to the same standard as the kiwi games (maybe because they have the lower tiers? might that gap close with our upcoming lower levels??)
So I, having the relative opinions I have on the merits of the two games, can only then conclude that other factors must be in play. The first that comes to mind is the overwhelming saturation in the media for league vs rugby. (and don't forget people like masters' contribution to that)
Maybe one page of union vs ten or more for league?
So, chicken and egg types of questions now beckon. Ten pages of league cause people to follow league, or ten pages of league because people follow league.
I'd wager that the average punter that follows league has never actually watched a game of union (recall how tribal it all is, take the roar pages as an example), or if they have they have the pre-decided intent to find fault, ie they don't watch with an open mind.
And it is tribal, follow a league team and (as part of the package) automatically hate that other team. That is the foundation of it all. Hence they do not care to watch rugby with an open mind.
(I at least came to rugby from league, so I hope that narrow mindedness that we all have does not apply to me in this particular case)
I mean, take 'a guy' from another country who has never seen either of the games. Watch a few of each, which game would he think the better one? Obviously we are all biased here, but I wonder what the answer would be from a 'survey of a thousand instances'.
We will never know sadly, but I cannot help but think that without growing up on the east coast of australia and so can simply observe the two games without prejudice the answer would be rugby.
If I am anywhere even close to correct with my views then the 'problem' is not the game itself.
God knows tho that I don't have the right answers!
Yes, we all think sometimes that a law or two should be tweaked here or there, but that basic game itself surely has to be sacrosanct?