Some of the match ups that I loved every year.
Stormers vs Blues in Auckland
Stormers vs Hurricanes in Wellington
Sharks vs Red
Bulls vs Crusaders at Loftus
Stormers vs Tahs in Sydney
Of course, if it all goes tits up I'd be very happy to watch a trans Tasman Super 10 that goes for 18 weeks, and maybe don't even bother with a finals series if the comp duration is a concern - whoever has the most points on the table at the end is the winner. This format is the fairest as everyone plays everyone else home and away once.
I think losing Super rugby would be a shame, but given that we are talking about 2016, there is a good chance something could be sorted out.
Of course, if it all goes tits up I'd be very happy to watch a trans Tasman Super 10 that goes for 18 weeks, and maybe don't even bother with a finals series if the comp duration is a concern - whoever has the most points on the table at the end is the winner. This format is the fairest as everyone plays everyone else home and away once.
Oh, I probably need to say what I kind of competition I want -
Short, from Late Feb/begining of March ending before the in bound tours.
Majority of games against foreign opposition.
SA having +- 5 teams.
South suffer - read it again. Effectively what he's saying is a return to a super 12 type scenario:
Less local derbies
Shorter season
Time allocated to inbound Tests and domestic competition
Kiwis would agree to this.
In fact the union who benefits most from a longer Super season is Australia because our domestic competition is shit. I'd go as far as saying fucking shit.
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I hate autocorrect .
In the scenario where you play every team once, less local derbies are an unavoidable consequence.
SidBarret is saying he wants more overseas opposition.
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I hate autocorrect .
from all this I only really see SA being benefited, why should aus and nz agree to this? whats in it for them?
Please read all three of my posts.
The one you quoted is a wish list, which yes, will have maximum benefit South Africa. An Australian wish list would look completely different, which is fine.
The point of the whole exercise is that all the parties say (honestly) what they want and where that differs finding compromises that serve the needs of each partner the best.
isn't a compromise the format we currently have? I see it as the fairest and most even for all parties?
Should I take your comment to mean that the current super rugby format is perfect?
I apologise for my sarcasm, but I am sick of people looking at the final product and then blaming the other partners because it does serve their purpose.
I want to know what do Australians want from super rugby?
There is no point in calling something a compromise if we don't record what each party is wants, what are they willing to compromise and what are deal-breakers.