To return to my previous point - what are the key criteria that should be considered?
I'm not talking about the criteria that is being considered.
Perhaps a few forum members with the right expertise could draft up a .ppt on a Google drive somewhere with a fair evaluation that flows on from such criteria which would, if nothing else, provide the ARU with some more questions to answer.
If its strong enough in terms of quality it could potentially end up in Alan Jones' hand and give him more to yell at Bill Pulver about.
Just a thought. We often talk about how the ARU and respective state unions need to be more innovative, but perhaps we need to get more innovative in how we apply pressure to them.
That being one of the best observations made here in some time.
There are two problems in this notable zone of concern:
One, and this is important, the ARU's and local RU's governance systems provide zero mechanisms of for, for example, 'grassroots' or any kind of 'outside' rugby-loving group to be heard, represented formally, or easily elected to such bodies' boards or other formal committees.
Appallingly, the boards of our State RUs are typically and solely hand-picked by their respective Chairmen via his personal network.
There are not even proper, well-advertised, serious, regular fora by which fans of the code can openly engage in Q&A with the RU boards and their managers.
Summarily Michael, our governing rugby institutions show zero sincere interest in building pathways, mechanisms or approaches by which the general, everyday rugby community can be represented within them, or even communicate on a structured basis with them.
The whole edifice is consciously archaic; I say consciously as the existing elites have shown no desire of any kind to allow their communities _that they are supposed to serve_to engage with them in a proper, democratic and institutionalised manner.
Two, and this has always surprised and concerned me greatly about Australian rugby fans in general.
Up until very recently, I would assess that the Australian rugby community is generally a passive, docile, compliant and un-protesting one.
The remarkable tendency inside Australian rugby - in a country that supposedly is sceptical and cynical about its elites - is to blithely believe that our RUs and ARU are 'probably good people doing their best for the game and somehow deserve to be there' vs holding these parties actively accountable for the code's success and growth and expecting change at the top when the opposite of that keeps regularly occurring (as it has).
We have seen examples of that tendency here, in these GAGR pages, over the years.
Essentially, we seem to
truly care too little, and/or, and I suspect this to be the telling point, our cultural and social genesis as rugby fans is one where deference to 'superiors' and excessive trust in the innate superiority of superiors is far too indentured.
This truth, which comes right up the guts from us and is not some inter-galatical force (buttressed btw by its refection in an appallingly supine local rugby media that for years has mostly lazily and irresponsibly fawned at the feet of our RU board), has aided the ARU and local RU elites in gradually building a powerfully embedded institutional culture characterised:
- by self-service not community-service,
- by self-aggrandisement and self-preservation not a proper acceptance of accountability and outward-facing responsibility and the decent and democratic actions that should derive from that,
- by a management modality that is based upon a kind of 'good blokes working together' mindset and not a modern managerial loyalty to measurable performance metics and code-health outcomes (such as skills levels, grass roots dynamism, player development, w-l ratios over time, coach skill development and growth etc.), and
- the selection of 'good rugby and business mates' to sit alongside themselves and not a proper openness to a wide range of objectively chosen skills and talents and backgrounds.......
- and thus ultimately does arise the notorious arrogance, complacency and rank insularity that inexorably builds like a pervasive virus from the foregoing cultural attributes.
My view is that both thematics I describe above now tightly interrelate and cross-reinforce each other and thus together are the core genesis of why Australian rugby has now, gradually but surely, entered a crisis state that may soon enough threaten its very demise.
I return to your point: perhaps we need to protest better and more innovatively.
You are 100% right. But the consequences of all above is that IMO, apart from our veritable moon-howling here which is at least something honest and a good vent for our anger and alarm, the only meaningful way we could do better would be to .............
...........actually form a funded protest group with a full complement of PR skills, social media skills, dedication to invested time, resources to lobby aggressively to applicable local rugby stakeholders, strong links to and support from the non-compliant opinion-influencers like Jones, Fitzsimmons, Papworth (dropping in the process and higher cause our personal likes or dislikes of them), and all such like devices and resources.
In this vein, a really well-organised
We're Not Gonna Take it: Give Rugby Back to Us movement could absolutely work, it's not too late to attempt it and I have often thought of putting some money up and starting it, such is my deep-seated detestation of and sadness towards what I see so shockingly committed (or omitted) in the negative by our so-called 'leaders'.
It would work right now as the code's alarming crisis and the utter incompetence (and obvious, total failure of the RUs and ARU to honour their pledge to oversight the code the rugby community and not themselves) has never been plainer or more in full public and media view.
It's factual that this world of ours has principally been formed by the three interrelated forces: the positive power of the human spirit, the massive impact of science and its vast application, and the successful (over time) protest movements that have ultimately led to positive social change that have benefitted most people.
So, we need our own rugby protest movement.
But I'm not sure we care just that little bit extra enough, with that required searing passion, effort and intensity, to ever make it happen.
We're probably the types that want someone else to do it, aren't we?