Michael Lynagh: Puts the boot into SANZAAR big time and further stresses the growing prowess of rugby in England in terms of crowds, viewership, systems etc (extract):
Wallabies great Michael Lynagh slams SANZAAR for Super Rugby mess
Christy Doran, FOX SPORTS
May 9, 2017 2:21pm
FORMER Wallabies captain and respected rugby pundit Michael Lynagh has taken aim at Super Rugby’s governing body SANZAAR for announcing structural changes to the competition mid-season.
It’s now been a month since SANZAAR announced that Super Rugby would be cutting three of its franchises — two South African and one Australian — for 2018 and returning to a 15-team competition.
But the changes have proved more complicated than anticipated with the Rebels and Force — the two Australian franchises on the chopping block — digging their heels in and threatening legal action against the ARU.
SANZAAR officials will meet in Tokyo on Friday and the ARU will be asked to report on their culling progress.
The messy state of affairs has harmed the credibility of both Super Rugby and the ARU while the domination of New Zealand teams has exacerbated the competition’s problems.
In an interview with foxsports.com.au, London-based Lynagh — who with former All Blacks captain Sean Fitzpatrick analyses Super Rugby for Sky Sports each week — slammed SANZAAR for its lack of foresight and leadership in expanding to 18 teams in 2016.
“It was just wrong from the start,” said Lynagh, a 1991 Rugby World Cup winner and Australia’s all-time leading Test pointscorer.
“We’re all for expansion, but it just wasn’t ready and it was ill-thought out from the start.
“I get asked continually in the streets: ‘which team is going to be cut?’
“Nobody’s talking about how the competition is going except: ‘aren’t the New Zealand games great?’
“What we used to have with the Super 12 and Super 15 was a great competition.
“You’d play a home and away on a yearly basis.
“You’d play all the games very quick, a very good standard, you’d have a playoff and then a final and it was done in one go.
“Now you have a break for the international tour, and who knows what happens when you come back, and you’ve got this convoluted points scoring system — that nobody understands — where you don’t get the best teams in the finals.
“It’s just craziness.
“Then you have Japan, who couldn’t decide whether to give it to Tokyo or Singapore, so they (Sunwolves) play in both so their home games are spread across the two countries.
“It’s just ludicrous.
“How are they supposed to get home support going when they’re travelling every week?
“Then you have one South African conference that doesn’t play a New Zealand team and you have the Blues, who are last in the New Zealand conference, that play half their matches against New Zealand teams.
“I just find it bizarre that they’ve got to this stage.
“And now mid-season they’re deciding: ‘let’s change it.’
“They’ve sort of procrastinated over this decision when they could have made a decision in the off-season and done it then.
“I don’t understand it at all — it’s just such a mess that it’s been allowed to get to this.”
While Super Rugby is struggling — particularly in Australia and South Africa — the English Premiership is going from strength to strength.
Attendance numbers have increased by 10 per cent and TV audiences by 13 per cent, according to statistics revealed by Premiership Rugby this year.
And on the back of an improving player development and pathways system, Lynagh believes English rugby will now enjoy a period of great success.
“It’s a difficult and a long season (in England), but yes it is (getting stronger),” Lynagh said.
“The conditions change from when it (Premiership) first starts in September and then you go into winter and it’s quite attritional in some cases.
“But with the advent of very good pitches over here... a lot of them having hybrid artificial and grass... you’re starting to get some better quality rugby even in winter months.
“The competition has a lot of good players and it’s going very well.”
Lynagh has a unique insight into England’s rugby landscape having played for Saracens in the 1990s and his son, Louis, now representing the national under-16 team and a member of the Harlequins academy.
“When I look at England at the moment — the senior team are doing very well — I go down to what I see at the Harlequins academy and Saracens academy and all those things that my son’s involved in and the quality of the rugby and the players in all those academies, even at the under-16 level, is outstanding.
“And then you think England have won the last two under-20 World Cups, they’re starting to get it right over here.
“We’ve always said that if England with all their resources and all the players that they’ve got, if they ever get their structure right they’ll be incredibly good.
“And I’m here to tell you that they have, because I can see it from under-16 up and it’s pretty strong and it’s not going away.
“Whereas down in the southern hemisphere, apart from New Zealand, we seem to be going the other way.”