Don't worry guys... it's just more Wayne Smith dribble with nothing further in the article to back up the claim.
Considering Wayne's dribble has been %100 correct and predicted the culling of an Aussie Super franchise as early as September last year..
I'll give him the benefit of the doubt and let him keep his sources anonymous for as long as we remain in the loop.
However:
Fox Sports Rugby Retweeted
Christy DoranVerified account @ChristypDoran
3h3 hours ago
MoreThose questioning whether Australia should be forced to cut two and not RSA shouldn't forget which conference doesn't play NZ #SuperRugby
0 replies1 retweet3 likes
Considering Wayne's dribble has been %100 correct and predicted the culling of an Aussie Super franchise as early as September last year..
I'll give him the benefit of the doubt and let him keep his sources anonymous for as long as we remain in the loop.
Greg Growden earned his reputation after two decades of dribble.Nah, Wayne Smith has been publishing all kinds of rubbish during this saga, almost Growden-esque.... and he was hardly alone in predicting the culling of a team.
My life is more complex now (kids) and if the Rebels go, I don't know whether I could be bothered following rugby in future and I suspect many others in Melbourne would do the same.
I have kids and I live half-way around the world now, yet I still watch (and play) Rugby weekly (and often twice-a-week). My point is, if you love the game you will find a way to enjoy it. It is a disgrace that we have to axe a franchise, but don't give up on the sport because of it.
I love rugby but I won't support a code that doesn't support me or my community, let alone treat it with the reckless abandon and disgraceful incompetence that the ARU has.
This decision burns bridges and it's about time everyone comes to terms with that.
If RSA and NZ try to make us pull two teams then I would advocate pulling out of Super rugby now, not in three years when the deal is renegotiated.
Might not be possible without Australia losing even more dollars. But, yeah, I reckon the end of Super Rugby, as we knew it, is coming soon.
South African issues will only add to the downward Super spiral. Could be a blessing in disguise.
Ok so I must have too much time on my hands and have some sort of persecution complex but I was asked by a good friend today what would I be trying to achieve now if I was at the ARU in relation to digging out of this shit fight
Unfortunately due to their absolute incompetence I think its impossible to make this 5 team structure now work especially given what the ARU have let the quality of our teams become and SANZAAR the 18 team comp.
So the starting premise is we are contractually obligated to maintain Super Rugby so we now need to give it its best opportunity to survive and maybe even return to somewhere near its position of only a few years ago
So at the risk of raising the ire of just about every supporter group ( what's left of any of them ), here goes . Oh and I know none of this easy and has lots of legal/logistical/political challenges but good management across every industry manage these sorts of challenges on a daily basis
1 Merge the Brumbies and Rebels . I don't care what you call the team or out of which city you base the administration and training facilities. You base this on what makes the best economic and Rugby program sense . If a deal can be pulled together involving the current Rebels ownership structure great but not essential. If it does you make sure the deal is water tight to ensure continued funding
You split the home games 50/ 50 between Canberra and Melbourne and in the weeks of the home games completely intergrate into the local Rugby community . Structured properly this should be a strong team and if the local integration is carried out effectively the local support will be at least at current levels and probably a shit load better if the team is playing quality Rugby .
The VRU and ACTRU continue to run their local programs and with the assistance of the professional team run development programs that provide a direct pathway into the Southern Brumbies (eg).
There are plenty of other examples in professional sport in our country of teams that make this work (Hawthorn / Launceston , Kangaroos/Hobart, St George /Illawarra.) And in NZ Rugby teams that traditionally want to belt each other to death at provincial level (Otago /Southland ) all get behind the Highlanders whenever they come to their town .
2. The ARU (on the basis it can become an efficient operation ???) centrally controls the admin functions of the Super Rugby teams that make economic and operational sense to do so ( Don't recreate the wheel , look at what NZ does and adapt to our conditions if necessary)
3. With the money saved from only distributing income to 4 rather than 5 teams as well as from the savings from the rationalisation of admins make it a high priority to get our players back from overseas and keeping who we already have in the country . Obviously there will still be players who for lifestyle and maybe tail end of career financial reasons choose to play OS but if priortised evenly across positions this would be a very effective step in improving quality .Get rid of Giteaus law and pay our players highly at Wallaby level based on both on field and financial performance of the Wallabies
4. Put in metrics to ensure as much as possible equalisation of the playing strength across the Super Rugby teams . This can be done quite simply two ways . Set a Salary Cap that is inclusive of the Top Up payments made to the Wallaby players . Whilst that component of the players salary is paid by the ARU counting it towards a clubs cap will ensure a more even spread of talent
Then for players who have not played at pro level before introduce a draft system along the lines of AFL.
Clearly there is a lot more detail required behind these initiatives and I could melt my keyboard trying to explore every machination, but I think broadly these initiatives give us at least a fighting chance of getting back on our feet
Now of course all of the narrow minded , short sighted fools who have helped get us into this hole ( think Roger Davis ) will shoot this down in flames but if we don't take a broader we are all in this together approach and try to make at least our 4 teams as strong as possible and get the overall product back to a quality that people want to watch both live and on TV and sponsors to want to invest in we may as well just give up the ghost now
After all of this nonsense if there is not a reason and stimulus for radical change there never will be
Force or Rebels?
Don't worry guys... it's just more Wayne Smith dribble with nothing further in the article to back up the claim.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/spo...p/news-story/461a55bdc8d9bf759964bee0da409a02
Good to see a Rebels supporter in favour of the most obvious and least painful action.
If or more likely when we go to 4 I'd be all for the centralisation of the administrative side of the pro game. The business simply isn't expansive enough to merit separation at that level.
From their I would take all monies saved and invest heavily in promoting the NRC alongsode looking to better resource it. This would also include extending its overall window.
Doing this would 1) provide us with a viable alternative to Super Rugby if developed intelligently (big if) and 2) provide a greater level of development for players leading further up the chain than is already occuring.