hoggy
Nev Cottrell (35)
And I would agree if that was the competition seen as the one to drive revenue in the game, but it isn't and I can't see that changing.
The Wallabies drive the revenue.
The Wallabies generate more revenue when they are successful. The international nature of rugby dictates that more income comes from overseas interest than for a domestic focused sport that doesn't attract TV rights overseas.
If there was a way to smoothly transition our current playing stock to a domestic competition I think it would be far more likely to succeed but no one has come up with a suggestion to do that. The suggestion seems to be that if we just remove Super Rugby and make say the NRC the main competition in town (except with less professionalism) that it will suddenly be much more successful than Super Rugby is.
I agree, however that revenue the Wallabies produce is on a slow spiral downwards, as the game becomes more irrelevant on the domestic front and there are less people to ultimately support the Wallabies.
Have we really created more revenue or added value, or have we just added more and more content every year.
They are playing upwards to 15/18 tests(half of them meaningless friendlies) each year now to create that revenue, and limited the ability of a domestic product to create any revenue stream on its own. You go from world conquering Wallabies to sausage sizzle rugby
Every year less and less people are introduced to the game to eventually support the Wallabies, so what happens when the whole thing goes bust, we end up with a domestic product that survives on sausage sizzles.
The game here will ultimately die out as a major sporting code as it slowly cannibalizes itself to survive. Well IMO anyway.