I think the only people you could really say have vested interests are the players.
They wield a significant amount of power and they are not going to be in favour of an option that would see their financial opportunities in Australia dwindle significantly.
No administrators are getting rich out of working in the game in Australia. Most of the senior ones could be earning more if they worked in the private sector rather than working in rugby because they are passionate about the game.
A competition that involved significant amounts of private equity would be ideal because it would take away the financial liability of paying the bulk of the professional players from RA. This would be a win/win for them. They'd be able to keep players in Australia and not have to effectively employ most of them.
Facilitating the introduction of more private equity is the difficult part. I think the outcome of World Series Rugby will be important for this. If enough people come out of the woodwork wanting to throw money at the game then that is what will change things. Money talks and if it is enticing enough for the players RA will end up getting dragged along (as they did with Super Rugby in 1996).
I don't think it works in reverse though. You can't say we're going to start a brand new competition in 2021 with privately owned teams that will sign all our best players and then expect those owners to come out of the woodwork with the requisite dollars.
No one running the game at any point is going to want to be the one who risks making the decision that bankrupts the game in Australia. Expecting someone to take that leap of faith with no evidence that it is likely to succeed seems like both wishful and misguided thinking.
They wield a significant amount of power and they are not going to be in favour of an option that would see their financial opportunities in Australia dwindle significantly.
No administrators are getting rich out of working in the game in Australia. Most of the senior ones could be earning more if they worked in the private sector rather than working in rugby because they are passionate about the game.
A competition that involved significant amounts of private equity would be ideal because it would take away the financial liability of paying the bulk of the professional players from RA. This would be a win/win for them. They'd be able to keep players in Australia and not have to effectively employ most of them.
Facilitating the introduction of more private equity is the difficult part. I think the outcome of World Series Rugby will be important for this. If enough people come out of the woodwork wanting to throw money at the game then that is what will change things. Money talks and if it is enticing enough for the players RA will end up getting dragged along (as they did with Super Rugby in 1996).
I don't think it works in reverse though. You can't say we're going to start a brand new competition in 2021 with privately owned teams that will sign all our best players and then expect those owners to come out of the woodwork with the requisite dollars.
No one running the game at any point is going to want to be the one who risks making the decision that bankrupts the game in Australia. Expecting someone to take that leap of faith with no evidence that it is likely to succeed seems like both wishful and misguided thinking.