Quick Hands
David Wilson (68)
To me private equity investment probably the game changer, plus people like twiggy involved who are pushing Asia pacific agenda. I am not protective of RA so feel free to call out RA could be doing more and how so as open to understanding that as I was not holding a candle to RA but rather acknowledging their power and influence to do so actually less then NZRU.
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Alas, the time for RA to be "doing more" has long passed. The time for them to be "doing more" (not just in the Pacific but in Australia too), was 20 years ago when media and public interest in the game was at an all time high, the Wallabies had come off a 1999 RWC win, RWC 2003 in Australia was an outstanding financial and popular success the Wallabies held the Bledisloe and Super Rugby was at the peak of its popularity.
That was the time to think strategically and plan for long term survival and prosperity - national club competition (not the ARC or NRC franchise models), junior club expansion into new areas as Sydney and Brisbane expanded and massive investment of $$$ into clubs across the country (just as the RFU did after RWC 2015).
Instead what we saw was short-term signings of league wingers on big $$$ and the contraction of the junior club footprint to the point where were barely now produce enough players to run a professional game. The ARU/RA existed from broadcast one agreement to another in the hope that endless growth in broadcast $$ would keep it all afloat.
It's a 20 year project to fix it all - a process which should have started 5-10 years ago but has still yet to begin (or even be acknowledged).
5 years ago I said that the new normal for the Wallabies would see us at the same level as Scotland and Argentina, with the occasional win against the stronger countries when everything clicked on the night.