Inside Shoulder
Nathan Sharpe (72)
One thing the ARU has become very good at is getting the supporters of the different provinces to band together against them.
One thing the ARU has become very good at is getting the supporters of the different provinces to band together against them.
Not sure where it begins or ends, but I assume that the hoped-for position of RWA is that the only liability that the ARU will have will be the annual grant to all super franchises. Where they are with this, I'm not sure. If they are able to become self-funding, not only would it be good for RWA and the ARU, but perhaps a model for the others to follow.Is this right?
Own the Force would
- RugbyWA currently own the operating licence for the Super Rugby team
- The ARU own the Western Force intellectual property
- ARU currently employ the Western Force players, coaches and staff
- Acquire the Super Rugby licence, which would be given up by RugbyWA
- Buy back the intellectual property from the ARU
- Re-employ all coaches, players and staff
- Take on the grant from the ARU each year (~$5m each year)
- Have to come up with operating funds from sponsorship, matchday etc (another ~$10m each year)
Totally agree, the code is fortunate to have him in his current role..........I must also add that I think that Cameron Clyne is the right man to be leading us. Again, it's a great pity that he wasn't in his current position 2 or 3 years ago, as I doubt that the ARU would have entered into some of it's arrangements with him in the chair.
I must also add that I think that Cameron Clyne is the right man to be leading us. Again, it's a great pity that he wasn't in his current position 2 or 3 years ago, as I doubt that the ARU would have entered into some of it's arrangements with him in the chair.
NZ fan here who has been lurking in this thread for the past 3 days. You guys are the hub of the Internet with regards to this issue. Plus planet rugby to a much lesser extent. Thanks for the informative thoughts I have been glued to each post.
After reading so much I felt compelled to post and I hope I don't say anything offensive as I know this is a rough thing to go through.
1) Although the ARU may have wanted to 4 teams at a minimum the NZRU would have been quick to agree with them. I personally have been involved in numerous pub discussions over the past 5 years with Kiwi fans wanting Australia to have 4 teams so that games can be more competitive. You can bet the NZRU wanted that too.
2) The spending the money on grassroots thing is an idea being touted to appease you guys. And I hope for the good of Australian rugby that the ARU renegs on this promise and pours the money into retention of top flight talent and helping high performance programs instead. Every study I have seen on sport shows that the performance of a national team is what gets kids playing the sport. In NZ by memory we have 450 000 people playing rugby out of 4.5 million people. Cricket by memory has 150 000 people (because we don't win as much internationally is a core reason).
Take whatever money you save and let each of the remaining clubs lure a star Aussie player back from Europe is one thought for an alternative use of the money. Grass roots sports is used to running off the smell of an oily rag, they would be thrilled to have more money but getting the Wallabies winning will get more kids playing than incentives at grass roots.
3) I hesitate to have rotten tomatoes thrown at me, but a point in favour of having four teams, is that the winning percentage of the remaining four teams will increase. Why? A) they will get some of the folded teams players next year b) they can pay their players more due to the terms of the broadcasting deal and retain their stars from leaving more effectively. It is possible point that the additional kids who take up the game in the 4 remaining areas due to their teams WINNING more will outweigh the kids who leave the game due to disenfranchisment that their local team has lost. Kids play sports because they idolise successful winning sportsmen.
I like the Wallabies and have chosen one of your star players from the 80s as my username. I have no idea as to whether the Force or Rebels should be cut and I don't envy who is making the decisions there at all. The few Kiwis I have spoken to favour some sort of Brumbies takeover or merger with the Rebels as perhaps 2 to 3 home games in Melbourne is enough to keep a footprint there and then the damage is minimised as at least everyone in your core cities will continue to see super rugby games they can attend.
Sorry for length!
What is the exact amount the ARU is in for if the jettison the Rebels? Anyone?
NZ fan here who has been lurking in this thread for the past 3 days. You guys are the hub of the Internet with regards to this issue. Plus planet rugby to a much lesser extent. Thanks for the informative thoughts I have been glued to each post.
After reading so much I felt compelled to post and I hope I don't say anything offensive as I know this is a rough thing to go through.
1) Although the ARU may have wanted to 4 teams at a minimum the NZRU would have been quick to agree with them. I personally have been involved in numerous pub discussions over the past 5 years with Kiwi fans wanting Australia to have 4 teams so that games can be more competitive. You can bet the NZRU wanted that too.
2) The spending the money on grassroots thing is an idea being touted to appease you guys. And I hope for the good of Australian rugby that the ARU renegs on this promise and pours the money into retention of top flight talent and helping high performance programs instead. Every study I have seen on sport shows that the performance of a national team is what gets kids playing the sport. In NZ by memory we have 450 000 people playing rugby out of 4.5 million people. Cricket by memory has 150 000 people (because we don't win as much internationally is a core reason).
Take whatever money you save and let each of the remaining clubs lure a star Aussie player back from Europe is one thought for an alternative use of the money. Grass roots sports is used to running off the smell of an oily rag, they would be thrilled to have more money but getting the Wallabies winning will get more kids playing than incentives at grass roots.
3) I hesitate to have rotten tomatoes thrown at me, but a point in favour of having four teams, is that the winning percentage of the remaining four teams will increase. Why? A) they will get some of the folded teams players next year b) they can pay their players more due to the terms of the broadcasting deal and retain their stars from leaving more effectively. It is possible point that the additional kids who take up the game in the 4 remaining areas due to their teams WINNING more will outweigh the kids who leave the game due to disenfranchisment that their local team has lost. Kids play sports because they idolise successful winning sportsmen.
I like the Wallabies and have chosen one of your star players from the 80s as my username. I have no idea as to whether the Force or Rebels should be cut and I don't envy who is making the decisions there at all. The few Kiwis I have spoken to favour some sort of Brumbies takeover or merger with the Rebels as perhaps 2 to 3 home games in Melbourne is enough to keep a footprint there and then the damage is minimised as at least everyone in your core cities will continue to see super rugby games they can attend.
Sorry for length!
But the $8M that might be under risk with Vic Gov, can be recouped from other states...
Both matches are portable
But the $8M that might be under risk with Vic Gov, can be recouped from other states...
Both matches are portable
2) The spending the money on grassroots thing is an idea being touted to appease you guys. And I hope for the good of Australian rugby that the ARU renegs on this promise and pours the money into retention of top flight talent and helping high performance programs instead. Every study I have seen on sport shows that the performance of a national team is what gets kids playing the sport. In NZ by memory we have 450 000 people playing rugby out of 4.5 million people. Cricket by memory has 150 000 people (because we don't win as much internationally is a core reason).
Less competition means a lower price, Victoria was and sill is, the state with the largest marketing budget for attracting events like the Bledisloe, EPL matches, Socceroos etc. it will have a massive impact on what other states are prepared to spend, there are really only 4 realistic bidders for Wallabies matches, Melbourne been one of them.
What is the exact amount the ARU is in for if the jettison the Rebels? Anyone?