|
With the recent report released and the
mumblings from John O’Neill around extending the Super 14 a major task arises of
how the complete calendar of NZ rugby should look. It is by no means a simple
task, having to align club rugby, the NPC, the Super 14, Tri Nations, domestic
tests and the end of year tour, but I thought I would have a wee attempt at
coming up with a solution rather than just complaining about it all.
The point touched on in the report is that
players want to play for one team with one coach and one trainer (in Europe)
rather than the three they get here in NZ. Now the reason they’d only have one
of everything is because they won’t be able to play internationals but I’m
pretty sure they could handle having two if they were able to play for the AB’s
while being overseas. So really it is a matter of having just the Super 14 and
International set ups and taking the All Blacks completely out of the NPC (which
is basically the case now anyway).
But what this would allow us to do is have the
two competitions (Super 14 and NPC) running parallel, and the NPC acting as a
feeder to the Super 14 alone. As far as I’m aware this is how it currently
works in SA so I don’t see any reason as to why it wouldn’t work here. Players
would still be drafted to S14 teams and the top x number of players would not
play for their province unless coming back from injury but wider squad members
would have a quality competition to keep fit in (not just club rugby which is
currently used). Or once you’ve played x amount of games for your S14 team you
can’t go back to NPC. This means outside your original squad, you’d use players
from within the region when the need arises.
I don’t like the fact that the beginning of the
NPC overlaps the end, and business part, of the club competitions where teams
with good players who have earned their right to make finals are then robbed of
those players, who helped get them there, when it really matters. This would be
addressed in my proposed set up.
The proposal of O’Neill’s, while it is heavily
Aussie favourable certainly has some interesting and worthwhile ideas. Number
one being a lengthier, two round format, where teams (and squads) will be truly
tested. The expansion is also something that needs to be looked into, and I
favour a two division, 20 team competition, including the likes of the Pacific
Islands, Asia and the Americas (That would have promotion relegation). I also
think it would be great to include a knockout cup, involving all 20 teams which
would expose every team and all players to pressure knock out matches, not just
the top 4 teams. Or perhaps a Ranfurly Shield type challenge system which would
also improve the excitement and marketability of these types of games. The
competition would have a three week break for the inbound internationals.
It has also been bandied about bringing in
traditional public holiday match ups, like the NRL, and I don’t think we should
be too precious not to copy or adopt other successful sporting codes competition
set ups and be more flexible with game days/times. So a guaranteed Easter
Monday AFTERNOON match between the Blues and Chiefs every year or a Queens
Birthday clash between the Crusaders and Waratahs every year, whatever, lets
just create some tradition. And I don’t think we should be afraid of midweek
games, sure Rugby is a lot more physical than Football but it can be managed.
If you look at the premiership some teams, such as Arsenal, use the Cups as a
development tool for their young players while focusing their real efforts on
the premiership title. There is no reason why this can’t be adopted and
modified for Rugby and be just as successful. Plenty of emphasis then goes into
having a quality squad, not just top 15 or 22.
“What about player burnout?” I hear you say,
but in the grand scheme of things players won’t play any more and may even get a
longer rest and reconditioning program with this set up. No rugby for AB’s and
core S14 players from 29 Nov – 22 Mar, now that is a conditioning window! (Or
actual off season)
I also toyed with having the Tri-Nations
(extended to include Argentina) within the Super 14, so every three weeks or so
the Super 14 has a rest and is replaced with the two tests but I think this
makes the Super 14 season too disjointed and it would be hard to gain any
momentum. This 4 team, home and away, format would also reduce the number of
weekends played on to 6 while having the same amount of games per team as the
current Tri Nations.
One of the biggest problems is the June inbound
test window which is apparently immovable. If this could be moved it would
make things a lot easier to structure, however for arguments sake I have left it
there.
So the big change is the NPC to the start of
the year and S14 to the end as well as the Tri Nations to the end, finishing
just before the EOYT. I understand this would be a big difference for the NPC,
as players picked from club games will be out over the Christmas period, but a
break of 3.5 months and a month for pre season may not be a bad thing for these
provincial teams.
Using this year’s calendar, this is how it
would pan out. I think it could work.
I’m not exactly sure how this aligns with SA
and Aus competitions but if it’s workable for us it’d be workable for them
(perhaps with a few tweaks).
Thanks Mr Hobbs, yes I am available for a job
with NZRU.
|