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While many local rugby fans, players, supporters and administrators are preoccupied with the poor SA Super 14 form; are going through the motions of the Vodacom Cup; thinking about the British & Irish Lions tour starting the end of May and preparing a team for the Currie Cup in July, a more sinister and monumental dilemma lurks for SA Rugby.

This is the expansion of Super Rugby for the benefit of all South African rugby players and particularly whether the current SA Rugby administration is leading South African rugby down a mine shaft.

It defies logic that two individuals at SA Rugby should be so prescriptive on the expansion of the Super 14 without adequately caucusing all the affected rugby unions and stakeholders (SuperSport, SABC, government, stadium owners, tourism and trade), tabling a variety of future planning scenarios and outlining the advantages and disadvantages to growing the game. In a short 12 months, these two SA Rugby representatives at Sanzar today, will be no more and all of SA Rugby will be burdened, for the following 6 years, with the malaise of a short-sighted vision espoused just last week Thursday.

Remember SA Rugby have had 4 years to develop and craft a future competition and tournament model and instead are furtively introducing a model — in so clandestine and secretive a fashion — without any real consideration for the catastrophic consequences it will have on the existing 5 franchises and in particular the Lions, Cheetahs and Stormers.

Where is the transparency and where is the open-door policy and canvassing of opinions in structuring the Sanzar R3.5 billion broadcasting deal? There is none and because of this it smacks of reckless, negligent behaviour in which the directors of SA Rugby and Sanzar have failed in their fiduciary duty to their shareholders. A most serious indictment on corporate governance and flouting of company law in South Africa.

What most people forget is that section 424 of the Companies Act in South Africa is not limited to directors of the company but applies to “any person”, including an ordinary employee such as a financial manager even if he is neither a shareholder nor a director or officer of the company. The liability can also attach to a juristic person such as a company as in SA Rugby, provided it can be demonstrated that the so-called “controlling mind” of the company, its board of directors, as in SA Rugby’s board meeting last week, was aware of the activities. I submit that it will not be too difficult to demonstrate this and have this challenged by any one, or a couple, of the aggrieved rugby unions, which feel that SA Rugby and its directors have acted in a reckless and negligent manner to the detriment of its shareholders.

These same 3 franchises of the Lions, Stormers and Cheetahs, were on the ropes and in a financial quandary in February/March 2006 and it was their will and motivation to elect individuals who would sandbag and eliminate any future competition to their franchise. In short, the inclusion of a sixth South African franchise. The fear factor then was that any one of these three Super Rugby franchises would be relegated in either 2007, 2008 or 2009 and they could sit out the Super 14 for a year or maybe two and this would have catastrophic consequences for them, hence the Southern Spears were iced at a cost of R27.1 million to SA Rugby, with no thought of any future planning.

Along the way, since then, the R30 million provided by SuperSport was earmarked by SA Rugby for a high-performance academy and centre in Alicedale in the Eastern Cape. Plans were drawn up and still lie in wait for implementation. Then in 2007 SA Rugby were facing a R20 million loss, so the R30 million allocated for the academy and high-performance centre was dropped into the SA Rugby bottom line to declare a R10 million profit, and poof, gone, in a snap, was the funding for the academy, confirmed with the epitaph of a press release issued by SA Rugby that there is no funding available for the academy.

Now fast forward to Thursday last week when certain individuals at SA Rugby finalised their preferred option for Vodacom Super Rugby expansion at a meeting of the board of directors on Thursday. An SA Rugby press release declared:

“The board accepted a recommendation from Andy Marinos, the acting managing director of SA Rugby, on South Africa’s approach to the season structure of a planned new Super 15 competition to be introduced in 2011.

“This has been a long process with all partners having to compromise in some directions,” said Dr Jan Marais, the chairman of the board. “We are prepared to extend the Super Rugby competition into July for instance but the integrity of the Absa Currie Cup competition is not something that we can throw away.

“Major matches in the Currie Cup attract audiences that are larger than the equivalent Super Rugby matches and the tournament is the lifeblood of our 14 provinces. It is also very important to South African rugby that we secure a Super Rugby franchise for the Eastern Cape and we will be tendering for a sixth team if we reach agreement on future structures.”

The details of South Africa’s position will now be communicated to Australia and New Zealand as part of an ongoing series of discussions and workshops in the search for an agreed position.

The board also received an explanation on the Legacy project for the Port Elizabeth region as an outcome of the Castle South Africa 2009 Lions Series. A total of R2 million has been earmarked for the region to uplift rugby at grassroots level, although the specific project has not yet been finalised.

“SA Rugby is putting R1 million of the profits from the tour into the project and other money is being invested into other legacy projects around the country,” said Dr Marais. “Another R1 million is being invested by the British & Irish Lions into the Port Elizabeth project as part of an agreement we reached with government.

“This was all done amicably and as part of a negotiation around SA Rugby being granted special dispensation to be allowed to play the match between the Coastal XV and the Lions on Youth Day, June 16.”

Firstly, it is inconceivable to equate the magnitude of a R3.5 billion 5-year (2011-2015) Super Rugby agreement, with a single, paltry R2 million one-off grant to the Eastern Cape for development on Youth Day.

Secondly, the Coastal XV is NOT playing, but June 16 — Youth Day – is the date set down as the launch and roll out of the new 6th South African Super Rugby franchise, the Southern Kings. Has SA Rugby forgotten their pledge and agreement with government and the Eastern Cape unions? Either this is selective memory or the accuracy of SA Rugby’s media releases need to be checked, double-checked and triple-checked but more of that in the sequel.

Over the next 60 days SA Rugby together with their Sanzar partners, the NZRU and ARU need to resolve a Southern Hemisphere Super Rugby expansion plan conundrum that has eluded the three Southern Hemisphere administrators, who are on the eve of signing before June 31, another multi-year (5-year) broadcast agreement for Super Rugby.

Sanzar’s broadcasting deal, currently worth $323 million over five years, or R2.9 billion over 5 years, as in R581 million a year, expires at the end of next year, but needs to be renegotiated before June 31.

A broadcasting deal as lucrative as this, could be in jeopardy as the Sanzar officials are at odds as to how to attract spectators to the Super Rugby series following years of declining spectator audiences and TV ratings and each have their own ideas as to how to do this and by all accounts appear to be a country mile apart from each other in terms of resolving this.

The ARU under O’Neil wants to shed South Africa and invite Japan to participate in some Pacific Rim tournament, but his motives are about as transparent as mud in wanting to pursue the commercial sponsors in Japan. O’Neil quite simply wants the fifth franchise for Melbourne and has lobbied hard for this. The NZRU under Steve Tew have been conspicuous by their absence in tabling a workable solution, yet have inserted a NZRU project manager to oversee options, which is more than crafty, as they will have a hand in the authorship of the expansion plans.

Then there is SA Rugby, who this year and the next are the acting secretariat of Sanzar, have had four years to put together a solution or series of options, especially when the Eastern Cape have had no franchise in the history of Super Rugby. It is quite perplexing then and more than a concern that they are leaving it a little late in the day in terms of coming up with simple, conflict-free solution, especially given the siren call to deliver a Super Rugby franchise to the Eastern Cape and to expand Super Rugby with a broadcast product that will attract spectators to games and viewers to the telecasting of the Super Rugby matches.

Why then launch a Super Rugby franchise, the Southern Kings, on June 16 to play the British & Irish Lions, for one game only, with much fanfare and hoopla and not have a single fixture thereafter? Are we so delusional that one spends R15 million (R11.5 million gate receipts plus R3.5 million team assembly and staging) for the day, blow out of town and say, “See ya!”

Let’s assume then, hypothetically, that we were the secretariat of Sanzar and had from now till June 31 to present an expanded Super Rugby series to the broadcast sponsors, that also needed to include the Tri-Nations to 4-Nations, to include Argentinia, what rugby product or products could be considered for presentation in offering a new revitalised rugby inventory for broadcast television and sponsors and which will add value and grow spectatorship and viewing audiences:

1. We all agree that Super Rugby requires expansion and revitalisation due to declining spectatorship and viewership.
2. We agree that Sanzar Super Rugby must be played in 3 conferences of South Africa, New Zealand and Australia as the local derbies attract spectators.
3. We agree that a variety of options could be considered for expansion or non-expansion of Super Rugby. These are:

3.1 Super 14 remains as is, from 2010 to 2015, with 14 teams (5+5+4) with a promotion relegation system, for an extra franchise in each of the Sanzar countries to play the last-placed team of that country in a Tri-Game series. The three extra franchise-in-waiting teams play in a sub tournament 6 months prior to the S14. One could add anyone or Argentinia, the Pacific Islands, Japan, Africa or US to this.

3.2 S14 goes to Super 15 in 2010 to 2015 with 5 teams from each of the Sanzar countries with a promotion relegation system, for the extra franchise in each of the Sanzar countries to pay the last-placed team of that country in a Tri-Game series.

3.3 S14 goes to Super 18 in 2010 to 2015 with 6 teams from each of the Sanzar countries. No promotion relegation and all teams are included and none are threatened with relegation.

This then is what is so perplexing about SA Rugby backing a sterile Super 15 model, that goes nowhere, to roll out in 2011:

1. Everyone at the SA Rugby president’s council is obligated in terms of a June 8 2005 pesident’s council resolution, which, to date, has never been rescinded, to see that the Eastern Cape gets a Super Rugby franchise. This is a legal and binding agreement that has been tested in the Cape High Court. Exclusion of the Eastern Cape Super Rugby franchise will have dire consequences for SA Rugby.
2. SA Rugby has spent R27.1 million to keep the Eastern Cape at arms length of Super Rugby.
3. SA Rugby have vowed to government to include the Eastern Cape in Super Rugby in 2010. Note: They have to, lest they face the withdrawal of government’s support for their 2015 and 2019 Rugby World Cup bid, plus a massive claim and another publicly embarrassing legal lambasting.
4. With a relegation and promotion series, the Lions, Cheetahs & Stormers are in line to face relegation not only in 2010, but in 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014, which will have catastrophic financial results if any of these franchises sit out for but one year.
5. There is general consensus at Sanzar that there should be 3 conferences, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand given that local derbies boost gate attendances.

Oy Vey!




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23 Responses to “Will an inept SA Rugby result in catastrophe?”

The Eastern Cape is a rugby desert. They may have a plethora of signed-up players (40% of the national total is the latest wild claim) but, out of this vast mass, their two representative teams — the PE Elephants and the EL Bulldogs — languish in last and second-last positions on the provincial log.

So they are weak. Even the Currie Cup champions from the Free State are, as the Cheetahs, the current whipping-boy of Super Rugby.

The Southern Spear/Kings would be smashed 100-0 a game if they were playing in Super Rugby. It would be the equivalent of having a Zimbabwe or Bangladesh in test cricket, serving little more than to foul up the proud historical records by being whipped to unimaginably vast defeats by all-comers.

The rugby world doesn’t need or want an E-Cape franchise in Super Rugby, even if there are big bucks in it for you, Tony.

(Report abuse)

Jon on April 21st, 2009 at 1:43 am

Jon - And a good morning to you! O ye of little faith.

Your idolised Cheetahs Currie Cup Champions that you fawn over prove quite simply 2 things.

The first is that despite being the so called famous Currie Cup Champions, it means squat and there are reasons they are taking a pasting and those are off the field. Ditto the Stormers.

Secondly, the fact that the last placed S14 side with barely 7 meagre points to rub together can take on the log leaders and Super 14 Champions of yester year and beat them, proves the game is wide open, so your preconceived notion of a team from the Eastern Cape being smashed holds no argument. That is a figment of your imagination.

Then one has to declare that the team that has taken the “smashing” in your jargon, with 241 points against them and only 70% of the tournament gone, in this years Super 14 with more points scored against it than even the Cheetahs the famous Currie Cup Champions, is but 3 points off the leader and placed 5th.

They are the Blues.

Finally Jon, tell me in this barren economic waste land of the Eastern Cape, how do you see “big bucks” being made. If you can answer that you should move to the Eastern Cape.

(Report abuse)

Tony McKeever on April 21st, 2009 at 7:37 am

It’s a barren desert in terms of genuine high-class rugby talent — the Bulldogs and Elephants testify amply to that.

But it’s a place of very rich pickings from the bottomless pocket of government largesse who would dearly love to throw money at their pet project in their voter heartland.

It will all come to nought. The EC is useless at rugby and if the champion Cheetahs can be so badly spanked at S14 level, the cellardweller EC will be hammered a dozen times worse.

If wishes were horses then beggars would ride.

(Report abuse)

Jon on April 23rd, 2009 at 10:18 am

Jon - How right you are. Let’s leave the EC to their own devices and walk away.

(Report abuse)

Tony McKeever on April 23rd, 2009 at 1:39 pm

Best idea you’ve had in a long time. The rugby world hasn’t been heart-tugged by their total absence and nor will they be, seeing as the EC has nothing of rugby value to bring to the table.

(Report abuse)

Jon on April 24th, 2009 at 9:31 am

Jon - Right again. Look at the Western Force on its knees today and then the counter proposal.

How could the Eastern Cape franchise (the Southern Kings) even consider playing Currie Cup rugby in 2010 as what to do about the fixtures against Border, Eastern Province and SWD?

A franchise against its 3 shareholders? Sounds like an ill conceived plan.

(Report abuse)

Tony McKeever on April 24th, 2009 at 9:58 am

The Western Force is Australia’s fourth franchise and they are battlers as Perth really isn’t a strong rugby union area either in terms of player strength or public interest. But they’re still hanging in gamely, because they are only the fourth franchise.

The Spear-Kings will be SA’s SIXTH franchise, and her fifth and fourth franchises — Lions and Cheetahs — are the comp’s perennial cellar-dwellers. Even the illustrious Stormers are mere mid-table also-rans year after year.

So an amalgamated team of Elephants, Bulldogs and SWD will be nothing more than cannon-fodder, just as they are in SA internal competitions.

Large numbers of registered players simply does NOT translate into a competent, competitive team.

All it means is that there are lots of players. Like in Japan.

(Report abuse)

Jon on April 25th, 2009 at 5:59 am

??? Jon ??? What is the purpose of sport ?
Gratification of Jon ? I think NOT … I’ve a good mind to wind up the 9 MILLION nominally South African people in the Eastern Cape you INSULT to come over and remind you why we play sport ! Blood letting on the sports field saves YOU and YOURS from Palestine, Belfast or Bosnia, you IDIOT !

I couldn’t care less if the Eastern Cape takes 100 years to become competitive … the EASTERN CAPE will TAKE its place… and you WILL have to bear it… tough like… consider the alternatives.

1. Me
2. You
3. Spears

Or go find another COUNTRY mate. It is the REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA - 9 provinces

The Eastern Cape is the 2nd largest and one of the most populated… it’s historical NEGLECT is a disgrace …

Catch a wake up or ship out !

(Report abuse)

Disgusted on April 25th, 2009 at 3:27 pm

Dear Jon/Tony/Disgusted

Guys… lets not fight amoungst ourselves, we all love South Africa and we all love rugby.

There are two facts that is obvious here: 1) Eastern Cape Rugby is sub-par and 2) we need to develop this region for South Africa’s rugby machine to fire on all cylinders.

A promotion/relegation game at the end of the season is a good idea only in the sense that it will create some illusion of fair-play. This however is not the solution, only part of it.

The solution is money! Would the top players play for the current Super 14 teams if they were paid Elephant/Bulldog salaries? I think not.

I suggest that the current five Super 14 franchises pay an amount equal to one-fifth of their player payroll to the franchise not competing is the Super 14 for the sole purpose to strengthen their team and make it commercially viable. Promotion/Relegation can then take place on a more equal footing. The fifth union can then use the money they would have used to contract players for development.

(Report abuse)

GS van Zyl on April 26th, 2009 at 7:49 pm

By the way Disgusted, that was a bit over the top… Does Jon’s kind include me?

(Report abuse)

GS van Zyl on April 26th, 2009 at 7:57 pm

GS van Zyl - the only reason Eastern Cape Rugby is sub par is that they have no franchise.

The franchise is the “financial well” from which the unions derive their income. The reason being that there are set international and local fixtures all telecast to an audience of millions. The audiences are onsold by the broadcasters to advertisers and the franchises in turn can sell space to title sponsors, presenting sponsors, suppliers, advertisers, suites & special events.

These are only sold if there is a tournament fixture list with set dates. Right now the Eastern Cape has none of this and SA Rugby are talking mind you only 2011 and 2012. This is seven lean years after having promised the EC a franchise, so no wonder there is no growth.

The Eastern Cape rugby is in a self induced comatose state brought on by SA Rugby’s inability to plan for tournaments and fixtures into the future.

GS I do like the idea of promotion relegation as it ups the ante and creates enormous excitement but the follow through must also be as to what happens to the franchises that are relegated.

There has to be a structure and tournament in place to accommodate them and their sponsors and supporters. They cannot just be abandoned.

(Report abuse)

Tony McKeever on April 27th, 2009 at 10:38 am

Tony

Would we always not have one franchise that is not included in Super Rugby?

If yes, I think those franchises who do get to play in the tournament should contribute towards the costs of players and development in the franchise which was left out. Then, when promotion/relegation comes along the franchise which was left out would have a better chance to challenge the other teams.

Another option would be to drop the worst performing franchise of the previous year and give the one left out the chance to play.

Regards,
GS van Zyl

(Report abuse)

GS van Zyl on April 29th, 2009 at 2:31 pm

GS - The ideal solution is to have Relegation & Promotion. This keeps the competition HOT. The last placed team in each country plays the one waiting to come in in a Tri-Game Series (2 Home for the Waiting Franchise and 1 Home for the last Placed in the S15.

The teams that fail to make the Super 15 cut then play a lower level tournament against Argentine and 2 other teams from Pacific Islands and Africa.

The point GS is to not banish any team to the Siberian Economic wastelands and have them sit out an entire season.

This gives up 3 Competitions:

1. Super 15
2. Tri-Game Series
3. Super Rugby Tournament between 6/7 Teams at the same time that the Super 15 is on.

All played between February to May.

(Report abuse)

Tony McKeever on April 29th, 2009 at 3:25 pm

If only it cound happen as you propose… I believe it makes too much sense to be implemented by an organisation like SARU/SA Rugby. They do not behave in a logical/rational fashion.

(Report abuse)

GS van Zyl on April 30th, 2009 at 4:59 pm

GS van Zyl - Here is the problem viewed from the Kiwis and Aussies perspective

http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby/news/2379017/Tew-Sth-Africa-won-t-budge/#share

(Report abuse)

Tony McKeever on May 1st, 2009 at 3:02 pm

Don’t put the cart before the horse.

EC isn’t weak because it has no franchise. It has no franchise because it’s weak.

It’s always been pathetically weak.

This is no “chicken-or-egg” argument. The EC sucks at rugby. Always has, always will.

(Report abuse)

Jon on May 2nd, 2009 at 4:45 am

JON: Try working for no pay. It is obvious that a franchise generates funds from sponsors who seek out the (exposure) rights due to the television coverage (win or lose) with which to retain & pay players.
Where were you when the Bulls were bottom of the Super 8 Super 10 & Super 12?
Your logic is questionable.

(Report abuse)

June on May 3rd, 2009 at 2:27 pm

Here comes trouble a Ten Team ANZAC Tournament - already signed up with TV backing

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,25415599-2722,00.html

However this mornings article in the Sydney Morning Herald confirms the inevitable:

See http://www.rugbyheaven.com.au/news/news/monday-maul/2009/05/03/1241289038693.html for the full piece:

The SANZAR nations arguing over an abundance of issues is not an attractive look. Offering a tournament that is television friendly, more enticing to the local market and keeps at arm’s length that irritating pest of a cousin, is.

For some time, local officials have been working away on a trans-Tasman Asia-Pacific tournament, which at first would involve 10 teams, and then through the introduction of Japanese sides, expand to a 12-team competition.

It would originally comprise of the five New Zealand teams and the four Australian provinces, with the extra side scheduled to come from this side of the Tasman. There are also thoughts of having two teams based in Japan.

It is certainly time-zone friendly. As ARU chief John O’Neill explained: “You could see a 3.30pm-5.30-7.30-9.30 smorgasbord of rugby on a Saturday.”

They have also consulted the local broadcasters, who like the proposal. This is no surprise, as broadcasters know that overnight matches from South Africa are as big a pay TV attraction as showing the test pattern.

So a SANZAR split appears inevitable. As they say in Ireland: “An Aussie and a Kiwi walk into a Dublin pub and see a horse at the bar wearing a Springbok jersey. They ask in unison: ‘Why the long face?”‘

(Report abuse)

Tony McKeever on May 3rd, 2009 at 11:52 pm

And from the land down under we hear what we already knew the 15th team goes to Melbourne:

Secret’s out: more Super derbies from 2011
Josh Rakic | May 17, 2009

DESPITE top secrecy since last Thursday’s successful SANZAR meeting - at which South Africa confirmed it would remain in the Super rugby competition - The Sun-Herald can confirm a 15th team will be included in an extended competition from 2011.

Reds rugby boss Peter Lewis last week demanded Australian teams play each other twice in the regular season to boost patronage and revenue with local derbies. A source close to the SANZAR camp confirmed that this would, in fact, be the case.

All 15 teams will play each other once, while the regular season will be extended by three rounds, during which teams will play three other sides from their respective pools for a second time. This means the Waratahs would be likely to have home and away matches with the Reds, Brumbies and Force.

Instead of having six home games one season and the seven the next, it’s believed all teams will have eight home matches a season, creating three extra revenue-making opportunities over two years.

The good news for Wallabies coach Robbie Deans - who last week gave his public support to expansion - is that the 15th team is all but certain to be based in Melbourne.

The length of the Super season was a big talking point at the meeting, Australia making no secret of its intention to extend the season and start it later to compete with the NRL and AFL.

South Africa was opposed to the suggestion, which would affect its prized domestic Currie Cup season, but the two nations and New Zealand were able to agree on a likely four-week extension.

Final details are still to be nutted out but it’s believed the season could be pushed back a week to start on the second last weekend in February.

If the bye rounds remain as expected, this would push the regular season back until the final weekend of May - the same weekend on which this year’s grand final will be played.

Regardless, all three nations have agreed on an overhaul of the finals system, doing away with the four-team structure to make a six-team finals series.

In the model, teams No. 1 and No. 2 would automatically progress to the grand final qualifiers and teams No. 3 and No. 4 would play teams No. 6 and No. 5 respectively. The winners would go on to battle for a grand final berth against the top two teams.

To accommodate the extra two teams, the finals series will be extended by one week, meaning the Super rugby calendar could run until the end of June, or at least into the third week.

Daar’sy!

(Report abuse)

Tony McKeever on May 16th, 2009 at 4:45 pm

Super 14 becomes Super 15. Good!

Melbourne comes in. What of relegation and promotion? What of the Eastern Cape?

(Report abuse)

June on May 17th, 2009 at 3:01 pm

Is it true that the players saved SANZAR?

Frustrated players save Sanzar
4:00AM Sunday May 17, 2009
By Gregor Paul

Player intervention is understood to have saved the Sanzar alliance.

Frustrated by the inability of administrators to strike a working deal, players from all three Sanzar nations, through their professional associations, are believed to have stepped in.

They quickly agreed on a compromise on how to restructure Super Rugby and presented their vision to administrators.

It’s understood the nations reacted differently but were put under severe pressure by the players’ associations to accept the deal.

Sources have said the alternative transtasman competition being worked up as a fall-back option lacked detail.

They also said it was unlikely to capture the imagination of TV executives or sponsors and that New Zealand and Australia would have been facing a significant drop in income had they gone down that route.

Sanzar executives were at an impasse over the start date of an expanded competition and how to structure games during the June test window.

Details on the new agreement will not be revealed until relevant stakeholders have been briefed but it is widely expected the competition from 2011 will have 15 teams.

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Those teams will be split into three geographic conferences with decisions still to be made about where the 15th team will be based. It is also thought the new competition will start in early March and all conferences will begin simultaneously.

Details of how Super 15 will be structured during the June test window is not known. However, the Springbok players are believed to have agreed to be less involved in the early stages of the Currie Cup.

One of the major sticking blocks in the negotiations has been South Africa’s desire to protect the Currie Cup and not allow the expanded Super 15 to overlap it. They have already sold TV rights for the Currie Cup.

Because the South Africans have compromised over their domestic competition, it is thought the season will run into early August and the number of games played during the June window will be limited.

The players decided they had to get involved as they had no desire to see the alliance split. While travel has been labelled a problem, the players were adamant on retaining the link with South Africa. The new format will cut the time spent away from home as more games will be played in New Zealand.

All three parties have agreed to not make public any details of the new format until they have been presented to their respective boards and agreed. That is expected to be done this week and, assuming sign-off is granted, Sanzar will then present its plans to News Corporation and other broadcasters at the end of June.

An extended Super 15 will further decrease the importance of the provincial championship as the overlap will be greater. If Super 15 runs until early August, followed almost immediately by the Tri Nations, All Black involvement is going to be zero.

Discussions are scheduled to restructure the provincial championship with the chances now high that the number of teams will be cut to build a shorter, tighter competition. It may also be time to revert to the old format of two divisions with promotion and relegation.

(Report abuse)

June on May 17th, 2009 at 3:07 pm

And guess what with the declaration of a profit by SARU, several hundred people here in Alicedale were deprived of jobs and a better standard of living. To date there has been no formal announcement or apology made to the people of Alicedale, some of whom waited patiently on the pavements on 15th January 2007 and several days after for the arrival of the contractor who would ‘turn the first sod’ and so provide job and small business opportunities. Apparently the Feasibility Study, done at great expense, was positive and let’s face it, there was never a ‘perhaps the Academy will be built’, it was announced as a DEFINITE by politicians, MEC’s, SARU, Supersport etc. etc. See The Herald 11.7.06 THIS IS A DISGRACE …….. but we are working on it!

(Report abuse)

Eli Konstant (Ms) on June 22nd, 2009 at 12:51 pm

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(Report abuse)

fast cash approval on April 5th, 2011 at 12:04 pm

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Tony led the change in corporate identity of South African Airways from the airline of the old South Africa to the flag carrier of the new South Africa.
Before that he was a competitive provincial sportsmen in swimming, diving, waterpolo, lifesaving and white water rafting.
Rugby was played at Bishops, NW Cape, Maties, van der Stel, UCT, Hamiltons and False Bay.
Tony singularly authored the blueprint for the establishment of Soccer City Stadium for the PSL which in 2010 hosted the opening and closing ceremonies of the FIFA World Cup and the Finals of the soccer showpiece.
He was past CEO of the Southern & Eastern Cape Super 14 Rugby franchise, the Southern Spears and now CEO of the Super 20 Rugby World Series.
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By the time you read this, the Springboks would probably have landed in Johannesburg and would be holding a press conference at the OR Tambo Intercont...
As you read this, Bakkies Botha is probably back in Pretoria leaving behind him New Zealand and the next three games of the Rugby World Cup, which end...
Dan Carter was to have captained the All Blacks for the first time on Sunday. An honour bestowed on him as a Kiwi legend akin to that of teammate Rich...
So now that we know Richie McCaw plays the bagpipes, and has Scottish heritage, the Rugby World Cup organisers are being put under pressure from all q...
The Rugby World Cup commences tomorrow September 9 with the All Blacks vs Tonga match. The flood gates will open for all the 20 team games with 600 pl...
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