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Rugby in Yorkshire - Times article |
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islander
World Cup Winner Joined: 17 Mar 2010 Location: jersey Status: Offline Points: 7598 |
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Posted: 15 Apr 2020 at 20:47 |
Don't think this has been posted before, from Owen Slot in The Times last week...
When we get out of this mess, will
someone please come to the rescue of Yorkshire? On Friday last week, the final
placings in the leagues were confirmed and in the promotion and relegation
equations, the Yorkshire clubs did not fare well. Yorkshire Carnegie were
relegated from the Championship to National One and Rotherham went down from
National One to National Two. These are both teams that have played Premiership
rugby. Along with Rotherham, one of the
other two clubs to be relegated from National One were from Yorkshire: Hull
Ionians. And Otley, who once rose to what is now the Championship, were
relegated from National Two. Yorkshire remains a rugby heartland.
There are more clubs in Yorkshire (125) than in any other county. Yet, somehow,
this county has become the land that professional rugby forgot. Why does this
matter? Because if you are a young wannabe professional player, where do you
go? Quite a lot go to Bath at the moment. The cream of the crop from West Park,
one of the Leeds clubs, have just signed for Warrington to play rugby league
instead. It also matters because if you have a strong professional club in the
county, it gives the game a shop window. It sells rugby to young boys and
girls. Ideally, professional rugby should be spread evenly across the country;
Yorkshire has become its big black hole. The only Yorkshire
club left in the top two divisions, now, is Doncaster who finished tenth in the
Championship. For a long while,
the hope and expectation was that Yorkshire Carnegie would rebuild and bounce
back into the Premiership, but the opposite has happened. The club has gone
into freefall. No one can be sure that the club can actually afford to keep
going next season. Indeed, the club has
dropped so far that it has changed its name. No longer the “Yorkshire” that had
intended to create a county-wide identity, the club has returned to its
geographical name: Leeds. Merely changing the name might wipe away some of the
toxicity of the recent past. Here is the problem.
Yorkshire has not just been left behind as a county; it’s leading club has
become reviled. This is why. Last
season — the 2018-19 season — was one of catastrophic mismanagement. Yorkshire
Carnegie (as they were then) were languishing at the foot of the Championship
and sought to remedy that situation mid-season by recruiting nine new players,
most of them flying in from New Zealand. However, it soon
became clear that the club couldn’t afford their wages. Actually, it could
hardly pay anyone’s wages. So the entire staff were laid off — players and
non-players — and a deal was agreed where they would receive only 15p of every
single £1 they were owed. Some of them didn’t receive that. Somehow, the RFU
cast ethics and player welfare to one side and the club was allowed to continue
unimpeded. In August last year, an entire new squad was recruited at cut-price
deals. That they were playing their first games a month later made a sequence
of heavy defeats inevitable. The total absence of long-term strategy was then
exposed, before Christmas, when the new coach who had just recruited this squad
was sacked. As if this was all his fault. When Phil Davies
then arrived to take the helm, people asked him: why? Why do it? Davies had
coached Leeds for a decade, from 1996-2006, and had just come back from the
World Cup where he had coached Namibia. Davies is one of the good guys. When
Davies then recruited four of his old Namibian players, it seemed that the
whole story was about to repeat itself. Then the music stopped.
Covid-19 brought the whole thing to a halt. Yorkshire Carnegie still hadn’t won
a game; they hadn’t come close. The Namibians flew home before the planes
stopped flying. Relegation was finally confirmed. And that is where we are now. Yorkshire/Leeds now
have a chance to rethink, to reset. They badly need it. Davies seems to
understand that. “This is the end of one era,” he said. “It is time for a new
era.” The fact that Davies came back in and held his nose is one reason why
“Leeds” now have a chance of making that happen. Why did he come
back? “It was a case of trying to help an old friend,” he explains. His
attitude has been to draw a line on the past. “I didn’t make those decisions
and I wasn’t there when they were made. Hopefully respect and credibility can
return.” The new Leeds
probably need more than just a new name. They should move home as well. There
has been talk of shifting to York. Their Emerald Headingley Stadium has a
capacity of 21,062, which doesn’t look too good when, sometimes, less than 500
come to watch. It also costs just
less than £100,000 a season for them to play there. They will struggle to
afford that. That is why Davies has been putting feelers out to the club’s
network of former players to ask them to help. In another world, where
blue-sky thinking is allowed, the RFU could take a commanding stake in the club
and run it as a franchise. Imagine having that vast player-base at your
command. The RFU has already taken over a shared ownership of the academy
(after Yorkshire Carnegie had elected to make the staff redundant). The reality is that
Yorkshire/Leeds have raw materials aplenty to sustain a competitive team. The
academy is a proven success, there are two massive universities in the city
where sport is a high priority, and a massive network of clubs on the doorstep
— all of which makes for an ideal player pathway. But this is a
long-term project. And it needs someone to take it on. Not just Davies alone. Until then, this
remains the county that professional rugby forgot. |
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Raider999
World Cup Winner Joined: 18 Jan 2013 Location: Crawley Status: Offline Points: 4478 |
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A good article which sums up the situation very well IMO.
However, I cannot agree with the bit about RFU running it as a franchise - it basically did this last season with the £500k each championship side received being the only thing that kept YC even partially viable. They should sink or swim as others, with better records, have done in the past. Yorkshire has no given right to be treated differently from anywhere else. Also any idea RFU will be able to fund ta recovery is fanciful in its current financial state even before the current Virus situation. |
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RAID ON
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Cannon
World Cup Winner Joined: 21 Jan 2010 Location: 20m behind play Status: Offline Points: 1473 |
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Sadly in these trying times I feel that this will be a huge leveller for some clubs.
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Rucks and mauls may bust my balls, but whips and chains excite me!!
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