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WEvans
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Joined: 08 Dec 2016
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Posted: 13 Apr 2024 at 12:26 |
I read this bit from Steve's post yesterday:
"Reports say the format of the Champions Cup could be changed to make room in the calendar for the new event".
Then I read your interpretation: "The new comp won't have an impact on player welfare/duration of season because the 'North v South' KO games will be instead of the Champions Cup KO stage for that season..."
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tulip
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Posted: 15 Apr 2024 at 08:24 |
Well we have seen how travel arrangements have impacted the Champions cup this year. Will that have an impact on this
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Paul10
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Posted: 17 Apr 2024 at 08:52 |
Richard Lowther wrote:
Paul10 wrote:
Baxter mentions the extra travel costs but forgets the extra income from prize money (1/4 final must be more than last 16) and big home matches.
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I've had a quick look for the figures but I can't find them. |
It's sillier than I thought.
The monies raised in the rest of the champions cup are shared equally between the 3 leagues (urc, prem top14). Prem share this prize equally amongst the 10.
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Delamas
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Posted: 20 Apr 2024 at 07:47 |
...so, will Quins and Saints both make a financial loss on their away semi-finals ? (!)
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SK 88
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Posted: 20 Apr 2024 at 10:53 |
Yes that's been the case for the entirety of the European Cup in all its forms.
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WEvans
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Posted: 20 Apr 2024 at 13:22 |
SK 88 wrote:
Yes that's been the case for the entirety of the European Cup in all its forms. |
To be fair English clubs hardly need to go to Europe to make a financial loss do they?
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Steve@Mose
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Posted: 06 Sep 2024 at 16:03 |
Rugby Championship may be halved by new All Black-Boks tours
A revival of long-haul tours between South Africa and New Zealand could result in the Rugby Championship only being held every other year.
The South African Rugby Union has announced a plan to host the All Blacks for eight matches, external - featuring games against provincial and South Africa A sides and a three-Test series - in 2026.
The Springboks would travel to New Zealand on a similar itinerary in 2030 in a concept being tagged as 'The Greatest Rugby Rivalry'.
"[Rugby Championship organisers] Sanzaar haven't finalised any of that, but I think that you'd be focusing more on series trophies rather than a Rugby Championship trophy," Rugby Australia chief executive Phil Waugh told The Roar , externalwhen asked what the plans meant for the Wallabies.
He added that he expected the Rugby Championship to take place in 2027 and 2029, but not in 2026, 2028 and 2030, with Australia instead hoping to host their own stand-alone tours in those years. |
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Steve@Mose
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Posted: 28 Sep 2024 at 00:27 |
'Rugby will die without new plan' - World Rugby candidate Benazzi
Former France international Abdelatif Benazzi says rugby union faces an existential crisis if it fails to find new markets and bring more cash into the game.
The 56-year-old is running to lead World Rugby when Bill Beaumont steps down as chairman in November.
"Since the pandemic, it is the first time we have seen all the federations, even the historic ones, in trouble with their revenues," he told BBC Sport.
"Rugby is in trouble around the world. We will die if everyone stays on his own side. We have to think collectively."
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A new global calendar is due to come in in 2026 to help boost revenues, with the world's top 12 Test nations taking part in a Rugby Nations Championship, culminating in a weekend of finals in late autumn to decide the winners and final rankings.
World Rugby reportedly turned down a lucrative proposal from Qatar to host the climax of the first four editions of the biennial tournament in 2025, 2028, 2030 and 2032., external
Benazzi, currently a French Rugby Union (FFR) vice-President, believes there is still scope to revive the plan, albeit on a smaller scale and with Qatari commitment to human rights.
"Qatar have improved a lot of things in their country and sport has helped accelerate integration and understanding for the culture," explained Benazzi, who attended the 2022 Fifa World Cup in the country.
"I was very impressed with the Qataris' interest in sport and their open mind about women. It is a new path and we have to find a new market, and new countries to host.
"We refused Qatar with five finals. They come back now maybe with interest for one final - that's interesting. We don't close the door.
"But we won't sell our rugby and lose our values. We have to discuss with everyone."
Rugby Football Union chief executive Bill Sweeney has previously suggested London may stage the first edition of the tournament in 2026, while the 2030 tournament could take place in the United States to help raise the sport's profile before men's and women's Rugby World Cups in the country in 2031 and 2033 respectively.
That itinerary could pave the way for the 2028 event to be staged in the Middle East. |
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Steve@Mose
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Posted: 9 hours 7 minutes ago at 12:12 |
Qatar Airways agrees £80m sponsorship deal for rugby union’s Nations Championship
Qatar Airways has agreed a deal worth up to £80m to become title sponsors of the new Nations Championship in a move that underlines rugby union’s determination to follow other sports in securing investment from the Middle East.
The Guardian revealed in October that Qatar had been chosen to stage the second finals series of the Nations Championship, in 2028, and the national airline has now come on board as headline sponsors. The eight-year deal will cover the qualifying matches and finals series for the first four editions of the new competition running from 2026 until 2034.
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Qatar’s move into rugby is partly an acknowledgment that their neighbours Saudi Arabia will dominate the football landscape over the next decade after winning the right to stage the 2034 World Cup and agreeing several sponsorship and broadcasting deals with Fifa. Saudi money is also increasingly prominent in boxing, Formula One, golf and tennis, but the Kingdom has not followed up on initial talks about investing in rugby.
The inaugural Nations Championship will take place next year in a joint venture run by the Six Nations and southern hemisphere Sanzaar unions, with assistance from World Rugby. The Six Nations teams will play three matches away and three at home against the Sanzaar nations and two others – expected to be Japan and Fiji – in July and November followed by a final series.
Under the proposed tournament structure the sixth-ranked European team after the six group matches will play their equivalent from the southern hemisphere, with fifth facing fifth and so on, leading to a grand final to determine the Nations Championship winners. All the final series matches will take place in the same city, with Doha to stage the six playoff games in 2028 after London hosts the first event next year.
Qatar had wanted to stage the first four Nations Championship finals, but that proposal was rejected by the Irish and French unions due to uncertainty over attendances and concerns over the country’s human rights record. The heads-of-terms agreement is understood to give Qatar the option of staging the event again in either 2030 or 2032 however, if certain revenue targets are met.
An announcement about the staging agreement has been delayed by ongoing discussions between the Six Nations and Sanzaar over the revenue split and the allocation of prize money and appearance fees.
Six Nations and Sanzaar are also continuing to hold talks with other commercial partners before confirming the Qatar Airways deal. The size of the deal will make it the biggest title sponsorship in world rugby, with each Nations Championship valued at around £20m, dwarfing the £12m sponsorship value of the Guinness Six Nations, which covers both men’s and women’s competitions. |
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