Report: Super Rugby's best set to take on elite European clubs in proposed club world championship
Top clubs and franchises from the northern and southern hemispheres could be in line to square off against one another in a world club championship as soon as 2022, according to a news report out of England.
According to the The Telegraph, there is "growing optimism" among key stakeholders for the creation of the competition, with hopes for kick-off at the end of the 2021-22 season.
The tournament would reportedly be held once every four years, and would feature a total 16 teams from both sides of the world to face off in a straight knockout format.
While ensuring the Champions Cup remains the premier club competition in the northern hemisphere, it is thought the club world championship would replace the knockout stages of the European competition.
Instead, the four highest-ranked teams from the pool stages of the Champions Cup would be joined by the previous season's winners of that tournament, the Premiership, the Top 14 and the PRO14 as the northern hemisphere's representatives.
It remains unclear how the eight teams from the southern hemisphere would be determined, especially given the fluid situation in South Africa, with the nation's four Super Rugby franchises dumped from the competition by New Zealand and Australia.
The Trans-Tasman nations are expected to join forces and team up with two Pacific Island sides to create a new version of the Super 12 in 2022, and it may be that the top eight sides from that competition qualify for the proposed club world championship.
South Africa's teams, meanwhile, are widely thought to be integrated into the PRO14, which already has two South African franchises in the form of the Cheetahs and Southern Kings.
The Lions, Sharks, Bulls and Stormers are also expected to be eligible for Champions Cup qualification from 2022, with The Telegraph reporting that details will be discussed with key stakeholders over a series of Zoom calls.
It is unclear whether teams from the Top League in Japan, Major League Rugby in North America or Super Liga Americana de Rugby in South America will be involved in a club world championship.
Regardless, The Telegraph said there was an “expectation that an agreement can be reached within weeks".
“It is really exciting. Everyone is talking – World Rugby, the southern hemisphere and ourselves,” said Simon Halliday, the chairman of European Professional Club Rugby, the organisers of the Champions Cup and Challenge Cup.
“We would like, if all the negotiations are fruitful, that the latter stages of the 2021/22 season would see the inaugural World Club Champions Cup take place. This can work without there needing to be any serious upheaval in the current calendar.
“It is under discussion and everyone seems keen but there are many key decisions yet to make. We can see how it can work for the northern hemisphere clubs but it needs to work for the southern hemisphere as well.
“We are going to be making presentations in the coming weeks to go into the details of how exactly it would work as there are a lot of moving parts. We need to make it work in the next month or so. The leagues and the union of the northern hemisphere will come together to sign off a new EPCR agreement that will take us through to the latter part of the next decade.
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> It would be best described as an elegant solution to what was potentially going to be a significant problem for new All Blacks coach Scott Robertson. It is a problem the mad population of New Zealand will have to cope with more and more as All Blacks are able to continue their careers in NZ post RWCs. It will not be a problem for coaches, who are always going to start a campaign with the captain for the next WC in mind. > Cane, despite his warrior spirit, his undoubted commitment to every team he played for and unforgettable heroics against Ireland in last year’s World Cup quarter-final, was never unanimously admired or respected within New Zealand while he was in the role. Neither was McCaw, he was considered far too passive a captain and then out of form until his last world cup where everyone opinions changed, just like they would have if Cane had won the WC. > It was never easy to see where Cane, or even if, he would fit into Robertson’s squad given the new coach will want to be building a new-look team with 2027 in mind. > Cane will win his selections on merit and come the end of the year, he’ll sign off, he hopes, with 100 caps and maybe even, at last, universal public appreciation for what was a special career. No, he won’t. Those returning from Japan have already earned the right to retain their jersey, it’s in their contract. Cane would have been playing against England if he was ready, and found it very hard to keep his place. Perform, and they keep it however. Very easy to see where Cane could have fit, very hard to see how he could have accomplished it choosing this year as his sabbatical instead of 2025, and that’s how it played out (though I assume we now know what when NZR said they were allowing him to move his sabbatical forward and return to NZ next year, they had actually agreed to simply select him for the All Blacks from overseas, without any chance he was going to play in NZ again). With a mammoth season of 15 All Black games they might as well get some value out of his years contract, though even with him being of equal character to Richie, I don’t think they should guarantee him his 100 caps. That’s not what the All Blacks should be about. He absolutely has to play winning football.
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