The World Club Cup can't come soon enough
My only slight dismay at news that a World Club Cup might happen, is having to wait until 2028 to see it.
Our rugby competitions in New Zealand are stale, at best. At worst, they’re on life support.
A World Club Cup could be the thing that saves them.
Presumably, the top six clubs from Super Rugby Pacific will be the ones who form our portion of the proposed 16-team, four-week tournament in the northern hemisphere.
I sincerely hope that’s the actual top six teams. Not a reprise of the nonsensical conference system that was an embarrassment to Super Rugby for a time.
Oh yes. I’m pretty sure I remember the Lions qualifying for home finals one season without having had a New Zealand team on the schedule.
Or the Hurricanes finishing third overall, but having to go play the Brumbies in Canberra because they were Australia’s top-qualifier.
Something like that, anyway.
The point is, if we are having a World Club Cup and we are sending six teams from Super Rugby Pacific - or whatever it’s called by 2028 - then they need to qualify on merit. Not three from New Zealand and three from Australia, for instance.
If the Fijian Drua or Moana Pasifika are among those six teams - assuming they’re still in the competition - then that’s fine by me.
As long as it’s all about merit and where you actually finish on the table.
The World Club Cup is exciting on its own merits, with a forecast eight teams from Europe, six from Super and two from Japan.
It’s the kind of rugby we’ve been crying out for.
But it’s what it adds to our competition - a bit like qualification for the Champions League in European football - that has the potential to create excitement.
I’ve not read anything about World Club Cup prize money yet, but I hope that goes solely to the participating clubs and not their governing bodies.
I don’t love rugby being a nanny state here and nor do I have any particular interest in salary caps or even distributions of talent.
All leagues have some mechanism to theoretically even things out, whether it’s a Luxury Tax in the NBA or Financial Fair Play in football.
But, essentially, it’s the big clubs and big franchises in the big markets that generally reign supreme. And, when they don’t, like Chelsea FC or Manchester United at the moment, fans, former players and pundits line up to criticise them.
That’s professional sport. That’s interesting. That engages audiences. That sells subscriptions and generates readers.
If you can qualify for the World Club Cup every four years - as it’s initially been earmarked for - and win it once or twice, then you deserve to be well-compensated.
For those that don’t qualify, you create a very real incentive to do so next time.
Hopefully it’s the start of things to come.
Schedules are always juggling acts, but when the ICC saw how much money their men’s Twenty20 World Cup generated, they quickly decided to have them every two years instead of four.
We don’t know what rugby’s World Club Cup could become, but we’re acutely aware in New Zealand of how quickly things can stagnate when you’re content to maintain the status quo.
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I do think the media in NZ treated him badly. Sam is a legend. He is humble, a great rugby mind and leader. What happened in the final could happen to anyone. The margins is so fine these days. I lay blame at the feet of the coaching staff and NZ rugby. The stats tell’s all. The AB’s was the worst disciplined side in the WC with more red and yellow cards than anyone else. Problem is NZ rugby is not training their players to play safer. And thats the danger a fast game brings. More yellow and red cards. But Sam Cane in my eye was and still is a great ambassador for the game, that just had a stroke of bad luck.
Go to commentsI hope Jim and co. Add this to their list of icebreaker questions they can ask all their guests going forward. So we can eventually hear what everyone thinks about this subject. “What do you think Ireland meant…”
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