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Why a British-Irish league would not be the panacea rugby needs

Let’s be brutally frank – how much would a so-called Super League really shift the dial without emotional investment?

Leinster’s Champions Cup semi-final against Northampton drew a huge crowd to Croke Park but there are no guarantees a British & Irish League would succeed. Photograph: Damien Eagers/PA

In a perfect world the countdown to a new season would be all about the rugby. Can Northampton Saints and Glasgow Warriors successfully defend their hard-earned respective Premiership and United Rugby Championship titles? If not, who will be their biggest threats? And which individuals have the ability to exchange relative anonymity for a place in Andy Farrell’s British & Irish Lions squad next summer?

The weather is half decent, the pitches firm, the scent of freshly cut grass and embrocation reliably evocative. There is just one sizeable drawback, as every professional club executive can testify. Primarily it is all about the price tag and whether or not the sums stack up. Out in the real world it is less a case of smelling the Deep Heat than absorbing the ongoing financial pain.

If anyone needed proof it came late last week. An eve-of-season board meeting would usually be about dotting the ‘i’s and crossing the ‘t’s to ensure the best chance of a shiny, happy campaign. Instead the Premiership’s power brokers have been debating whether or not a British & Irish men’s league might be a better way forward. Efforts have since been made to pour cold water on the story but there is rarely smoke in rugby without some glowing embers.

Well-placed insiders have been offering up a simple three-letter explanation: CVC. In normal circumstances the private equity company that splashed so much cash for the privilege of investing in rugby union six years ago would now be poised to check out. It did not get involved to chat endlessly about scrums and mauls; the chief priority is a significant return on that investment. And, as things stand, that has yet to materialise.

Recently even the supposed pinnacle of the club game, the Champions Cup, has failed to tempt England’s most established broadcasters. Good luck to Premier Sports but awarding it the rights does not obviously solve the competition’s steady slippage in profile. And what happens if Sky, TNT Sports, Discovery and the established terrestrial channels ultimately decide they can do without the expense of cross-border club rugby indefinitely? Little wonder the Premiership’s next television contract, once TNT’s deal expires in 2026, is already concentrating minds.

There is one twinkling solution in clear view. A bespoke rugby channel, broadcasting all the best club games worldwide, with millions of subscribers keen to register. CVC, which already has stakes in both the Premiership and the URC, would be ignoring the marketing elephant in the room if it did not at least float the idea of a simplified offering. “Sign up for the best league in the world” – even more competitive on a weekly basis than the Top 14 – would be a useful tagline.

All of which fuels the British & Irish League speculation. Twenty-five years ago, in the earliest days of professionalism, it would have made even more sense. Work together to stabilise the player wage “arms race”, dovetail the fixture list with the Five/Six Nations and save several decades of angst? Hurrah! These days things are far more logistically tangled and complex.

Glasgow Warriors will this weekend begin their defence of the title they won in April. Photograph: Steve Haag Sports/Inpho/Shutterstock

And let’s be brutally frank. Would any resultant “Super League” be a massive improvement or shift the dial in terms of its financial uplift? Compared to the increasingly buoyant and eye-catching Top 14, Newcastle versus Dragons or Connacht versus Sale on a Friday night would hardly be a gamechanger. A conference set-up might work in American sport but would it capture neutral imaginations here? And what about the South Africans and the Italians, both of whom are being sworn in as full voting partners of the URC next year?

Speaking to representatives of both leagues this week, there is certainly little sense of breathless excitement or talk of a magic bullet. Unless, maybe, the various national unions could all be persuaded that the still-lucrative Six Nations – particularly in the event of the old European Cup faltering – would be stronger as a result. Then, maybe, there could be a virtuous circle: the fixture list would dovetail more effectively, the best players would play in bigger and better club games and those who only watch the international game could be more easily enticed.

For that to happen, though, a deft scalpel will have to be applied to both existing leagues. If the broadcasters are ever going to be persuaded to pay top dollar again in an uncertain market, they will want to be showcasing the best players on the continent, not also-ran sides full of journeymen. Some of the scenarios being discussed would also involve only eight English sides. In that event, which two would drop out? And, on that subject, exactly how many competitive men’s professional sides can Wales sustain?

Enough. History has long since taught us that self-interest is rugby officialdom’s guiding light. Which instantly renders the idea of an Anglo-Welsh league – which would benefit relatively few and dilute everyone’s share of the central pie – a non-starter for the English and makes a British & Irish league similarly unlikely for the foreseeable future.

Admittedly there has been some tentative interest from Ireland but, ultimately, the lessons of rugby’s past echo loudest. Without an intense whiff of historic rivalry and, ideally, fervent away support, no amount of televisual magic will generate the same emotional pull. Which is why, as the Prem and the URC prepare to kick off on Friday night with Bath hosting Northampton in a repeat of last season’s final and Edinburgh entertaining their old rivals Leinster, we should all be extremely careful what we wish for.

C’mon, Aussie, c’mon

Look, as they like saying in Australia to buy extra thinking time: it’s not a done deal yet. There are still more than nine months before the Lions turn up to face the Wallabies in next year’s three-Test series and a lot can change in rugby in a short space of time. But, let’s be clear, Australia’s recent record 67-27 defeat in Argentina was not a great look in a Lions context and their two upcoming Tests against New Zealand, starting in Sydney this weekend, feel increasingly pivotal. Go down in a heap against a currently less-than-vintage All Black side and morale will be dented even further. This would be a good moment, accordingly, for the Wallabies to dust themselves down and regain some bounce. If not a potentially tricky end-of-year tour to Europe will become even more challenging.

The All Blacks’ TJ Perenara during training in Sydney on Tuesday. Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP

Memory lane

Back to the Courage League National 1 in January 1997 and Francois Pienaar’s Saracens debut against Bath at the Rec, as the dawn of professionalism arrived in English club rugby. The hosts ran out 33-25 victors.

Still want more?

Sale and England flanker Tom Curry tells Gerard Meagher: “The surgeon said you are probably going to retire … I just cried.”

Gerard also delves into the state of the Premiership on the eve of the season.

And if England v New Zealand is the World Cup final in 2025, fans will be treated to an absolute classic. Sarah Rendell reports from Twickenham as Abby Dow led the Red Roses to victory against the Black Ferns.

Abby Dow breaks clear to score for England. Photograph: David Rogers/Getty Images

And finally …

Here at The Breakdown we are greatly looking forward to bringing you full coverage of a jam-packed rugby union campaign, stretching all the way to the final Lions Test in Sydney on 2 August next year and beyond to the World Cup in England. Please feel free to subscribe to this newsletter and/or to get in touch with any news stories or subjects you’d like us to cover. The very best of luck, in the meantime, to players, coaches and referees at all levels of the game. Get stuck in and enjoy your season.