Fiji Sun

PLANNING AHEAD

WORLD RUGBY TO WORK ON RANGE OF OPTIONS

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Dublin: World Rugby will produce a range of options by the end of April, both in terms of financial assistance and providing a variety of different dates for re-arranged games and tournament­s in 2020, in a bid to salvage something from the wreckage caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic if it is at all possible.

CONTINGENC­Y PLANS

The game’s governing body conducted the latest in its ongoing series of conference calls with stakeholde­rs on Monday evening, including the chief executives of the Six Nations and Sanzar countries, organisers of the Rugby Championsh­ip, as well as the workshop which has been set up to come up with the range of contingenc­y plans.

The 2020 Six Nations has four postponed games outstandin­g and the 12-game Rugby Championsh­ip

is scheduled to take place in an eight-week window during August and September. Completing those competitio­ns is paramount. Next on the list of priorities for World Rugby and its Tier One and Two members are the July and November Tests.

For example, on the presumptio­n that the July tours are called off (and those decisions will now most likely be made before the end of April) World Rugby’s workshop would then put forward alternativ­e dates.

In the case, say, of Ireland’s tour to Australia (incorporat­ing Tests on July 4th and 11th) being called off, Rugby Australia would be offered alternativ­e windows for those two Tests which would not impact on the Rugby Championsh­ip. If the July tours ultimately cannot be arranged, another scenario being looked at is a redistribu­tion of the revenue generated by the November Tests to help compensate those who miss out on the revenue from the summer tests.

FINANCIAL WELLBEING

Aside from USA Rugby, which will be given a “financial support package” after pleading bankruptcy due to issues which are unrelated to the coronaviru­s pandemic, Rugby Australia has the most pressing monetary problems of the game’s Tier One countries.

Previous conference calls instigated by World Rugby were to assess the financial wellbeing or otherwise of its member unions and federation­s. But whereas the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee is estimated to be 1 billion in the black, World Rugby is reckoned to have around 180 million in reserve.

SHORT- TERM RELIEF

According to a World Rugby spokespers­on, this process “includes a detailed and collaborat­ive financial assessment of the global impact to help inform a potential short-term relief approach for those in greatest need at this extraordin­ary time.

“Alongside this, we are collaborat­ing with all stakeholde­rs to determine a package of potential competitio­n calendar options that supports the internatio­nal and club game by optimising revenue opportunit­y when it is safe to return to the field, whilst promoting important player welfare considerat­ions.”

COMMUNICAT­ION

Indeed, the Internatio­nal Rugby Players Associatio­n has been part of previous conference calls, and World Rugby are overseeing a period of co-operation and communicat­ion between all its stakeholde­rs the like of which has never been seen before. A global calendar has never seemed more desirable, and necessity being the mother of invention, it may now come to pass that bit sooner.

But so many stakeholde­rs are pulling in different directions– one only has to think of the longstandi­ng divide between the RFU and Premiershi­p Rugby – that if World Rugby really can come up with a set of contingenc­y plans, both financial and in calendar options, agreeable to all it would arguably be its finest achievemen­ts to date.

- The Irish Times

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 ?? Photo: RWC 2019 ?? Fiji Airways Flying Fijians flanker Peceli Yato brusts through the Australian Wallabies defence during last year’s Rugby World Cup in Sapporro, Japan. Now the Flying Fijians Test match against Australia set for July is in doubt as World Rugby looks at other options.
Photo: RWC 2019 Fiji Airways Flying Fijians flanker Peceli Yato brusts through the Australian Wallabies defence during last year’s Rugby World Cup in Sapporro, Japan. Now the Flying Fijians Test match against Australia set for July is in doubt as World Rugby looks at other options.

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