Herald on Sunday

FIRST BLOOD

The injury-hit All Blacks stormed home to win a thriller at Eden Park last night — and one punter is waking up $117,000 richer after a big bet on Codie Taylor, pictured, to score the first try.

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In the build-up to last night’s first test between the Lions and the All Blacks, leading figures have delivered a sobering verdict on the Lions’ future with warnings that the entire structure could be “killed off”.

Moves to reduce future tours from 10 to eight games and six to five weeks were described as “madness” by John Spencer, a Lions board member and manager of the tour in New Zealand.

Spencer, who was assaulted by a drunk man in an Auckland restaurant this week, warned that coaches and players would turn their backs on the Lions because of the impossibil­ity of the task they faced and the threats to welfare.

The next three-tour cycle of South Africa, Australia and New Zealand has been agreed in principle with a minimum of eight games, as part of the new global calendar from 2019 announced by World Rugby in March. However, negotiatio­ns between stakeholde­rs to determine the details of the Lions tours from 2021 are ongoing and there is pressure from clubs, particular­ly in England, to shorten the length of the tour to five weeks, a schedule that officials fear would make the concept untenable. They believe a two-week preparatio­n time is the minimum requiremen­t.

“If they take a couple of matches away from us, all coaches think that is madness, bordering on insanity – voluntary insanity,” Spencer said. “If we are not careful with preparatio­n, I think the Lions could be a dead concept.

“The clubs would be killing it by demanding extra things every tour — shorter tours, fewer matches, less preparatio­n. Meanwhile, with one fewer match before the first test, the Lions would come under incredible pressure from the host nation.

“It is easy to say ‘don’t play the midweek matches’ but how do we prepare? Our tour has to have moral force. We need to engage with the community, be respectful and go away with a level of integrity and unless we provide meaningful opposition, you just can’t do it.”

There is huge frustratio­n in the current Lions management that they were forced to play their opening game against the New Zealand Provincial Barbarians only three days after their long-haul flight from London because of the refusal of clubs to shift their domestic finals. The controvers­y of the six call-ups last week is further evidence of the challengin­g schedule. It’s understood the Lions paid Premiershi­p clubs around £470,000 ($820,000) in 2009 to secure agreement for the date of their final to be brought forward to allow a full week of preparatio­n before the tour of South Africa. The request was rejected four years later by both English and Welsh clubs and not even raised ahead of this tour. “I fully understand that the Premiershi­p wants more time at the end of the season and do not want overlaps with internatio­nals but one has to contrast with that the huge undertakin­g and status of the Lions tour,” Spencer said.

Senior sources in the home unions have admitted that the decision to block a plan to reduce the Six Nations from seven to six weeks — which had originally been proposed by the clubs as part of the new global calendar — has now left the Lions extremely vulnerable in the battle to maintain the current length of tour and secure more preparatio­n time.

Spencer argued that “it would be totally contrary to all our values and common sense to let the Lions go into decline”.

“What other sport could take between 20,000 to 30,000 supporters away from home, help the economy of the host country and keep the creed and concept of the Lions going and here we are artificial­ly trying to hit it around the head with a bat?

“We are going to put such pressure on the coaches and players at the end of a busy season and they will eventually, because it is such an impossible task, not want to go.

“Coaches will say ‘I am not putting my reputation at stake for that’, and players will say ‘we are just going to get beaten up’.”

Lions chief executive John Feehan warned that decline would have alarming consequenc­es for the financing of the game.

“If the Lions are killed over the next three tours, then Northern Hemisphere leverage is gone and a great brand of rugby is gone,” Feehan said. “When I first started 16 years ago, there was a lot of questionin­g in the press about whether the concept should be continued or not. The 2005 tour [to New Zealand] was difficult but what it did do was make a little bit of money.

“But what some unions did not really appreciate back then was how important the tour is financiall­y for the Sanzar [South Africa, New Zealand and Australia] unions, as the home union gets to keep the goodies. The Northern Hemisphere make more out of the autumn series than the Southern Hemisphere

make out of the June series.”

Steve Tew, New Zealand Rugby chief executive and one of the key negotiator­s in the global calendar, said they had preferred to keep the number of tour games at 10, while eight was seen as the minimum to maintain the tour’s ethos and revenue generation for the host nation.

“We’ve had a discussion about how many games and we have agreed there must be a minimum to make it still like a tour but also considered the pressure on the players’ workload from clubs’ point of view,” Tew said. “If we got down to five games, it would fundamenta­lly change the way a tour is perceived by the players and fans and it would be difficult for the Lions to be brought together for the test matches with just two warm-up games.

“If it lands at eight, we can live with eight. There is no doubt though it will make it harder for the host country to determine who gets games and who doesn’t.”

Talks between the Lions board and their Sanzar counterpar­ts over the details of the next three tours are expected to begin before the end of the year. There is concern that the Lions will lack a strong advocate given any agreement will require the unanimous agreement of the unions some of whom, such as the Rugby Football Union, have to consider their long-term agreement with clubs.

“The Lions have a scarcity value that no other sporting event has. The Sanzar countries are happy for it to go down to eight games because the Lions have less preparatio­n time and the host country has more chance of winning,” Spencer said. “Also financiall­y, they are not affected because they make their money around the test matches.

“Let’s ask what is right for our guys. Is this what we want? If you ask any player on this tour what they think of the concept, they will tell you it is overwhelmi­ng. It is the peak of their careers, a oncein-a-lifetime opportunit­y. Every member of the squad and backroom staff feels the same.

“I dread the start of the decline for reasons that can be avoided so easily at this stage. We should sit down with the stakeholde­rs and say ‘we understand where you are coming from but why are we going to kill off the king of rugby?’

“Let’s have a little bit of common sense in administra­tion where we can protect rugby between certain dates once every four years.”

All Blacks coach Steve Hansen said on Thursday that the impact of the Lions had been huge on the players who had faced them in the build-up to the first test and on the country as a whole.

“It would be a real shame if we ever lose the Lions,” Hansen said.

It would be totally contrary to all our values to let the Lions go into decline. Lions manager John Spencer

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Steve Tew
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 ?? The Lions players are committed to the team’s concept, says their manager John Spencer. Getty Images ??
The Lions players are committed to the team’s concept, says their manager John Spencer. Getty Images

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