Manawatu Standard

Struggling Aussies eye up NZ’S NPC

- RUGBY

If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em.

The Australian game has hit rock bottom in Super Rugby, with their trans-tasman record now reading 0-15 and their conference leaders (the Brumbies) with four fewer points than New Zealand’s bottom side (the Blues), so it’s no surprise to discover some radical proposals are being mooted.

The latest solution being aired across the ditch is for Australia to use the New Zealand provincial game as its chief developmen­t pathway and send its second-tier National Rugby Championsh­ip club teams to participat­e in the Mitre 10 Cup. That’s a proposal being supported by NSW Waratahs chief executive Andrew Hore, who just happens to be a New Zealander.

Hore, who has worked as a high performanc­e manager for NZ Rugby and was chief executive of Ospreys in Wales, told The Guardian Australia he believed it would turn round the Australian game in ‘‘two and a-half to three years maximum’’.

‘‘Does it have merit – yes, it does. It would be great for coaches, it would be great for players and it would enhance the competitio­n,’’ he said of the proposal for Australia’s eight NRC teams to join New Zealand’s provincial competitio­n.

‘‘The NRC is not a bad competitio­n. But we want it to be commercial­ly sustainabl­e – playing in the Mitre 10 Cup might give it greater commercial sustainabi­lity, and connect through to the community.’’

An Aussie invasion of the wellestabl­ished Kiwi provincial championsh­ip may seem a logical panacea to their problems across the Tasman, but the reality is it is never going to pass muster in New Zealand. Even with a likely hefty participat­ion fee.

Hore told the Guardian the game was ‘‘in crisis’’ in Australia, as the imminent Super Rugby team axing, falling attendance numbers and declining television ratings sit alongside the poor onfield results.

The Waratahs boss said it was time for the Australian game to take a close look at those running the sport.

‘‘It could have something to do with the maturity level and maybe the age of some of the administra­tors in this part of the world … we’re starting to see is some tired individual­s, people who don’t know what else is out and about,’’ he said.

And the Kiwi official had no hesitation in pointing to the main weakness in Australian rugby.

‘‘We don’t have a great deal of collaborat­ion,’’ he said. ‘‘That’s the big difference between here and New Zealand. There’s almost a feeling with that group [Australian administra­tors] of being intimidate­d by consulting down. It’s as if they’re embarrasse­d if they don’t have the answer to bring to the table. I say give the problems to the people to bring back some solutions.’’

 ??  ?? The Brumbies are Australia’s best team in Super Rugby but have a inferior record to the Blues, New Zealand’s worst-placed team.
The Brumbies are Australia’s best team in Super Rugby but have a inferior record to the Blues, New Zealand’s worst-placed team.

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