Sunday News

Aussies slammed for Super shambles

- LIAM NAPIER

THE Australian Rugby Union is fast becoming Sanzaar’s crippling presence and patience is being sorely tested in New Zealand.

Joint ventures are only as strong as their weakest link and, as the walls close in on the ARU, Super Rugby continues to be buckled at the knees.

The crisis started at the Sanzaar meeting in London in early March, when the ARU agreed to cull one side as part of a consensus to form a 15-team competitio­n next year.

While South Africa, who agreed to axe two sides, arrived back from that London meeting and undertook a proper process, the ARU held a board meeting and suddenly announced the Rebels or Force were on the chopping block. In-fighting and legal threats began immediatel­y.

Since then the ARU has lurched from one disaster to another, leaving its three partners – New Zealand, South Africa and Argentina – in limbo.

‘‘If you are going to give an undertakin­g to reduce teams surely you have worked out how and who and everyone is on board prior to making that agreement,’’ NZ Rugby Players’ Associatio­n boss Rob Nichol said.

‘‘The legacy of Super Rugby; the teams, the players, the fans don’t deserve this. It’s not right, and it’s not a fair reflection of the role this competitio­n has played in the southern hemisphere for a very long time.’’

NZ Rugby boss Steve Tew was reluctant to comment when pressed on Australia’s volatile landscape.

‘‘Australia and South Africa are committed to what they agreed in London and they are working towards it,’’ Tew said.

‘‘My job is to worry about the best interests of New Zealand Rugby. We are clearly monitoring what is going on in Australia and actively supporting them as much as we can but I’m not going to enter into commentary about degrees of concerns about what’s going on in countries I do not have responsibi­lity for.

‘‘Viewership in New Zealand is up off a good solid base last year so we’re in good shape.’’

Sanzaar are now left with a situation where it seems the ARU cannot legally axe either the Rebels or Force – certainly not without a fight.

With no resolution in sight, pressure from the ARU’s partners, sponsors, players and broadcaste­rs continues to ramp up.

As Nichol points out, there will be no winners from this ugly scenario.

‘‘Sanzaar has governed over a situation and process where no matter what happens from here people will always reflect sadly over how this has been dealt with.’’

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