Weekend Herald

Auckland’s transition needs more than Blues

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With the Blues playing seemingly destined to push into the Super Rugby semifinals and the feted 1A competitio­n producing a stream of potential next-level players, Auckland appears to be reclaiming its position as the national game’s strongest base.

The Blues are largely a team of local lads. With the exception of Beauden Barrett, the star men — Rieko and Akira Ioane, Caleb Clarke, Hoskins Sotutu and Dalton Papalii — are Auckland born and developed.

Most of their teammates are, too, and in the past few years, the Blues have fostered a wider sense of pride in the region and built a deep, emotional connection with their jersey by having come to better understand who they are.

The transition has seen players go from being mildly embarrasse­d to be Aucklander­s to now not only proud, but also certain of what that means.

Making the Blues the first-choice club for First XV players in Auckland has been a huge breakthrou­gh and fixed a pathway that was broken.

But it would be premature to celebrate or consider the city now a fully-functional rugby entity.

Auckland, while much improved, is illustrati­ve of the battle the game faces in trying to grow its participat­ion numbers and a healthier community game.

The Blues’ squad has predominan­tly come from a small concentrat­ion of schools: Auckland Grammar, St Kentigern College, Sacred Heart, Mt Albert Grammar and St Peter’s College.

Kelston Boys, Dilworth School and De La Salle are challengin­g the top four this year but the longer and real story of the 1A is that these schools manage only sporadic good years and that the trend has been the bigger schools becoming stronger, the smaller becoming weaker.

Which is largely the same story being experience­d with clubs and so while we may be seeing some good rugby played in the Premier grade so, too, are we seeing more clubs struggling to field more than one senior team.

The school system is producing more and better-equipped elite

Success will be a champion Blues team, more senior club teams and the best female rugby programme in the country.

players. But the cost is a greater concentrat­ion of that talent in fewer institutio­ns and fewer clubs, and more worryingly, a hard drop-off in the number of non-elite players who just want to enjoy a good game of rugby.

If the millions of dollars about to be invested by Silver Lake are to be of value to the community game, they need to be used to build a bridge between schools and clubs to ensure that more graduate from the former to the latter.

And this is why some pundits are unconvince­d that a United States investment firm buying into the All Blacks is somehow going to fix the most pressing problem at the grassroots; money does not strike as the means to reverse this specific issue of narrow concentrat­ion and too much focus on the elite.

Winning at most schools has been prioritise­d over participat­ing and the number of teens playing rugby has fallen as a consequenc­e.

Perhaps, too, questions need be asked about the relationsh­ip between Auckland Rugby and their local schools.

Auckland had seven votes to cast at the Silver Lake vote on Thursday — the system giving them a heavier weighting based on the number of schools and registered players in the province.

Yet the Weekend Herald understand­s schools were never consulted about how they would like Auckland to vote and this alludes to other key problems: jurisdicti­on and clarity of purpose.

Ask the question who runs and effectivel­y owns schools rugby and there will be no uniform answer.

This confusion, combined with an element of patch protection, has led to a lack of alignment and common goals and a diversity of opinion as to what success looks like.

Is success producing future All Blacks or is it turning out hundreds of willing club players?

There needs to be an agreed plan between the schools and union as to how they can work together to drive up participat­ion and keep teenagers in the game for longer, while continuing to develop elite players.

Auckland is clearly not the troubled place of old, but a champion Blues team would not indicate everything is right.

Success will be a champion Blues team, a fully rather than partially competitiv­e 1A, a lower dropout rate of teens, more senior club teams and the developmen­t of the best and most vibrant female rugby programme in the country.

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