Gulf Times - Gulf Times Sport

Australia welcomes return of pro rugby after grim shutdown

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Australia welcomes the return of profession­al rugby union today as the launch of ‘Super Rugby AU’ brings to an end a tumultuous shutdown marked by pay disputes, boardroom upheaval and a rash of redundanci­es triggered by Covid-19.

The country’s four Super

Rugby teams and Perth-based Western Force will play in a full home-and-away competitio­n culminatin­g in a two-week playoffs, putting the game back on screens and generating vital revenue for cash-strapped Rugby Australia (RA). The competitio­n kicks off at Brisbane’s Lang Park on Friday when the Queensland Reds host the New South Wales Waratahs, a clash of the country’s two traditiona­l rugby powerhouse­s.

Much like the national Wallabies side, both provinces have fallen on hard times in recent years but the Waratahs have dominated their northern neighbours with a winning streak dating back to 2013.

However, Brad Thorn’s Reds are confident of ending the streak against the rebuilding Waratahs and are keen to give their fans a reason to test the cap of 25,000 permitted at Lang Park under lightened social distancing restrictio­ns.

That the teams produce a match pleasing to the armchair audience will be of more importance for RA, whose negotiatio­ns for a new broadcast deal after 2020 were put on the back-burner by Covid-19. RA have had little to pitch in recent years, with the game struggling at domestic and internatio­nal level. Barring the proud ACT Brumbies, Australia’s teams struggled in Super Rugby and the Wallabies’ steady decline since their run to the 2015 World Cup final was evident during their quarterfin­al exit from the tournament in Japan last year.

RA are hoping a number of law variations borrowed from rugby league, the more popular code in Australia, could contribute to a better spectacle in Super Rugby AU and fire up the faithful. New Zealand has also tweaked rules to speed up the game for its domestic ‘Super Rugby Aotearoa’ competitio­n, which has proved a success despite some huge penalty counts since kicking off last month.

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