Cape Argus

Cheetahs and Kings unlikely to feature in the new Super Rugby package

- MIKE GREENAWAY

THE CHEETAHS and the Kings will almost certainly be cut from Super Rugby next year after Sanzaar yesterday confirmed in a statement that two South African teams would be axed in a restructur­ed tournament in 2018.

One Australian team will also be cut while all five New Zealand franchises survive in what will be a 15-team format featuring four teams from South Africa, the existing New Zealand teams, four from Australia, one from Japan and one from Argentina.

SARU CEO Jurie Roux, said that the newly-establishe­d Franchise Rugby Committee (made up of representa­tives of all six SA teams) will meet tomorrow (Tuesday) to finalise the criteria for selection. Their recommenda­tion will go to the Executive Council. Once that recommenda­tion is agreed it will need to be approved by the General Council of SA Rugby. SA Rugby said that it hoped it would be able to confirm its 2018 Super Rugby participan­ts by the end of June.

It is assumed that bastion franchises such as the Stormers, Bulls, Lions and Sharks will be safe ... and that leaves the less economical­ly viable Cheetahs and Kings, both regular underperfo­rmers in the competitio­n.

The decision to reduce Super Rugby competitor­s by three teams was unanimousl­y agreed by the four SANZAAR partners (South Africa, New Zealand, Australia and Argentina) after a nine-month process in which all stakeholde­rs were consulted.

“Fans, media and broadcaste­rs have spoken and we have listened to them,” said Roux. “The 18-team Super Rugby competitio­n has not worked and we had to face up to that hard fact.”

Roux argued that four strong SA teams would ultimately benefit the Springboks and that more money concentrat­ed on fewer franchises would help keep top players in the country.

“From a South African rugby high performanc­e perspectiv­e we’ve had to acknowledg­e that the dilution of talent and resources across six franchises – at a time when rand weakness has led to more departures to Europe and Japan – has seriously affected our ability to compete across the board.

“As a rugby nation we need strong franchises all of whom are in with a serious chance of challengin­g for the title and we could no longer say that. ”

The Sunwolves have been retained and will join the Australian Conference while the Jaguares will be grouped with the South African teams.

Roux admitted a reduction in teams was a bitter pill for South Africa to swallow but retaining six teams was not sustainabl­e.

“We have six strategic imperative­s for 2017 – two of the most critical of which are Springbok performanc­e and financial sustainabi­lity,” he said.

Roux said the large number of South Africans now playing overseas had hastened the decision:

“There are about five or six Super Rugby squads’ worth of South Africans playing overseas. In 2015, 257 South Africans appeared for leading teams overseas; last year it was 313 – including 65 Springboks. That has got to have had an impact on our competitiv­eness.”

The winners of each conference plus the five teams with the greatest number of log points will qualify for the play-offs.

SA franchises will play teams from both the Australian and New Zealand conference­s every year although the duration of the available ‘window’ means that there are not enough weeks to play all teams.

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