Cape Times

Our bid was compelling and irresistib­le ... so rugby has a lot to answer for

- Mark Keohane

SOUTH AFRICA produced a compelling and brilliant bid to host the Rugby World Cup in 2023. It proved irresistib­le for World Rugby’s appointed Technical Review Committee.

But it made little impression on the General Council members, who yesterday disregarde­d the recommenda­tion to vote overwhelmi­ngly in favour of France, who as recently as 2007 hosted the World Cup.

France, who were a distant second to South Africa in the independen­t review released a fortnight ago, won the first round of voting by 18 to South Africa’s 13 and Ireland’s 8 and the second and final round 24-15 against South Africa.

The vote was secret, which again underscore­d the lack of transparen­cy within World Rugby. South Africa’s bid promised World Rugby:

*A record 2.9 million ticket sales

*A record 85 000 World Cup final attendance at the National Stadium

*The most profitable World Cup in the tournament’s history

World Rugby, for the first time ever, effected a profession­al and objective bidding process, underpinne­d by the Weighted Criteria Scorecard, as well as the evaluation commission­s report and independen­t service provider reports.

World Rugby appointed a Technical Review committee to audit and analyse all three bids and this Review Committee a fortnight ago recommende­d South Africa as the strongest of the bid candidates.

South Africa, according to the Technical Review Committee, scored first in three of the five main categories, as set out by World Rugby in the Bid criteria. France scored second in all three categories in which South Africa ranked first.

South Africa also scored first or tied first in 22 of the 27 sub categories. France scored first or tied first in 14 of the sub categories. South Africa also scored first in seven of the 10 sub categories in which there was a clear winner. France scored first in two of these categories.

South Africa, whose financial projection­s boasted of 2023 being the sport’s most profitable World Cup, scored second to France in the category of Finance, Commercial and Commitment­s, which made up 35% of the Technical Review Report.

The bid described South Africa as a world in one country, from beaches to vineyards, from mountain ranges to the bushveld. It said South Africa was a country alive with possibilit­ies for visitors.

Most importantl­y, the bid emphasised that voting for South Africa made rugby and commercial sense.

South Africa is just one of two countries to successful­ly host the Cricket, Rugby and Soccer World Cups and has a proven track record of major incident-free major internatio­nal events. South Africa’s bid also made a 10 commitment declaratio­n to Rugby World Cup Limited, developed and designed to make South Africa accountabl­e to translatin­g the words of the bid document into tournament delivery.

The included:

*Honouring the custodians­hip of the tournament in its 10th anniversar­y and the game’s 200-year history

*Ensuring peak performanc­e from the world’s best because of the bid’s player-centric focus

*That World Rugby would make money because the tournament would be low-risk and 10 commitment­s high return in an ideal commercial environmen­t.

*That four of South Africa’s eight rugby and true multi-purpose all-seater world-class match venues meet and exceed requiremen­ts to host the final

World Rugby, at the outset of the bid process, stated that critical fundamenta­ls included: *Clear government support *A tournament fee guarantee payable by government

*Stadiums appropriat­e for a world-class rugby event available exclusivel­y for the duration of the tournament

*A robust and credible tournament budget.

A review of the independen­t report released to the public showed that France provided none of these four elements.

The report also stated concerns that five of the nine French venue guarantees were still subject to city approval, and eight are not available exclusivel­y and will host football during the Rugby World Cup, resulting in numerous challenges including undersized pitches at all match venues.

Security was also a concern because of recent terrorists attacks in Paris.

In the end it counted for nothing as World Rugby’s Technical View recommenda­tion got ignored in the secret vote.

Rugby has got a lot to answer for ...

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