The Citizen (KZN)

Geared up for

ROUX: MAJOR RUGBY CHANGES ARE INEVITABLE IN A POST-COVID WORLD

- Ken Borland

SA Rugby not ruling out possibilit­y of it’s own version of Super Rugby.

SA Rugby chief executive Jurie Roux is not subscribin­g to the views of players and former players from Australasi­a that the days are numbered for South Africa’s partnershi­p with Sanzaar, but he did acknowledg­e yesterday that major changes for both Super Rugby and the Rugby Championsh­ip were inevitable in a post-Covid world.

New Zealand’s Super Rugby franchises will resume play this weekend in an internal competitio­n, while Australian teams are set to follow a similar route. There has been talk of the two countries setting up a Trans-Tasman competitio­n and increased speculatio­n that South Africa will cast its lot in with the Northern Hemisphere.

“As far as Sanzaar goes, we are busy with negotiatio­ns in good faith. I’m not too phased about whatever former players, current players or media have to say in Australia or New Zealand, I’m only interested in the people that sit around the negotiatin­g table and they have a completely different viewpoint. But I always have a Plan B, you need the foresight to plan for the worst-case scenario.

“We are very dependant on the decisions of government and that changes quite regularly. But hopefully next Monday we will hear that we can return to training and then return to play in August. That would be a homebased, truncated version of Super Rugby, followed by the Currie Cup and then moving into more internatio­nal exposure with the internatio­nal window now moved to October/November.

“It depends on border restrictio­ns, but there is a biosphere model for our teams to be based in Australia, Argentina or here, with a competitio­n in the northern hemisphere being an alternativ­e. The biggest influence on Sanzaar will be if New Zealand and Australia don’t open their borders until April. But it’s very clear that the pool format is not the preferred option, we had to come up with a round-robin in which all the teams play each other and it had to make commercial sense.

“We’ll make a rugby decision and then look at the commercial and logistical challenges like reduced flights and number of business class seats, plus whether teams will have to isolate, which means being in a bio-bubble, or quarantine, which means a month in a hotel room without training, will determine those. But the current format will be too tight in a post-Covid world, which is why we’re looking at different options,” Roux said in a virtual press conference yesterday,

The CEO said that the pandemic had at least provided world rugby with the impetus to move towards a global calendar.

“Covid has enabled us to do what we couldn’t do for 130 years and that’s get a global calendar aligned because all competitio­ns are on hold, agreements have been breached or are being re-negotiated. Basically rugby in the northern hemisphere will move from winter to summer.

“The Rugby Championsh­ip will move to the beginning of the year with the Six Nations, Super Rugby will stay at the beginning of the year and internatio­nal rugby will be in October/November. We’ll probably have that all done by 1 July,” he said.

“We can’t make a final decision on the Springboks until government opens the borders, but by the end of July we should have a very good idea of their schedule. There are very detailed plans for the Rugby Championsh­ip to be held at a single venue. If that doesn’t work out then hopefully we’ll have local in-bound tours, otherwise we can go north. Failing that we have very exciting plans for local competitio­ns.”

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 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? OPTIMISTIC. SA Rugby boss Jurie Roux hopes that rugby will resume in August.
Picture: Getty Images OPTIMISTIC. SA Rugby boss Jurie Roux hopes that rugby will resume in August.

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