Glasgow Times

Qatar World Cup must serve as ominous warning to rugby union

- Martin Hannan on Wednesday Rugby correspond­ent TOMORROW Liam Bryce

WERE there any lessons for rugby union to be learned from the footie World Cup in Qatar? Believe it or not, I think there were. First of all, however, a word of congratula­tions for the people who put together the memorial service for Doddie Weir in Melrose on Monday. It was in turns sad, funny and inspiratio­nal, and I think the man himself would have approved of it, even being mockingly described as “a pest” by John Jeffrey.

In years to come I will take from the service the repeated pledges that Doddie’s courageous commitment to funding research into Motor Neurone Disease will continue in the form of his Foundation, and just because the man himself is no longer with us, we must never forget that MND is most certainly still with us and is not going to go away any time soon.

Therefore fundraisin­g must continue and if a national research institute doesn’t happen soon, then the focus must be on the UK Government, which must be held to account over its pledge of £ 50 million for research into MND – a promise secured, I believe, at least partially because of the awareness of this horrible disease created by the truly remarkable and completely unforgetta­ble Doddie Weir.

Now back to the mundane subject of money. If Qatar’s World Cup taught us anything it is that cash is king. Money can’t buy you love, as the Qatari leadership found, but it can buy you football’s biggest tournament and the squalid promotiona­l opportunit­ies that the World Cup brings to a nation.

That’s why rugby must never go down the route that FIFA, UEFA and the biggest leagues in Europe have followed by allowing people with no real interest in sport to achieve a foothold – no, make that a strangleho­ld – on football. The days when local businessme­n put a few quid into a club and bought themselves seats in the directors’ box are long gone – except in certain

parts of Scotland – and at the top level, local investors have been usurped by foreign conglomera­tes whose interest is in making money. The ordinary fan has been priced right out of the game, and increasing­ly that is the case for rugby where tickets for internatio­nals are often like gold dust – because that’s what they are costing these days.

The English Premiershi­p is a case in point. With Wasps and Worcester in administra­tion – a tragedy of history, if anything, as both clubs are

more than 150 years old – there is a temptation on the part of some clubs or the Premiershi­p overall to look for investment from oil rich countries or the money markets.

Indeed, prior to the pandemic, capital investment firm CVC ( which manages assets of more than

£ 130 billion and which has long had serious commitment­s to sport) had bought a 27 per cent share in the Premiershi­p for around £ 200m plus a further £ 365m for a share in the Six Nations.

With over half a billion invested in rugby you can bet that CVC will want a return on their money, but I know they are patient and I believe they have the best interests of rugby at heart. But Qatar? Saudi Arabia? The USA? Can people from those countries really be passionate about rugby especially when, unlike CVC, they have not had any prior involvemen­t?

Steve Lansdown, the billionair­e owner of Bristol, summed up the problem: “For people to invest into it [ rugby], it’s a passion. It’s not one you point to and say you make a return on your money, so you have to go into it with your eyes open knowing that it is going to be a bit of a black hole for a time. That’s the difficulty.”

So a quick fix of millions from oil states should be ruled out. Yet money is needed in rugby, especially if clubs like Edinburgh Rugby and Glasgow Warriors are to develop into genuine challenger­s in Europe.

As I have written before, no serious business person is going to invest in either of our two profession­al clubs as long as the SRU’s high- heid yins insist on retaining control. You could argue that having players on centralise­d contracts helped preserve both clubs through the pandemic and the fact is that the faltering UK economy means Murrayfiel­d can continue to be in control.

There is a future, however, and that must surely be the governing body of Scottish rugby handing over our two profession­al clubs to businesses and business people who know and love the sport.

The time has come for people with ideas about a sustainabl­e future for all of Scottish rugby from the grassroots up to be allowed to give their views, and that includes the most important people of all, namely the fans who, don’t forget, pay to fill Murrayfiel­d Stadium and thus the Murrayfiel­d pockets.

Yes, we need investment – but it must be the right kind.

Qatar? Saudi Arabia? The USA? Can people from those countries really be passionate about rugby?

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 ?? ?? The World Cup in Qatar, won by Lionel Messi’s Argentina, showed that cash remains king in football
The World Cup in Qatar, won by Lionel Messi’s Argentina, showed that cash remains king in football

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