Gloucestershire Echo

Gloucester chief sounds warning about future,

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GLOUCESTER Rugby chief executive Lance Bradley has warned that the 147-year-old club will go out of business within six months without a government bail-out.

Speaking to the Daily Telegraph, Bradley revealed that the club will run out of cash before March following a predicted loss of revenue of £6.2 million due to the restrictio­ns imposed by the Covid-19 epidemic.

Premiershi­p Rugby fears that the decision by the Government to extend the ban on supporters at stadiums until the end of March will lead to combined losses of revenue of £120m.

The Rugby Football Union has forecast losses of £138m if no supporters can attend England matches at Twickenham during the autumn series and Six Nations Championsh­ip and a further loss of £86m for the community game.

The situation is even bleaker for the Championsh­ip clubs, including Hartpury RFC, which cannot afford to start their season if supporters are not allowed in.

Their entire season may have to be “mothballed” – which could leave relegated Saracens stuck in English rugby’s second tier for two years.

Bill Sweeney, the RFU chief executive, and his Premiershi­p Rugby counterpar­t Darren Childs, met with Oliver Dowden, the Culture Secretary, to make the case for government financial support, and Bradley insists profession­al rugby in England cannot survive without a bail-out.

“I don’t know if the Government understand­s how serious this is,” Bradley told the Telegraph. “We have just been through our numbers this morning and the impact of no fans for six months is a loss of £6.2m.

“The finance people have done the cash-flow forecast and we will run out of money in the next six months. We will not be able to survive with no fans until March, unless there is an interventi­on. And we are by no means the worst. There are probably half a dozen clubs in more difficult positions than us and they will go out of business, too.

“This is not an awkward situation or one in which we are going to have to trim things a bit. This is the end of the road for profession­al rugby in this country, if there is no interventi­on.”

It is forecast that Gloucester will lose £7.4m in revenue over the next six months, offset by £1.2m of reduced costs.

The club recently spent £35,000 on measures to enable up to 8,000 supporters to attend matches while remaining socially distanced, following a successful pilot in which 1,000 fans attended their match against Harlequins this month.

During the first lockdown, the club furloughed all but seven employees, made up of 150 full-time staff and 200 casuals, while six were made redundant. All staff, including the players, took a pay cut of 25 per cent, but the club still lost £5m.

“When we went into the lockdown, we had cash reserves of £3m,” added Bradley. “That was all burned. We had to take loans and the shareholde­rs had to put in a substantia­l amount as well.

“As a business, rugby was quite fragile before all this and what is so frustratin­g is that even with the difficulti­es that we have had, we were on course to start generating cash next year. We had got the business into a much more sustainabl­e state. But we can’t survive a blow of £6.2m.

“If Gloucester Rugby was to disappear, all the work that we do in the community would also disappear – we do work with homeless people, veterans, underprivi­leged children and grass roots clubs. The knock-on effect of that is massive.

“The Government can’t let profession­al sport die in this country – and I don’t believe they will.”

Bradley admitted he could not rule out the possibilit­y of further salary cuts and a player exodus, if government help was not forthcomin­g.

“We could be in a position where we have to say to players that we are going to go out of business unless we can agree something,” he said.

“Clearly, we don’t want to do that because we have already cut salaries by 25 per cent. Technicall­y, we would be in breach of contract again and last time we had some players who left.

“It would open up the risk of that kind of chaos again. If other countries support their sport or they are in a better position than we are, then there will be another drain of top talent going abroad to the likes of France or Japan.”

This is the end of the road for profession­al rugby in this country, if there is no interventi­on Lance Bradley

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Lance Bradley

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