The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

New dawn has a lot of nagging reminders of past

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Scottish Rugby’s Super 6 initiative is apparently an attempt to drive club rugby into a bright new future. But for Caledonia and Glasgow city rugby, it’s a nagging reminder of the past.

A club from each of the four rugby regions of Scotland promised some kind of geographic­al spread. In the end, half the six selected franchises are in Edinburgh, covered by a mere four-mile radius; two of them are based in grounds barely 1,000 yards apart.

Stirling County – who until the late 90s were actually based in Glasgow district – are the Caledonia region’s representa­tive, leaving all territory north of the Forth without representa­tion.

Glasgow, the biggest city in the country and with the Warriors’ recent success clearly the biggest potential growth area for rugby, has no representa­tive either.

Clearly with only six franchises – although the rumours have been flying that it might be extended to eight somewhere down the line – and 12 bids, someone was going to be disappoint­ed.

Scottish Rugby’s Mark Dodson indicated his hopes that the unsuccessf­ul bids would try again in the future.

However, it seems fanciful to think that the partnershi­ps formed for these bids – Glasgow’s with its major universiti­es, Dundee’s with the city council, two universiti­es and the High School, for example – will be so readily reformed when the bidding process opens up again.

It also seems extremely fanciful that Edinburgh can successful­ly sustain three franchises while Glasgow has none.

For up-and-coming rugby players north of the Forth, it means staying amateur with their existing clubs or taking the road to Stirling or the capital; largely the same decision their fathers made when the game was purely amateur – in name at least – prior to 1995.

That’s progress, apparently.

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