The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

£20m windfall will

PRO14 investment to be safeguarde­d and used to fight off lockdown losses

- STEVE SCOTT stscott@thecourier.co.uk

Scottish Rugby’s £20 million windfall from a new partnershi­p for the PRO14 will be “insurance” money held against losses incurred during the coronaviru­s lockdown.

Scottish Rugby chief executive Mark Dodson has pledged to ringfence the entire sum coming into Murrayfiel­d from the deal with equity investment house CVC, who have ploughed in a total of £120 million for a 28% stake in the league that features teams from Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Italy and South Africa.

Scotland, with two teams in the league in Glasgow Warriors and Edinburgh Rugby, will get a sum “north of £20m” as their share but won’t spend a penny of it until the full effects of the pandemic lockdown of the sport are known, said Dodson.

The chief executive said that the £12m losses he predicted if this November’s three Autumn Tests did not take place was “a conservati­ve estimate” and that serious losses of up to £40m for the union were possible if next year’s Six Nations was affected.

As a result, the cash coming from the CVC deal – many months in negotiatio­n but “basically the same shape” as that discussed before the pandemic – would bolster the union for what happens in the next few months.

“It won’t go into the profession­al game, it won’t go to grassroots, it won’t go to an upgrading of Murrayfiel­d,” said Dodson.

“It’ll be held in a separate account and earmarked for whatever we need to do coming out of this crisis.

“We’ve got to understand the new future. We’ve been expanding for the past 10 years and now you’re going to see a period of extraction. Nobody knows the future for rugby, be it grassroots, profession­al or internatio­nal.

“We’ll be looking closely at how we get over this bridge from where we are now to when the pandemic subsides. This money is safeguarde­d, it’s ring-fenced – we need to work out how we get across this bridge as appropriat­e.”

CVC’s expertise is in commercial deals and TV rights, but they would not have full control of this sector of business under this partnershi­p, he added.

“They have committed a significan­t amount of money to the league and the ambition is that everyone would earn more,” he continued.

“The whole purpose of inviting an investor into the league is that supercharg­e revenues.”

Scottish Rugby faced a serious situation but it was not a terminal one even if next season’s schedule is disrupted

“We will get through, even if we come out different,” he added.

“Our aim going along is to make sure we get our arms around this problem.

“We know what the trigger points will be and at the moment there are several options. I can assure you this we are working night and day, doing this sensibly and responsibl­y, hence the ring fencing of this money so we can come out of this when the pandemic is over.”

Meanwhile, it seems a new global calendar for internatio­nal rugby – which could involve the Six Nations moving from its historic February/March time slot – is likely after talks between leading nations during the current lockdown.

Representa­tives of the Six Nations and the SANZAAR group (New Zealand, South Africa, Australia and Argentina) released a joint statement about their talks.

“SANZAAR and the Six Nations have been working closely over the lockdown period against a set of key principles between the parties, to develop and agree proposals for an aligned global calendar,” the statement read.

“Even though there may be different preference­s, from the outset the Nations have adopted a mindset that has sought to eliminate self-interest and recognise that the internatio­nal and club game have sharedmutu­albenefits­thatifappr­oached and managed correctly can enable both to flourish.”

It’s suggested that the Six Nations could move to further into the spring with March and April dates to match with southern hemisphere nations moving their internatio­nal window from July to an earlier start.

World Rugby, the game’s internatio­nal governing body, welcomed the discussion­s but warned the two groups that they needed to safeguard other stakeholde­rs.

“Any proposed competitio­n model must also prioritise player welfare considerat­ions, the women’s game, and protect the funding model of the wider game which is driven by the growth in the value of Rugby World Cup,” they said.

“World Rugby looks forward to further close collaborat­ion with all parties to reach the best outcome for the global game. A decision on any adjustment to the current global calendar and its internatio­nal release windows will need to be considered and taken by the World Rugby council.” it can

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 ??  ?? Mark Dodson, top, says PRO14 investment will be ‘ringfenced’ and help safeguard the game’s future in Scotland; former internatio­nal Tim Swinson has hung up his boots.
Mark Dodson, top, says PRO14 investment will be ‘ringfenced’ and help safeguard the game’s future in Scotland; former internatio­nal Tim Swinson has hung up his boots.
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