The Rugby Paper

Prem giants will ‘buddy up’ to save the Championsh­ip

- By NEALE HARVEY

PREMIERSHI­P Rugby could assume control of the Championsh­ip as part of revolution­ary plans to overhaul the top two tiers of English club rugby.

The Rugby Paper understand­s top-flight bosses are open to partnershi­p arrangemen­ts with Championsh­ip clubs that will see the A-League scrapped and unlimited numbers of underused Premiershi­p profession­als loaned to level two sides instead.

Championsh­ip clubs who have no interest in promotion will be encouraged to ‘buddy-up’ with Premiershi­p sides, enabling them to utilise up to 12 of that club’s first team players and any number of academy youngsters in need of senior game time.

Under the terms of the proposals, which are being driven by RFU director of profession­al rugby Nigel Melville and were presented to the Premiershi­p clubs last Tuesday, Championsh­ip ‘buddy clubs’ would not be eligible for promotion to the top-flight.

Promotion and relegation would remain, however, with ambitious Championsh­ip clubs who fund their own full-time squads having to state their promotion intentions before a season starts. Such clubs would be able to field just four on-loan players.

While an implementa-

tion date has yet to be decided, TRP understand­s the existing Championsh­ip play-offs are likely to be scrapped next season, with Premiershi­p clubs compensati­ng tier two sides to the tune of £1.7m for a return to first-past-the-post.

Melville’s radical proposals are seen as a ‘last chance solution’ for a Championsh­ip competitio­n which is in danger of collapse in the light of financial troubles afflicting London Welsh, Jersey and others.

With no more RFU money on the table for tier two sides and Premiershi­p Rugby keen to address issues around the A-League and player game time, the buddy system is seen as a viable way of helping Championsh­ip clubs cut costs and survive.

A well-placed Premiershi­p insider told TRP: “The Championsh­ip clubs have squads of 35 profession­als and semi-pros they can’t afford and the Premiershi­p clubs have got massive squads of 50-70 profession­als, a lot of whom don’t play, so why don’t we marry the two together and find a solution to benefit everybody?

“Buddying-up will mean standard of rugby in the Championsh­ip will rocket and clubs like Rotherham and Nottingham will not have to spend all their money on players and coaches. It’ll mean they can stabilise their ships, upgrade facilities, grow crowds and still have a route to the top.”

The insider added: “The Championsh­ip has almost been an embarrassm­ent to the RFU and they’ve totally neglected it for the last seven years.

“It’s the second tier of what professes to be the biggest Rugby Union in the world, yet virtually every club is bankrupt.

“A solution has been found and control of the Championsh­ip must fall to the Premiershi­p.

“If we get the right people in charge and the right rules and regulation­s in place, it will stop clubs going out of business while still offering ambitious fulltime teams like Doncaster and Cornish Pirates a chance of promotion.”

TRP understand­s the buddy system could be extended to include National One sides like Moseley, Coventry, Plymouth and Darlington Mowden Park.

 ??  ?? Plans: Nigel Melville
Plans: Nigel Melville

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom