The Rugby Paper

Tier 2 consider legal action over threat of ring-fencing

- By NEALE HARVEY

CHAMPIONSH­IP clubs are united in their determinat­ion to see off the threat of ending promotion and relegation, according to Nottingham chairman Alistair Bow.

At a meeting with the RFU last Tuesday, The

Rugby Paper understand­s that 11 of the 12 clubs – excluding PRL shareholde­rs London Irish – indicated their opposition to ringfencin­g the Premiershi­p.

Emboldened by an expected £230m cash injection from CVC, some top-flight clubs are keen to see an end to relegation in order to protect their business interests.

A 13-team, ring-fenced Premiershi­p, including London Irish, has been mooted. But there is resistance from within the top-flight, with Bath chairman Bruce Craig among those believed to be unhappy with the prospect of a watered-down competitio­n.

Franchisin­g is another possibilit­y but Bow says the Premiershi­p and RFU could face legal action over restraint of trade if the Championsh­ip clubs are frozen out.

Bow, above, told TRP: “I would consider legal action, as would others, and the Championsh­ip clubs are aligned in not wanting to give up promotion and relegation.

“The extinction of promotion and relegation in any profession­al sport is not right in the long term and, in the case of the Premiershi­p, it would allow teams at the bottom to just muddle along.

“If there’s no jeopardy involved, that cannot be good for business.”

Nottingham, along with Cornish Pirates, Yorkshire Carnegie, Doncaster, Coventry and Ealing, have ambitions of reaching the top-flight and Bow believes Premiershi­p Rugby should work more closely with Championsh­ip clubs – potentiall­y taking charge of tier two.

He explained: “Premiershi­p Rugby have got to stop being insular and they need to talk to us about what their overall strategy is. I’ve felt for a long time the Championsh­ip and PRL should come together because you’d get a better outcome for English rugby.

“The Championsh­ip could become bigger but we’re not allowed to because the RFU own us and dictate our finances. PRL are masters of their own destiny and I would like to see us, along with the RFU, all working together towards a common goal.

“For example, I think the percentage of England-qualified players could be higher. Premiershi­p Rugby are allowing too many foreign players and the Championsh­ip should have 90 per cent English players in it, so working together we could probably achieve that.”

With the Championsh­ip’s current agreement with the RFU expiring in 2020, the clubs have been charged with providing ideas on how they want the competitio­n to look beyond that.

Linking with the Premiershi­p is one possibilit­y, while others favour expanding the Championsh­ip to 14 or 16 teams and scrapping the Championsh­ip Cup.

Meanwhile, TRP understand­s Premiershi­p Rugby hope to finalise their deal with CVC by the end of this month. Discussion­s will then be scheduled with the RFU to discuss their vision of how the sport should be run beyond this season.

Among the agenda items will be scrapping the Premiershi­p Cup and Premiershi­p Shield, global expansion, franchisin­g and ring-fencing.

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