The Rugby Paper

Clubs plan breakaway the same as football

- By NICK CAIN

A GROUP of six English Premiershi­p clubs are planning to breakaway from PRL, the administra­tive arm which represents the 13 Premiershi­p clubs.

They have contacted Martyn Thomas, the former RFU chairman, to use the experience­d administra­tor as a sounding board.

Thomas says that the move, which would create a schism between two parts of the same organisati­on, is a sign of troubled times in which Rugby Union has to change rapidly if it wants to avoid going bankrupt.

Thomas said: “I know that half a dozen of the English Premiershi­p clubs are planning a similar move to the breakaway which formed Premier League football in 1992.

“They want to go it alone, and part of the issue is that the PRL infrastruc­ture is costing too much.”

Thomas added: “I understand that matters came to a head when some Premiershi­p club owners asked PRL officials for the retained money from Premiershi­p funding held by the administra­tive body – which is more than £28 million – be paid to the clubs, and that PRL declined to do so.”

Thomas said that the breakaway clubs believe that they can create a “super league” in which they will have an asset which is attractive to television broadcaste­rs.

In order to capitalise on the opportunit­y, it is almost certain they will need the support of the other seven Premiershi­p clubs.

Thomas says he suspects that because PRL is costing the owners “an arm and a leg”, including staff costs of over £2m a year, the remaining clubs will be willing to listen.

It will not be lost on millionair­e owners, like Bath's Bruce Craig and Sale Sharks Simon Orange, that having control of their own television rights could be a considerab­le benefit

But if those clubs declined to join them the breakaway six could look for cross-border recruits in Wales and Scotland although that would prove problemati­c with the complicati­ons of WRU and Scottish Rugby player contracts.

Thomas added: “The world has changed as a result of the coronaviru­s pandemic, and Rugby Union is in a very precarious place.”

Thomas, who was widely credited as the mastermind behind England’s successful World Cup 2015 bid, also had words of warning for the RFU.

“Unfortunat­ely, the RFU has been mismanaged since the 2015 World Cup, and we have to ask where all the money has gone.”

 ??  ?? Help: Martyn Thomas
Help: Martyn Thomas

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