The Rugby Paper

Toughest six months of my career trying to keep Sussex CCC afloat

Jeremy Blackmore talks to former RFU director Rob Andrew about rugby’s future

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Rob Andrew has seen several watershed moments during his career, but the current crisis the sport finds itself in has been the most challengin­g he has experience­d during a lifetime playing and working in sport.

Former England fly-half Andrew, who was Rugby Director at the RFU for a decade until 2016, draws parallels to the period when rugby went profession­al in 1995. It was clear that it was a huge moment, but the long-term repercussi­ons were unclear.

Andrew won 71 caps and three Grand Slams with England during the Will Carling era before moving into coaching and administra­tion roles with Newcastle Falcons and the RFU. He is currently leading Sussex County Cricket Club’s response to the coronaviru­s crisis as chief executive at Hove and taking steps to ensure the club’s longterm survival.

“Clearly, there’s some challenges all sports face now,” Andrew told The Rugby Paper. “We’re in another massive period of change and 2020 will go down in history as another watershed landmark moment for sport. It’s getting pretty serious in some quarters, but we’ll just have to wait and see how it plays out.”

With no crowds meaning potentiall­y no games in the Championsh­ip this year and a delayed start to the Premiershi­p, Andrew agrees there could be irrevocabl­e change to the structure of rugby.

“There could be absolutely. It appears very serious across a range of sports. Who knows how this is going to play out? We’re living with it, as we speak.

“Clearly, if there are no crowds, for most of rugby for most of this winter, that will have a devastatin­g impact. How devastatin­g, who knows? It feels like one of those big moments where the future will be determined, and we don’t know what that future is going to look like.

“A bit like in ‘95 when rugby went profession­al, it was clear it was a big moment, but nobody quite knew how it was going to play out. That’s happening now.”

Some of that profession­alism that began in 1995 has already been reversed with some clubs going semi-profession­al.

“It’s already started, but it’s again very difficult to know what the outcome is going to be,” adds Andrew. “I think the next six months are going to be very, very critical and very challengin­g.”

The potential for Saracens’ England players to go a whole season without any rugby after their enforced relegation to the Championsh­ip is another unparallel­ed situation facing the game.

Andrew says: “It’s just extraordin­ary. We’ve used the word unpreceden­ted a lot in the last six months, here’s another example of that. I mean, it’s just truly, truly extraordin­ary and very hard for people who are trying to unpick it.”

At Sussex, Andrew has put in place a package of financial measures aimed at ensuring the club’s long-term future.

“We’ve dealt with it on that basis from day one,” he said. “I think the decisions that we have taken and we are taking, and we will continue to take, are very much based on recognisin­g the seriousnes­s of this position.

“This is about surviving and making sure that we do survive, which we will, and we take the tough decisions that allow us, whenever we get back to some kind of normality, that the club is able to continue.

“There will be sports clubs, as we are already seeing in football, who will disappear. This crisis will take down sports clubs. My job with the board is to make sure that Sussex is not one of them.

“We’ll do everything we can, and we are doing everything we can, to make sure that doesn’t happen. There is no doubt it’s been the most challengin­g six months that I have seen in 35 years in sport. Every day, every week has been another challenge. But we’ll be okay.”

Andrew’s current role at Sussex is far from his first involvemen­t in cricket. He captained Cambridge University in the early 1980s, twice playing in the Varsity match at Lord’s and scoring a first-class century against Nottingham­shire.

After making his England rugby debut at Twickenham in January 1985, he spent a season with Yorkshire CCC 2nds before pursuing an eight-year associatio­n with Wasps and then a move back north to Newcastle Falcons.

Reflecting on his administra­tion role with the RFU, he says: “That was an interestin­g role. It was a bit more political and it was a bit more a role that was trying to resolve the club v country issues in rugby that had grown up and manifested themselves through profession­alism.

“They’re still there really and that’s probably never going to go away. So, it was really trying to improve that relationsh­ip.”

“2020 will go down in history as a watershed landmark moment for sport”

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 ?? PICTURE: Getty Images ?? Survival mode: Rob Andrew is fighting to safeguard the future of Sussex CCC. Right: Playing for England
PICTURE: Getty Images Survival mode: Rob Andrew is fighting to safeguard the future of Sussex CCC. Right: Playing for England

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