Scottish Rugby unveil plan for their Super Six
SCOTTISH RUGBY last night unveiled a new strategy and league structure for all their clubs in Scotland at its AGM at BT Murrayfield.
A new top tier of the domestic game, to be known as “Super Six” will be created for the 2019/20 season. This will be semi-professional and work to close the gap between the club game and professional teams in Scotland.
The move is being backed with £3.6-million of new Scottish Rugby investment over five years reaching every club in Scotland.
All the Super Six teams will be overseen by Scottish Rugby’s High Performance department which will allocate funding for head coaches, strength & conditioning and analysis support. Funding costs for squads of 35 players will be split between Scottish Rugby and the clubs, with teams playing a 20-match season.
A new ‘Scottish Championship’ of 12 teams will be created beneath Super Six alongside a new three division National League structure, all of which will contain wholly amateur teams.
With franchises in the Super Six running for five years at a time, teams in the Scottish Championship and National Leagues can build stronger community ties and focus investment on developing their clubs in the absence of player payments.
Clubs can apply to join the Super Six tier and will be required to bring their own investment to the table to complement Scottish Rugby’s financial support.
The teams will be geographically aligned with Scottish Rugby’s four regions Caledonia, Glasgow & the West, Edinburgh & the East and The Borders, with two floating teams, and partnered with one of Scotland’s two professional teams, either Glasgow Warriors or Edinburgh Rugby.
The National Leagues will be feeder clubs for Super Six teams in their region to ensure an upward flow of talent through the leagues to the top tiers.
Scottish Rugby Chief Executive Mark Dodson said: “It is a new beginning for our whole sport, not just the top clubs. It resets the ambitions of everybody and offers every club a fresh start.
“For the first time since the game went professional, this strategy involves all the clubs in the success of our national team. We want to create strong sustainable clubs that can play at the level which best suits them and that they can choose.
“We want to see clubs invest in their infrastructures and future growth so the National Leagues will have amateur status and the Super Six will be where player payments make better sense.
“This is not a radical plan, it is simply overdue and we look forward to working with all the clubs in Scotland to deliver this new structure for the wider benefit of the game at large.”