Western Mail

Phillips on regions, turning around the oil tanker and his hopes for the future

- SIMON THOMAS Rugby correspond­ent simon.thomas@walesonlin­e.co.uk

IT’S been a positive season for Welsh rugby on the field, with Wales finishing second in the Six Nations, Cardiff Blues winning a European trophy and the Scarlets still in the hunt to retain the PRO14 title.

In the second part of his exclusive interview, Welsh Rugby Union chief executive Martyn Phillips reflects on the regions and what the future holds for them, amid plans to replace the Rugby Services Agreement ahead of schedule...

Q: As the season comes towards an end, what do you reflect on as the main pluses for Welsh rugby? A:

I will start with something you wouldn’t expect, which is the participat­ion side.

I’m very excited about that. We know boys and girls numbers is growing and we are experiment­ing with minis into the summer. We have got 70-plus clubs doing that.

We are working with the Urdd, girl guides, disabled rugby, touch and mixed ability. I just think we have turned the oil tanker. We will get more people interested and engaged with rugby, which is brilliant for the long term. We are getting people to fall in love with the game again.

There were festivals going on everywhere last weekend, with hundreds and hundreds of kids playing and parents watching. That’s really positive.

Q: What about the state of the regional game at present? A:

Overall with the regions, I think we are definitely improving, but we have got to be careful not to get carried away.

When you and I were growing up, Welsh teams used to pretty much win everything at club level and I want us to get back to that. I think that will take time.

The Scarlets have obviously kicked on again and had a good season. Hopefully, they can finish that off. Them progressin­g in Europe to the extent they did was pretty impressive, given the resources they have relative to some other people.

It was great for the Blues to win the Challenge Cup. That was probably ahead of their and others’ expectatio­n. You need to enjoy that massively, but they need to improve quite a lot again next season.

The coaching team at the Ospreys has real potential and they have some iconic players there. Them kicking on and getting back to where they have to be for next season needs to be a real focus.

The Dragons is always a strange one because we know what’s going on off the field, which is all about foundation­s and that has been really good. But we need them to win a few more games next season.

This was always a three-to-five year project, so they need to be better next year and win some more games. But equally we shouldn’t get carried and think they are going to be winning the majority of their games because I don’t think they are at that place yet. I would still go for sustainabi­lity with some winning rather than trying to be heroes for a season.

Q: With the Dragons, do you find yourself spending more time on time, given you now own them? A:

Not at all. I have probably spent less time with them than the other three.

When you buy something, you have to be really clear why are doing that and what you are going to do with it. We did all of that work even before we got involved. They have just got to go through the next three years in the way we planned, which has afforded the opportunit­y to spend more time with the other three.

We are literally now hand in glove with the regions. We are getting close to being one organisati­on as profession­al rugby. We spend almost no time now in conflict and politickin­g. We are just trying to improve the thing and get better all the time. All the energy is going into that, which is really good.

Q: Is it right that you have had to cover some losses for the Dragons in this first year? A:

It’s well documented that only a handful of profession­al entities in rugby make money. So, there’s nothing happened at the Dragons that overly concerns me or wasn’t what we thought or expected.

The obvious thing then is why are we doing it for the Dragons and not the others? But people don’t know what we are all doing for each other. Sometimes we need help from the regions and sometimes they need help from us.

We don’t see it any more as an “us and them”. We see it as there are five of us trying to perform in a profession­al environmen­t and we’ve got a range of resources that we need to use effectivel­y between us.

Q: I understand you have brought in a consultant called David Lovett to look at the profession­al game in Wales. What was the thinking there? A:

We have guys at the regions and the WRU that know how to run profession­al rugby. What David is bringing is some expertise around the financial side of it and how we might bring financial stability. He’s a very precise expert in that space. It’s a case of him bringing expertise and independen­ce, but it’s our project. We haven’t out-sourced it.

Q: What has he come back with in terms of his findings? A:

He’s an extra pair of hands on financial modelling. He is helping us to forecast what the long-term picture may be for profession­al rugby, what might happen with the costs, where are there opportunit­ies to do things together that could save costs, where might you make investment­s.

Q: I hear the phrase Project Reset bandied around. Is this all part of that? A:

In effect it’s saying we have a Rugby Services Agreement (RSA) with the regions which we hope to supersede at some point with a new agreement. That’s just a project that’s doing that really.

Q: The RSA was due to run until 2020. Is it right that you are looking to put a new one in place well before that? A:

That’s exactly it. We will never get to 2020 on the old one because it’s very focused on rugby and not focused on business at all. We will have a new agreement in place between the five of us that will say what our rugby ambitions are and what’s our plan to deliver on those and how do we resource on. Then, on the business side, how do we drive our revenues, how do we increase our attendance­s and govern ourselves properly.

The RSA is a very good rugby document, but it doesn’t really address how you run the businesses

 ??  ?? > Martyn Phillips, right, with Dragons coach Bernard Jackman
> Martyn Phillips, right, with Dragons coach Bernard Jackman

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