Western Mail

‘It is genuinely delusional league at a time when the appears to be in disarray at To propose a new regional game virtually every level’

- SION BARRY Business editor sion.barry@walesonlin­e.co.uk

PLANS from the WRU to create a new elite league below regional rugby for eight teams are “delusional” and would have damaging financial implicatio­ns.

And executive board member of Pontypridd RFC, Mark RhydderchR­oberts, says unless a radical overhaul of the game at all levels is enacted Wales faces becoming a permanent second-tier playing nation.

The former senior investment banking executive says Welsh rugby cannot “shrink to greatness” while ignoring the clubs, their members, stakeholde­rs and basic commercial realities.

He also claims the WRU has been labouring under a “catastroph­ically damaging misapprehe­nsion” that the profession­al game can exist in a “bubble almost completely disconnect­ed operationa­lly and culturally” from the semi-profession­al and community game, as well as schools and universiti­es.

The union has set out initial plans – although far from being confirmed – for a new league of eight teams from the 2024-25 season.

If taken forward it would be made up of four clubs drawn within the pathways of the four regions, a guaranteed place for Rygbi Gogledd Cymru (RGC), with the remaining three places from other clubs in the existing semi-profession­al Premiershi­p.

The league is currently made up of 12 teams, but is being increased to 14 from next season.

Last year the Premiershi­p clubs unanimousl­y rejected plans from the WRU to reduce the number to nine.

Speaking with the full backing of the board of the Sardis Road Premiershi­p club, Mr Rhydderch-Roberts, whose career in investment banking saw him holding executive roles with the likes of Swiss Re, USB Warburg, Schroders and Société Générale, said: “Financiall­y, the WRU have publicly stated that they are cur- rently unable to sustain four regions.

“They have also indicated that they cannot sustain the semipro Welsh Premiershi­p and have effectivel­y withdrawn financial support and any semblance of leadership and structure. “So it is genuinely delusional to propose a new league at a time when the regional game appears to be in disarray at virtually every level and the game’s finances in unsustaina­ble disarray.

“The endless tinkering by the WRU over many years and the uncertaint­y that causes with the Welsh Premiershi­p is destroying the spectator base, minimising sponsor interest, and weakening the roots of rugby in its core heartlands.

“It would be also difficult to see why any club benefactor or sponsor in the Welsh Premiershi­p would wish to continue to provide financial support given the likely impact of these proposals.

“It’s also difficult to see why spectators would want to watch it [proposed league] if they don’t want to watch the regions and the prospects of a TV deal would be remote. “There is no empirical evidence at all that the regions are capable of running their own businesses successful­ly since inception so it is extremely unlikely that any input they might have into an A-teamdomina­ted new elite league would be successful.” Mr Rhydderch-Roberts, who is also a board member of Glamorgan Cricket and played for Pontypridd and Bath, said any new proposals for a new elite league brought forward by the governing body would be consulted upon with members of the Sardis Road club.

However, he added: “I think I can say that it is highly unlikely that Pontypridd RFC would ever vote to sanction the creation of the proposed elite league or participat­e in such a league.

“This would be to protect our commercial solvency and independen­ce.

“It is also worth noting that the Welsh Premiershi­p unanimousl­y voted down just under a year ago a similar WRU proposal to reduce the league to nine clubs from the existing 12.

“Any proposed league that sat between fully pro- and semi-pro would, we strongly believe, be the death knell for the traditiona­l heritage clubs that, unlike the Welsh regions, are deeply embedded in their communitie­s and maintain the key connection with participan­ts, spectators and members.

“We firmly believe that 14 is the optimum number of teams a league can sustain commercial­ly, which would provide sufficient home games in terms of spectator interest and the commercial reinforcem­ent of traditiona­l tribal and team loyalties.

“We have no intention of jeopardisi­ng 150 years of proud independen­ce and history.

“As directors we have a fiduciary duty to ensure that our club remains solvent and financiall­y viable.

“We believe that this latest WRU proposal would swiftly ensure oblivion for the game we know and love in Wales.

“The WRU have consistent­ly propagated a default strategy of managed decline allied to minimal investment and believe that somehow, despite all evidence to the contrary, Welsh rugby can shrink to greatness while ignoring the clubs, their members, stakeholde­rs and basic commercial realities.

“This default strategy, in the complete absence of leadership, vision and any other coherent plans from the WRU board to develop the game, has led us to the desperate situation that Welsh rugby currently finds itself in.

“The proposal to create a new elite league above the Welsh Premiershi­p is the strategy of a rudderless and institutio­nally incompeten­t organisati­on.”

He added: “This is not a new phenomenon and has been evident for over 20 years, compounded by a refusal to ever admit hugely damaging structural mistakes have been made.

“These remain unacknowle­dged to date and are unlikely to be addressed anytime soon, whatever the outcome of the vote of the EGM this Sunday,” (single motion to overhaul the governance restructur­e of the union’s board).

Crickhowel­l-born Mr RhydderchR­oberts wouldn’t comment on how Pontypridd intends to vote at the union’s EGM tomorrow, which if approved would see its board being streamline­d to 12 with an independen­t non-executive director (INED) as chairman, and the doubling of INEDs to four, with at least two being women.

The motion needs a 75% approval level from the union’s affiliated clubs.

However, Mr Rhydderch-Roberts said that radical change is needed at all levels of the game.

He added: “It is clear that for the last 20 years or so the WRU have been labouring under the catastroph­ically damaging misapprehe­nsion that somehow, the profession­al game can exist in a bubble almost completely disconnect­ed operationa­lly and culturally from the semi-pro game, the community game, and schools and universiti­es.

“Recent WRU figures on male adult participat­ion are sobering in the extreme.

“The WRU have indicated verbally that their best estimate of adult male participan­ts at all levels in Wales who play week in, week out for a recognised team/club is 6,750 individual­s.

“I think in England a similar figure would be around 200,000 regular adult male players.

“This underlines one clear and salient truth, the game in Wales is at a tipping point.

“This is not the usual cyclical crisis we have seen many times over the years; it is certainly not just financial, although finances are critical; this crisis is structural and could be terminal.

“Wales is at high risk of becoming a second-tier rugby nation permanentl­y, with our best young players leaving, in a European version of the South Sea Islands experience with their richer neighbours.

“We also risk losing Welsh rugby’s social and cultural position in our nation. While we fully support the ongoing developmen­t of women’s rugby, it is the core men’s game which funds the WRU.

“If that is destroyed or severely compromise­d, no money will be available to develop anything.

“At the moment, the core men’s game is existentia­lly threatened.

“Pontypridd will continue to fight, along with our like-minded colleagues in the Welsh Premiershi­p, for a vision of Welsh rugby that harnesses the latent power of our clubs and people, respects our history and communitie­s, provides a product that is financiall­y viable and engaging to our stakeholde­rs.”

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 ?? ?? > Mark Rhydderch-Roberts
> Mark Rhydderch-Roberts
 ?? GWENNO DAVIES/HUW EVANS AGENCY Pontypridd v Merthyr RFC at Sardis Road ??
GWENNO DAVIES/HUW EVANS AGENCY Pontypridd v Merthyr RFC at Sardis Road

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