The Guardian (USA)

Premiershi­p clubs face losing England players for half of games next season

- Gerard Meagher

Premiershi­p clubs face losing England players for half of their league matches next season due to mandatory rest periods and clashes with internatio­nal fixtures in a truncated campaign before the Rugby World Cup.

The 2022-23 season will begin on 9 September and is due to run for 38 weeks, two fewer than the current campaign, with the final taking place in late

May to give England more preparatio­n time for the 2023 World Cup in France. That was part of the agreement that led to the Rugby Football Union last year approving a halt to relegation from the Premiershi­p.

It is understood, however, that England players who tour Australia are contracted to 10 weeks off before returning for their clubs and are due to miss the first two rounds of next season. In addition, with the national side playing four autumn matches this year and England entitled to convene their squads a week before Test campaigns begin, players could be absent from their clubs for 11 Premiershi­p rounds from October onwards.

Bye weeks provide some mitigation but factor in how England internatio­nals are also entitled to a week’s rest during the season provided they reach a certain threshold of game-time during the autumn fixtures and Six Nations and some players may miss at least half of their club’s league campaigns.

“Next season, in a very congested programme, when you look at the extended November series with the extra week and the Six Nations and the shortened season, I think the internatio­nal players are available [for] something like 50% of the games,” the Northampto­n director of rugby Chris Boyd

said recently.

“From a pure player availabili­ty point of view, it’s tough. From a financial point of view for the club it’s tough because you’re paying those guys’ wages when they’re away. But part of the obligation of the Premiershi­p clubs is to produce players for the internatio­nal game and if we lose sight of that then we go into a situation where the club game becomes more important than the internatio­nal game and we get a completely different feel to our game.”

When addressing England’s latest disappoint­ing Six Nations campaign in March, the RFU chief executive, Bill Sweeney, suggested the entire domestic structure needed overhaulin­g: “Everyone is fed up with it. We need to fix it.”

Change is likely in 2024 when the new profession­al Game Agreement

is introduced and while Premiershi­p fixtures clashing with internatio­nal matches is an age-old problem, to illustrate the difficulti­es facing clubs next season, Ellis Genge has played in more than 60% of Leicester’s league fixtures despite his involvemen­t in both of England’s campaigns.

While the opening two rounds of next season’s Premiershi­p are likely to take place without England squad members in action, clubs can seek dispensati­on for players to return early, provided the RFU, Premiershi­p Rugby and the Rugby Players’ Associatio­n all agree.

After the British & Irish Lions tour of South Africa last year, the majority of England players involved were granted dispensati­on to return ahead of schedule, though of the 10 who appeared in the Test series against the Springboks, only Maro Itoje has avoided a lengthy spell on the sidelines with injury this season. Itoje, as it happens, was one of the few players to be given the full 10 weeks off.

It is also understood that while there were plans to shelve the Premiershi­p Rugby Cup next season due to the shortening of the campaign, it will now go ahead with most fixtures taking place in midweek.

 ?? David Rogers/Getty Images ?? Maro Itoje was one of the few England players given 10 weeks off this season. Photograph:
David Rogers/Getty Images Maro Itoje was one of the few England players given 10 weeks off this season. Photograph:

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