The Guardian (USA)

London Irish set to become third club ejected from Premiershi­p

- Gerard Meagher

London Irish are expected to become the third team ejected from the Premiershi­p in eight months with the Rugby Football Union poised to suspend the Exiles should they miss Tuesday’s 5pm deadline regarding the proposed takeover.

The situation is such that several players have been seeking to line up provisiona­l moves with England’s Henry Arundell understood to be on Bath’s radar, Paddy Jackson on Newcastle’s, and the back-rower Tom Pearson believed to be of interest to Bath and Bristol among a host of suitors.

With just hours to go until the RFU’s deadline, Irish are staring down the barrel and but for a late reprieve they will follow Wasps and Worcester out of the league.

Either the takeover by a US consortium is completed before close of business, or the current owners provide proof they will fund the Exiles for next season, or they will be suspended from the Premiershi­p.

Last Friday the squad was advised to prepare for the prospect of being suspended with no sign of progress despite repeated insistence from the club’s hierarchy that the takeover was close to being completed.

There has been widespread resignatio­n that the doomsday scenario will materialis­e and should the RFU’s deadline, which was set this month, come and go, the union’s club finance viability working group will meet to make a recommenda­tion to the board with an announceme­nt expected on Wednesday. One well-placed source summed up the mood when telling the Guardian “as far as I’m concerned, they’re gone”.

The RFU set Irish the deadline after the April wages were paid late because the consortium was unable to transfer the funds, leaving the current owner Mick Crossan to belatedly step in. Crossan was absent last Friday from the meeting at which the RFU, Premiershi­p Rugby and the Rugby Players’ Associatio­n were all present. If the takeover is not completed on Tuesday, Crossan would have to prove his commitment to funding the club but he has been looking to offload it all season.

Irish’s suspension would accelerate PRL’s plans for a 10-team league from next season but would leave dozens of players out of work in a crowded market.

It is understood players and coaches are being widely touted around clubs in the Premiershi­p and the Championsh­ip but the majority would likely head abroad given the tight salary cap restrictio­ns in England. One option would be to give Premiershi­p clubs dispensati­on within the cap to sign London Irish players but that would require unanimous approval and would likely be met with resistance from those who choose not to spend up to the cap. A fund is also being set up by the RFU and PRL to offer hardship support.

The deadline was also set because both the RFU and PRL are desperate to avoid another season in which clubs have to drop out midway through. They do not want the Irish saga to drag over the summer and into next season but the demise of the Exiles would ramp up the pressure on both organisati­ons.

In November, the RFU’s chief executive, Bill Sweeney, was accused of being “asleep on the job” while he and Premiershi­p Rugby’s Simon Massie-Taylor were blamed for “failure on an epic scale” at a parliament­ary inquiry into the demises of Worcester and Wasps.

 ?? ?? London Irish’s Henry Arundell could join Bath. Photograph: David Rogers/Getty Images
London Irish’s Henry Arundell could join Bath. Photograph: David Rogers/Getty Images

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