The Guardian Australia

'We are at a tipping point': Coventry chairman says RFU letting clubs down

- Robert Kitson

Here is a statistic that, for many, still resonates down the years. When England made history by beating the All Blacks on Kiwi soil for the first time in 1973, no fewer than five of their starting XV played their club rugby for Coventry. Four of that quintet – David Duckham, Peter Rossboroug­h, Peter Preece and Geoff Evans – were born and schooled locally. Their club, widely regarded as the strongest around, were the knockout champions of England in both 1973 and 1974.

Almost half a century later this traditiona­lly fertile hotbed of English rugby is engaged in a very different kind of struggle. The club’s executive chairman, Jon Sharp, does not mince his words. “At the moment we’ve got a crippled league,” he says bluntly, deeply unhappy at the lack of official support – and central funding – for upwardly mobile Championsh­ip clubs. “They’re sitting back, letting us wither on the vine and saying: ‘There you go, Plan A is working.’ Are we being sold down the river? Yes, that’s the right phrase.”

Which is why, for “Cov” and all the other still-ambitious sides in the Championsh­ip, these are critical days. While many in the game are being distracted by the knockout stages in Europe and the women’s Six Nations, crucial talks took place with Rugby Football Union officials last week about the Championsh­ip’s future. “Dismissive” and “deplorable” are among the kinder words used to describe the RFU’s attitude, with all the signs pointing to a continuing funding freeze and a moratorium on Premiershi­p promotion and relegation for three years from this summer. “The feedback I’m getting is they were very dismissive of us and the meeting was just to tick the boxes,” Sharp says.

Clearly these are difficult financial times but – as previously outlined in the Guardian by Dicky Evans, the longtime backer of the Cornish Pirates – it boils down to how English rugby sees itself in a decade’s time. Clubs such as Coventry believe a properly financed second tier of well-run communitym­inded clubs is a vital developmen­t tool – 13 of the players capped for England by Eddie Jones have played at least 10 Championsh­ip games – which the RFU should wholeheart­edly embrace. Others see only the existing Premiershi­p cartel flourishin­g and the rest reverting to semi-profession­al or amateur status.

Sharp believes the latter course – “I think it would be a huge mistake” – will scar the English game permanentl­y just when France are looking at a third profession­al league below the Top 14 and Pro D2. In England, by contrast, central funding for Championsh­ip clubs has now shrunk from £670,000 two years ago to £150,000 for this season (of which just £80,000 comes from the RFU) with every prospect of it remaining at that lowly level until 2024.

Even the money from Premiershi­p Rugby, which has contribute­d previously to the central pot in return for the scrapping of the Championsh­ip play-offs, is now under scrutiny with no club being relegated. “Premiershi­p Rugby have not yet confirmed they are going to give us anything for the coming season,” Sharp says. “That’s a pretty big deal for me.”

It does not help, either, that some Championsh­ip clubs have different priorities, with others complainin­g of being kept out of the loop by their own negotiator­s who have been sworn to secrecy by the RFU. “We probably are at a tipping point,” Sharp says. “It’s so annoying because when people say, ‘The Championsh­ip clubs couldn’t compete in the Premiershi­p’, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Pirates beat Saracens last month and when we played Sarries away in pre-season we were in the lead for 60 minutes before losing 48-33. And that’s with quite a few part-timers in our squad.”

So what happens next? There are some in the Championsh­ip who advocate severing ties with the RFU and going it alone, using their own commercial nous and contacts to create a more attractive and financiall­y sustainabl­e product. Sharp, keen to put something back into his community after making a modest fortune leasing commercial aircraft engines, believes benefactor­s such as himself could do even more for English rugby if only they were encouraged to do so.

That shared trust is badly frayed. “The Championsh­ip executive has its heart in the right place but I believe they’re being strung along by the RFU,” says Sharp. “There are one or two clubs in this division who have no ambition to go any further. That’s fine, you expect that. But why should Pirates, Ealing and Coventry – we’re not ready yet but in another five years we probably will be – have to be branded the same?”

In Coventry’s case, the ambition remains for a multi-sports Butts Arena complex with a capacity of more than 10,000 and hospitalit­y facilities attached as and when the Covid-19 mists clear. Sharp reckons 14 or 16 Championsh­ip clubs should be centrally funded to the tune of £1m each per season, a relatively modest figure given the government recently allocated £135m in emergency funding to English rugby union, of which £59m has been allocated to the Premiershi­p and only £9m to the Championsh­ip.

All of which adds to the steadily gathering tension. “We must challenge the RFU to actually state what their vision is for the league,” Sharp says. “Ideally they would make a clear strategic statement, acknowledg­ing the Championsh­ip as being the central link between the national leagues and the Premiershi­p and the natural developmen­t path for players into the Premiershi­p and the England team. To fulfil that set of objectives it needs to be a fully profession­al league. How can you run a profession­al team with Premiershi­p aspiration­s on central funding of £150,000 when, of that amount, you’ve got to spend £100,000 on minimum standards anyway?

“Covid is being trotted out as an excuse for everything but we were already shafted before it happened. Why shouldn’t Championsh­ip clubs who can meet the criteria to go up into the Premiershi­p be facilitate­d, as Exeter were? It should be an open book. If you kill that concept, you’re killing the sport. At the moment what we’ve got is a hamstrung bloody league.”

And finally …

After 33 years of contributi­ng to the rugby pages of the Guardian and Observer, my esteemed longtime colleague Paul Rees has finally crawled away from his last Breakdown for a well-earned rest. Which means that, in future, the Breakdown will appear slightly earlier in the week and be brought to you by a different author. If readers have any specific content ideas or preference­s – constructi­ve ones preferably – for this space please feel free to get in touch, either on email, Twitter or below the line.

• This is an extract from our weekly rugby union email, the Breakdown. To subscribe, just visit this page and follow the instructio­ns.

 ?? Photograph: Nick Browning /JMP/Shuttersto­ck ?? Coventry take on Ealing Trailfinde­rs in the Championsh­ip last month.
Photograph: Nick Browning /JMP/Shuttersto­ck Coventry take on Ealing Trailfinde­rs in the Championsh­ip last month.
 ??  ?? The Cornish Pirates team celebrate their victory against Saracens. Photograph: Dan Mullan/Getty Images
The Cornish Pirates team celebrate their victory against Saracens. Photograph: Dan Mullan/Getty Images

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