Irish Daily Mirror

ALL OVER FOR IRISH AS RFU CLOSE CLUB

- BY ALEX SPINK

LONDON IRISH became the third English Premiershi­p club to fold after rugby chiefs ran out of patience and pulled the plug.

Eight months on from Worcester and Wasps going bust, a final extended deadline came and went with owner Mick Crossan unable to sell the Exiles (above) and unwilling to bankroll them any longer.

It means one of rugby’s most famous names being wiped off the map and another wave of redundanci­es flooding the sport’s already saturated job market.

RFU boss Bill Sweeney informed the club, in its 125th anniversar­y year, that it was barred from participat­ing in any league next season.

He described the situation as “desperatel­y sad”.

A hardship fund was immediatel­y set up by the RFU, Premiershi­p Rugby and the Rugby Players Associatio­n for those most in need of support.

RPA boss Christian Day (below) said: “The human impact of this failure will affect more than 100 players and staff who are now faced with uncertaint­y and will leave many thousands of fans without their beloved club.”

Jonathan Joseph, Anthony Watson, Alex Corbisiero and Mike Catt are among the England players to have worn the Irish green, along with overseas stars such as Olivier Magne, Agustin Creevy and Naka Drotske.

RFU chairman Tom Ilube said the post Covid-19 bounce-back had been weaker than expected due to the costof-living crisis.

“And that has meant clubs with unsustaina­ble business models have gone out of business,” he added.

“To thrive, rugby clubs need to have a wide-ranging offering and varied revenue streams.

”All three clubs that have failed this season have had fragile business models for many years.”

Irish had been skating on thin ice since Crossan revealed in 2020 that even before the pandemic the club was costing him £4million a season.

Two years later he said he was ready to give the Exiles away to anyone prepared to keep it going.

Reports in March that a Us-based consortium was negotiatin­g to buy the club offered hope but nothing came of it and twice the monthly payroll failed to arrive on time.

A plea from the players for one more week to try to retrieve money owed was granted by the RFU but last night the sands of time finally ran out.

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