Kuwait Times

Australia pitches ‘Super 8’ rugby with NZ, SAfrica, Japan

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SYDNEY: Rugby Australia yesterday proposed a Super 8 series with teams from New Zealand, South Africa, Japan and Argentina to be played at the conclusion of either a domestic or trans-Tasman tournament. The plan was unveiled as part of its drive to secure a lucrative new broadcast deal, with the current one running out at the end of the year. Its vision includes options for either a domestic Super Rugby competitio­n, as is being played currently due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, or a trans-Tasman one from 2021.

New Zealand last month suggested a new event with its five existing teams, two to four from Australia and one from the Pacific in a shake-up of the struggling flagship southern hemisphere Super Rugby tournament.

But there was little consultati­on and the plan angered its SANZAAR partners, with Australia insisting all of its teams — ACT Brumbies, Queensland Reds, NSW Waratahs, Melbourne Rebels and Western Force — must play.

Rugby Australia’s pitch includes a four-week Super 8 tournament featuring the top two teams from Australian, New Zealand and South African Super Rugby, and the leading one from Japan’s Top

League and South America’s domestic tournament.

“We will do whatever is in the best interests of Australian rugby and we’ve been working hard on a variety of competitio­n models, not just for Super Rugby but for every level of the game,” said interim Rugby Australia chief Rob Clarke.

He added that discussion­s had taken place with the other countries, but gave no indication about how the plan was received.

“We’re in no means cutting off our SANZAAR partners and we’ll be looking to do things jointly with them beyond the Rugby Championsh­ip wherever possible,” he said.

“That said, we do need to have a competitio­n that has integrity to it and has an ability to grow our game here in Australia and grow our fan base and some of the options we’re looking at we believe will do just that.”

Super Rugby was launched in 1996, emerging from the amateur South Pacific Championsh­ip as a 10-team profession­al competitio­n featuring clubs from Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.

Its 25th anniversar­y season this year has not been one to celebrate, as the COVID-19 pandemic not only halted cross-border competitio­n but brutally exposed its flawed format.

With 15 teams in five countries straddling 16 time zones, it has long been criticised as unwieldy, expensive to run, exhausting for elite players and difficult for fans to follow.

Part of the Australian broadcast package also included an annual ‘State of Union’ clash between New South Wales and Queensland, similar to rugby league’s State of Origin. — AFP

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