Herald on Sunday

Vote for new boss may end in tiers

- Liam Napier

The irony of the vote to determine the next World Rugby chairman is the often maligned tier-two nations hold the balance of power to shape the game's future.

The April 26 vote, set to take place via email, to either reinstate former England captain Bill Beaumont or anoint Argentinia­n administra­tor Agustin Pichot's fresh vision for the global game is brewing another north versus south standoff.

Sanzaar's collective – New Zealand, South Africa, Australia, Argentina – are expected to throw their support behind Pichot's push for change.

The Six Nations unions are, meanwhile, aligning behind Beaumont's status quo.

Such a familiar, fraught script leaves smaller nations controllin­g the fate of the next global chairman.

As politickin­g ramps up behind the scenes, the

Herald on Sunday has obtained a document which, while one-sided, attempts to expose Beaumont's broken promises over the last four years.

Titled ‘‘fact checking Bill's pledges’’ the document outlines five keys points, starting with the failure to deliver a global season.

In 2016, when elected chairman, Beaumont pledged to address the global season, review expansion into the likes of a world club championsh­ip and look at moving the Six Nations to later in the season. None of which transpired. Four years on, following the failed bid to get the Nations Championsh­ip concept off the ground, Beaumont is again promising to deliver an aligned global calendar.

The second point of contention in the document is dubbed ‘‘fairness’’.

In 2016, Beaumont said by the end of his term more tier two nations would be playing the establishe­d elite. Yet Georgia remains indefinite­ly frozen out of the Six Nations, while other tier-two nations frequently bemoan their lack of progress and top table influence.

Next on the agenda finance.

Four years ago Beaumont said he would ensure World Rugby has a sound commercial structure that maximises rugby's potential value.

The document instead claims rugby's financial situation is worse now than in 2016.

Pichot has called for a decade-long financial plan to offset losses rugby regularly incurs, as the Covid-19 crisis magnifies the lack of financial stability across the board.

This is particular­ly evident as Rugby Australia desperatel­y attempts to avoid financial ruin.

But it is also true of the long-standing inequitabl­e revenue-sharing arrangemen­ts between the north and south.

Because each Sanzaar and the Six Nations nation holds a disproport­ionate three votes each, most assume this group will determine the next chairman.

New Zealand's three votes will be cast by chief executive Mark Robinson, former All Blacks doctor Deb Robinson and recent Melbourne Storm chairman Bart Campbell, NZ Rugby's nomination to join World Rugby's executive committee. However, those at the shallow end of the voting spectrum suddenly assume great importance. At this point, eight days out from the vote, the Herald has learned 11 of the 50 votes, excluding Beaumont who holds a casting say, remain undecided.

These include North America, Fiji, Samoa, Oceania, Japan, Romania and Georgia plus voting blocs such as Rugby Europe, Africa, South America, Asia, all of whom get two pivotal votes. is

 ??  ?? Bill Beaumont
Bill Beaumont

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand