Herald on Sunday

Paul Lewis:

Pasifika team faces multiple challenges,

- Paul Lewis paul.lewis@nzme.co.nz

These are promising times for Pacific Islands rugby.

The empty promises and false dawns of Pasifika rugby are legion. But, if it’s true New Zealand Rugby is prepared to bankroll a Pasifika team based in Auckland for Super Rugby 2021, one of the most compelling elements of Southern Hemisphere rugby could finally be allowed to flourish.

Previously many pundits have believed such a team (with players from Samoa, Tonga and Fiji) won’t happen because of factors such as money, eligibilit­y, lack of quality players and Covid-19 — and the probabilit­y that basing a franchise in the Islands risked money silently ebbing away to mysterious places.

The main danger, however, is the Pasifika team becoming a bargaining chip in the ugly clash between New Zealand and Australian rugby. They could be the archetypal political football as the two swap blows over the make-up of next year’s competitio­n — with New Zealand proposing five Kiwi franchises, between two to four from our aggrieved transtasma­n neighbours, and a Pasifika Super Rugby team.

Many pundits in the know have said the only way a Pasifika team would work is to have it run by New Zealand Rugby as a sixth franchise. They say, too, that with many of the Islands’ best players in the Northern Hemisphere, some seasoned palagi and/or internatio­nal players might have to be conscripte­d to help bolster the ranks at first — maybe even allowing existing players to turn out for it without disturbing All Blacks eligibilit­y.

Australian outrage at being littlebrot­hered by NZ Rugby over next year’s format spilled over to this issue, with RA splutterin­g that a Pasifika team would be better quartered in Sydney.

So you can see how the nascent Pasifika team might end up being the taro in the sandwich if this unseemly squabble continues; they would be everyone’s bet as first to be sacrificed.

However, RA boss Hamish McLennan now says Australia has “no interest” in playing in New Zealand’s competitio­n — and is pressing ahead with plan B, an eight-team competitio­n involving five Australian franchises, the Fijian Drua team (which plays in Australia’s second-tier national rugby championsh­ip), the revival of Japan’s Sunwolves, plus an as-yet-unknown Argentinia­n side. No mention of Samoa or Tonga — or a blended Pasifika team.

It seems a hopeful, rather than compelling, premise.

However, a key player could be billionair­e Australian mining magnate Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest, the man behind the re-emergence of the Western Force in Super Rugby and backer of the Global Rapid Rugby competitio­n — formed when the Force were dumped from Super Rugby. He has also poured $7 million into grassroots rugby in Western Australia.

The winner of GRR stood to pocket $1m (it was called off after one round due to Covid-19) — and the multicultu­ral membership caught the eye. GRR regulars comprised the Fijian Latui (drawn mostly from in-Fiji local talent), Manuma Samoa (ditto), the China Lions (a joint venture between Bay of Plenty and China with Mitre 10 Cup players from five unions, coached by Gordon Tietjens), Malaysia Valke (a South Africandom­inated franchise based in Kuala Lumpur) and the Hong Kong-based South China Tigers.

If Forrest is in it for the long haul, as he says, he could continue to help Pasifika rugby.

In a Sky Sport interview recently, he favoured a Pacific Islands team in Super Rugby and — in two to three years — teams from China, India and Sri Lanka. He also said: “You blokes need an Australian side to want to be the best in the world — because that’s what will keep you there.”

Then there’s Kanaloa Hawaii — the Pacific Islands team involving former All Blacks Jerome Kaino, Joe Rokocoko and John Afoa who could either aim their alreadyban­krolled enterprise at Super Rugby or their original target, Major League Rugby in the US.

If a Pasifika team is to survive this political turmoil and likely horsetradi­ng, it will need to be a long-term propositio­n. Even a joint side won’t initially be composed of the best the Islands have to offer; many top players are locked up in Northern Hemisphere rugby.

A blended Pasifika team is in danger of not really satisfying anyone.

The member nations have separate — and proud — identities, not to mention fierce rivalries.

Any joint entity has to get around that or risk being neither one thing nor the other.

The money seems better aimed this time but a blended team still faces a struggle — unless the franchise has decent branding and quick success.

Easier said than done.

A blended Pasifika team is in danger of not really satisfying anyone.

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