Otago Daily Times

Granting of licences comes with no guarantees

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WELLINGTON: The granting of two conditiona­l licences for Moana Pasifika and Fiji Drua is not a guarantee the two sides will be competing in Super Rugby next year.

New Zealand Rugby wants to establish a new competitio­n from 2022 involving the Super Rugby Aotearoa sides, Rugby Australia’s five Super Rugby teams plus the two Pasifika sides.

A final signing off on the licences is expected to be completed by the end of June.

NZR chief executive

Mark Robinson said yesterday while it was on ‘‘the frontier’’ of an exciting competitio­n, there was still a lot of work to be done.

‘‘It’s my job to just sprinkle a dose of reality and still say we have a bit of work to do. We are finalising business plans, so are conditiona­l on that, and with our friends at Rugby Australia we have ongoing dialogue there.’’

Rugby Australia said it was ‘‘encouraged’’ by the NZR announceme­nt.

‘‘We look forward to continuing our engagement with NZR on this process as we plan towards 2022,’’ RA chief executive Andy Marinos said in a separate statement.

‘‘Once further conditions around the licences have been met, we look forward to formalisin­g the compositio­n of the teams in what will hopefully prove a new dawn for rugby in the region.’’

While things like competitio­n, governance and team strengths are still to be finalised, it appears the financial models of the two new teams are the main concern.

Robinson said NZR was confident Moana Pasifika and the Fijian Drua will be able to meet the conditions of the licence, which includes final sign off on a sustainabl­e business plan by June 30.

‘‘In the next two months, we will be working with Rugby Australia and the two Pasifika teams to formalise their place in the new competitio­n.’’

Last month, World Rugby committed $2.3 million a year for three years to help the two Pasifika bids build their business case.

Confirmati­on of the two licences comes five months after NZR confirmed Moana Pasifika and Fijian Drua were its preferred partners to explore the entry of Pasifikali­nked teams in future profession­al competitio­ns.

Fijian Drua, launched in 2017, compete in the lower tier Australian National Rugby Championsh­ip and won the title in 2018.

An invitation­al Moana Pasifika squad was beaten 2821 by the Maori All Blacks in a oneoff match last year.

Fijian Drua is expected to be based in Fiji, but Moana Pasifika, which would be comprised of players from Tonga and Samoa, is likely to operate from New Zealand due to cost concerns.

New Zealand has pushed for Pacific inclusion in a new tournament with Australia’s profession­al teams since the broader Super Rugby competitio­n, which included South African sides and one from Argentina, was abandoned last year due to the Covid19 pandemic. — RNZ/Reuters

 ??  ?? Mark Robinson
Mark Robinson

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