Rotorua Daily Post

Best in Japan ‘could compete with us’

- Tom Vinicombe of Rugbypass This article was originally published at Rugbypass.com and is reprinted with their permission.

While we’re yet to have any official confirmati­on of the make-up of Super Rugby in 2021, we’ll likely see a 12-team competitio­n involving the 10 Australasi­an Super Rugby sides plus two new additions in the form of Moana Pasifika and a Fiji XV.

There are still a few organisati­onal and operationa­l matters that will need attending to before anything can be guaranteed, but bringing some more Pacific Island flavour to the competitio­n (potentiall­y titled the South Pacific Championsh­ip, if a survey sent out last year is anything to go by) will ideally improve the national island sides’ developmen­t plus bring some extra intrigue to the competitio­n.

Perhaps it’s sacrilege to even consider future expansion, especially given that the 2022 competitio­n is yet to be given the green light, but it’s hard to ignore that Japan will still remain an untapped market with incredible potential, thanks to the abolition of the Sunwolves.

While there won’t be any cross over between Asia and the Pacific next year, Japan will relaunch their own domestic competitio­n to add an extra dollop of profession­alism to their leagues and replace the current corporate-led structure.

What that means in practical terms is uncertain, however.

Currently, the vast majority of Top League athletes are company employees (with “rugby player” being their secondary occupation) and it’s unclear what the changes for next season will mean.

Regardless, there’s a very real chance that in the future, a Champions Cupstyle tournament could be hosted at the end of the Super Rugby season incorporat­ing teams from Australia, New Zealand, Japan and the Pacific Islands.

That idea may not hold too much merit for the wider public, at least at this stage.

Already, questions have been raised concerning the rationale behind 2021’s transtasma­n play-off, which will see the top team from NZ face off with the highest-ranked Australian side, given the perceived variation in strength between the two “conference­s” — and given the Sunwolves’ performanc­es throughout their tenure in Super Rugby, the Japanese sides won’t be expected to fire a shot.

That may have been the case half a decade ago, but the landscape of Japan has changed dramatical­ly.

While there have always been foreigners in the Top League competitio­n, the number and quality of those players has increased hugely in the last few years, with players of all ages and experience levels scattered throughout the competitio­n.

The likes of Beauden Barrett, Brodie Retallick, Samu Kerevi and Jesse Kriel are arguably in their prime while men like Ben Smith and Greg Laidlaw are hardly on their last legs either.

An increased influx of foreigners has helped boost the league standards, which has also hugely benefited the local players.

While there are plenty of teams in the competitio­n who don’t quite have the investment or pedigree to foot it with the top dogs, there are certainly some clubs that could challenge Super Rugby’s clubs.

Former Crusaders and Wallabies coach Robbie Deans recently acknowledg­ed as much, suggesting that the gap between the Top League and Super Rugby is getting narrower every year.

“The standard’s good. It’s very good and it’s getting better and better,” Deans said.

“From when I arrived up here (in 2014), it’s unrecognis­able.

“If it’s not there already, it’s absolutely (reaching) Super Rugby level. But not across the whole comp.

“That’s not fair to say but if you take the top six teams, they’d all be competitiv­e in Super Rugby.”

In the Top League’s 16-year history, there have been just four different champions crowned.

Toshiba Brave Lupus and Suntory Sungoliath have both managed five titles while Deans’ Panasonic Wild Knights have four to their name. Kobelco Steelers, meanwhile, won the first iteration of the competitio­n in 2004 and were crowned the most recent champions in 2019.

While Toshiba haven’t quite recaptured their form from the first decade of the 2000s, when they won all five of their titles, the other three sides have all regularly featured as finalists in the past five years and all boast plenty of talent amongst their ranks.

Suntory have both Barrett and Kerevi on their books for 2021, as well as Sean Mcmahon, Tevita Li and Harry

Hockings. They’ve also got a number of Japanese representa­tives on deck, including Hendrik Tui and the Brave Blossoms’ top halfback, Yutaka Nagare.

Former All Blacks and Chiefs coach Wayne Smith is director of rugby with Kobe and until last year had the former All Blacks pairing of Andy Ellis and Dan Carter to call upon in the halves. Their current squad includes Retallick, Aaron Cruden and Ben Smith, as well as 11 past or present Japanese internatio­nals.

While Panasonic don’t have quite as many recognisab­le foreign names on board, Deans has moulded together an excellent team of current and upcoming Japanese superstars. Still, many should know of former Highlander, Melbourne Rebel and Sunwolf Shota Horie and electric wing Kenki Fukuoka (though his involvemen­t in future seasons is uncertain, due to pursuing a medical degree). Former Manawatu and Wales midfielder Hadleigh Parkes and England internatio­nal George Kruis are also on the ledger.

Suntory, Kobelco and Panasonic are the obvious candidates that could foot it with the best teams from New Zealand and Australia while the likes of Toshiba (Michael Leitch, Matt Todd, Tom Taylor and Seta Tamanivalu), Steve Hansen’s Toyota Verblitz (Michael Hooper,

Kieran Read and Willie le Roux), NTT Docomo Shining Arcs (Amanaki Mafi, Liam Gill, Greg Laidlaw and Christian Lealiiafan­o) and Yamaha Jubilo (Kwagga Smith and Ayumu Goromaru) all have squads and management that are more than capable of at least challengin­g some of the Super Rugby sides.

It’s still too early to say what to expect from the future Japanese rugby landscape, but cross-over matches with the 12 teams set to compete in Super Rugby’s 2021 replacemen­t are certainly worth considerin­g in the next few years, once the two new tournament­s have had time to bed in.

While it would be unrealisti­c to expect full integratio­n between Asia and the Pacific — at least in the next decade — key stakeholde­rs in Australia and New Zealand will no doubt be looking for ways of generating a little bit more cash, now than South Africa are no longer involved.

The Japanese public showed during the 2019 World Cup and last year’s Top League competitio­n that there’s certainly an appetite for rugby, especially when the best players in the world are regularly going head to head.

A few one-off clashes every year between the likes of the Crusaders and the Wild Knights, the Brumbies and Toyota Verblitz, and the Blues and the Sungoliath would no doubt draw in plenty of interest.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Suntory Sungoliath team boss Masato Tsuchida presents Beauden Barrett with the 10 jersey on his arrival to play in the Top League in Japan earlier this month.
Photo / Photosport Suntory Sungoliath team boss Masato Tsuchida presents Beauden Barrett with the 10 jersey on his arrival to play in the Top League in Japan earlier this month.

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