The New Zealand Herald

Reviews are in: Boring . . .

Super Rugby stuffed: We don’t need navel-gazing exercise to work out the game needs reinventio­n

- Dylan Cleaver comment

Super Rugby has been a 25-year living, almostbrea­thing review.

Oh wait, look . . . it’s another rugby review! With bated breath we await the end of June 2020, not for a potential move back to alert level zero, but for the launch of “Aratipu”, which might sound like the new Cook Strait ferry but is in fact a radical reposition­ing of Super Rugby in the national sporting ecosphere — or probably nothing of the sort.

Yes, rugby had itself reviewed and came to the conclusion that what it needed more than anything else was another review.

Set alongside the recent Review of Rugby, a polyonymou­s piece of work more sexily referred to as the McKinsey Report, last year’s Secondary School’s Rugby Review and 2017’s Respect and Responsibi­lity Review,

Aratipu looks set to establish

New Zealand Rugby as the country’s elite House of Review. If Mark Robinson’s pitch for CEO was based on a promise to stakeholde­rs that he would uphold New Zealand Rugby’s legacy of commission­ing reports, he has assumed the role with alacrity.

The scope of the latest review is broad, even if the named reviewers are depressing­ly narrow — the five franchise chairs, Robinson and NZR chairman Brent Impey, and that hardy annual of sports administra­tion, Liz Dawson — with risk managers rather than risk takers the order of the day.

They will be tasked with the “growing, regenerati­on and invigorati­on” of Super Rugby, a kind of back-to-front, contradict­ory word salad of a goal to which even the most dispassion­ate of observers could say: “Wasn’t it the ‘growing’ part that led Super Rugby to the shambles it is now?

Super Rugby has been a 25-year living, almost-breathing review. The relatively early years of stability aside, it has been a formless mess of “innovation­s” and iterations.

In terms of a report card, it could be graded as such.

Super 12 (1996-2005)

Brave idea with obvious logistical challenges.

Super 14 (2006-10)

An obvious idea, with expansion into Western Australia was marred by an unnecessar­y inclusion of another South African franchise.

Super 15 (2011-15)

A routine idea about expansion into Melbourne ruined by the first of the seemingly impenetrab­le conference formats.

Super Rugby ( 2016-17)

The jump-the-shark idea where competitio­n grew to 18 teams and added two more countries — Japan and Argentina — and time zones into the mix. How this went from a thought in a bored administra­tor’s brain to an actual reality remains one of the 21st century’s great mysteries, up there with the popularity of Gangnam Style and the meaning of quantum entangleme­nt.

Super Rugby (2017-Covid-19)

The too-little-too-late walking back of a really bad idea.

Don Mackinnon, Blues chairman and another staple of the New Zealand sports administra­tion scene, said: “The scope of Aratipu will include the New Zealand Super Rugby competitio­n [local and offshore], clarify Super Rugby’s role in the domestic high-performanc­e pathway, review the ownership and equity structure, and digital rights.

“We will consult widely and think broadly.”

Again, this is all, to use a term popular in rugby clubrooms, a bit a***-about-face. The people who matter have already been consulted and they have answered with their feet and their TV remotes.

The conclusion is remarkably simple: Super Rugby is rooted.

This is the not the time for Aratipu.

It sure as hell isn’t time for “growing, regenerati­on and invigorati­on”.

It is time for disengagin­g, dismantlin­g and reinventio­n.

We don’t need to wait until the end of June to realise that.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Rugby needs to keep its eye on the Super Rugby prize and stop talking gibberish.
Photo / Photosport Rugby needs to keep its eye on the Super Rugby prize and stop talking gibberish.

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