NZ game can be big beacon in the gloom
Despite setbacks, rugby in this country well-placed to take advantage
For all the financial pain and mass redundancies New Zealand rugby continues to endure, the fraught global landscape could alter the player market and present the domestic scene in a much more attractive light. “There could be a bit of a rebasing of the player market about to go on,” NZR head of professional rugby Chris Lendrum says, tentatively. “A lot of it will be determined by broadcasting ability to pay for rights.
“Talking to colleagues in the UK it sounds like both the [English] Premiership and Top 14 in France will seek to cut player wages across the board. How they reach an agreement on that remains to be seen.
“Everybody is trying to find a sustainable way forward here. If those markets rebase then ours has the potential to as well but it’s so fluid it’s hard to say for sure.”
What we know is New Zealand, as the first nation to resume rugby in two weeks, is better placed than any to position itself as a more attractive proposition than it has been viewed for some time.
So much of that pitch rides on sorting out the mess that is the unsustainable domestic game – a yet-to-be-determined blueprint that encompasses the Mitre 10 Cup’s seemingly tenuous semiprofessional status, and Super Rugby’s reshaped mid-to-long term future.
But as the Northern Hemisphere remains stuck in a panicked state of attempting to finish this season before the next is scheduled to start, New Zealand etches ever closer a local rebuild in the form of Super Rugby Aotearoa.
“My overall sense is this presents positive opportunities for New Zealand,” Lendrum says. “With the world in crisis this is a great time to be in New Zealand. We’re a first world country tucked away in the corner of the planet with a strong health system — all of which makes people reflect how lucky they are to be here.”
In essence from a New Zealand perspective, chaotic autonomy breeds opportunity.
As English and French clubs become more protectionist, lucrative European contracts may dwindle. Private owners in England are fast tiring of losing £7 million ($13.9m) on average each season. The Weekend Herald understands one owner has shed £50m over several seasons to line his players’ pockets.
“At this time you’ve got club owners who historically haven’t cared much about their ego investment in a rugby team running at a loss because the rest of their business interests have been highly profitable,” Lendrum says. “Now that model is really challenged for them so their tolerance for their ego investment is far less.
“Sitting where we do I feel optimistic there could be some advantages out of this situation, provided we can sort our own backyard.
“If we see more players not taking contracts or there not being as many opportunities as there were overseas and the desire to travel for people with families is less then that might change our depth proposition in New Zealand. We’re watching with real interest.”
As the pandemic continues to severely impinge life freedoms in other rugby countries, high-profile former All Blacks and middle tier-talent has flooded home in their droves.
Although many of these players remain under contract elsewhere and prohibitive insurance costs in the tens of thousands will prevent the likes of Ben Smith and Liam Squire playing locally, Sam Whitelock has returned from Japan to play for the Crusaders, and other free agents such as Julian Savea and Ma’a Nonu are expected to give this year’s Mitre 10 Cup a welcome shot in the arm.
Japan is one rugby market more insulated than most, but even Top League contracts are increasingly competitive as Australian, South African and Europeans seek refuge from cutbacks in their backyards.
With this trend in mind, Lendrum believes New Zealand will strengthen its alliance with Japan as the Brave Blossoms under Jamie Joseph eye inclusion in the Rugby Championship and the possibility of linking Top League teams in a Southern Hemisphere club competition gathers momentum.
“Obviously their competition running in the same window as us presents a challenge but it also presents an opportunity to align with the Japanese and continue the good work we’ve done with growing our relationship and presence there.
“Put it this way – if there was one market we’d prefer to be in competition with it would be the Japanese.”
From a pure scale of economy New Zealand sits at the shallow end of global rugby. But if — and it is a big if with all the traverses yet to be navigated — NZ Rugby can map a sustainable structure that then attracts significant private investment, there appears hope Covid-19 can yet breed some good here.