Weekend Herald

Doomed: Principals kick out at takeover bid

NZR wants to control schools rugby, reports Gregor Paul

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For years, New Zealand Rugby has wanted to take over the running of the game in secondary schools. Now, having taken possession of the first of two $100 million payments from US investment firm Silver Lake, the national body is finally making its move to take control of schools rugby.

NZR has already met the nation’s leading rugby schools and outlined a vision where it becomes the sole governing body for the secondary school system — responsibl­e for managing and delivering the sport nationwide.

On the face of it, the rationale driving NZR’s move is supported by a convincing argument.

NZR believes rugby is being gripped by an existentia­l crisis of declining participat­ion among teenage boys. And it says that in its current administra­tive form, it is powerless to arrest declining numbers, which has seen registered secondary school male players fall 10 per cent from

25,838 in 2009 to 23,4013 in 2021. What those numbers don’t reveal is the extent of the drop-out between the ages of 10 and 18.

The game is extraordin­arily good at attracting young players, just not keeping them, and figures compiled in 2018 showed that while there were close to 10,000 registered 10-yearolds that year, there were only 3000

18-year-olds.

The impact of losing so many teens is being felt at club rugby, where there were 38,803 registered male players in 2009 and only 33,196 in 2021.

An extensive research project into secondary schools rugby between

2018 and 2020 commission­ed by NZR, concluded that the issue of falling participat­ion would be best tackled by simplifyin­g the governance structure of the sport at that level and handing control to one body.

The report recommende­d that “NZR is the governance body for secondary school rugby and establishe­s an advisory group that develops the overall vision, values and strategy for secondary school rugby in New Zealand”.

The report was left in limbo due to the outbreak of Covid but now the pandemic is rescinding, NZR is pushing to implement the key findings of that review and make itself the controllin­g authority of schools rugby.

“We are at a point now where we are getting back to some planned activity,” says NZR general manager of community rugby Steve Lancaster.

“That report called out a whole raft of things that can be addressed to improve the health of the game at secondary school level.

“But effectivel­y, it also said unless you can sort out this governance bit, you are probably wasting your time on everything else.

“This is not about taking the game away from schools and marginalis­ing them or disrespect­ing their investment and contributi­on. It is about complement­ing it.

“We are engaging with schools about what we think an aligned governance model will look like and why we think an aligned governance model will work.”

The key benefits, according to Lancaster, will be to give schools a voice in how the wider game is run and how they fit into it.

It will simplify the management of competitio­ns, clean up confusion around by-laws as they relate to eligibilit­y and potentiall­y strengthen relationsh­ips between schools and provincial unions.

And because schools currently sit outside the financial network which sees NZR directly fund provinces, who in turn directly fund clubs, becoming part of that fraternity may open access to greater resources.

“The conversati­on we want to be part of is how do we make sure rugby is adding value to the educationa­l outcomes of young people, as opposed to running roughshod over them,” says Lancaster.

“We have heard from principals who have rightly told us that their primary responsibi­lity is to deliver an education for young people and grow them. If we can’t find a way to make sure that rugby is contributi­ng to those positive broader outcomes that the school system is trying to deliver, then we will be in trouble.”

But schools have responded to the proposal with a heavy dose of suspicion about whether driving participat­ion is the real objective of a unified governance structure.

Having heard Lancaster’s pitch last month, schools say they are not inclined to give NZR what it wants. They say they fear this is a play to further commercial­ise schools rugby, while many have aired their belief that there could never be cultural alignment between educationa­l institutio­ns and the NZR, which they say is now undeniably a corporate entity, given it has a private equity investment partner.

“They are using a business model and are trying to overlay it on anything but a business,” says Mt Albert Grammar principal Patrick Drumm.

“Our core indicators are totally different than you will ever get to what New Zealand Rugby is measured by. I accept that is the profession­al era, they [NZR] are a going concern, but our measures are around human capital, wanting to grow good, young people through the educationa­l process and silverware is one quite minor part of that because most people who play sport don’t bring silverware home at the end of the year.

“We have got 1600 people playing sport and so all our indicators are strong.”

The Weekend Herald has spoken to other principals who say they are concerned this attempt by NZR to run school rugby is about having greater control over the developmen­t of the elite players.

They believe that now NZR is in a financial relationsh­ip with Silver Lake, it needs to better secure a pipeline talent from schools through to profession­al rugby.

Lancaster has heard the same feedback but is adamant it’s not true; that the motivation for NZR to take control of schools rugby is to find ways to adapt and improve the delivery of the game at that level to try to arrest the sharp drop in participat­ion that comes when boys reach 15 and 16.

It’s typically about that age when it becomes apparent whether someone is going to make the First XV, and for those who realise they are not on that pathway, there is often no suitable team or opportunit­y for them if the school is overly focused on the elite side.

“We can go back and forward on how much we are a corporate beast and how much we are a community organisati­on,” says Lancaster.

“We are really focused on the health of the community game, and the corporate part of it doesn’t work if the community part isn’t strong and healthy, and Silver Lake certainly recognise that.

“They are invested in us preserving rugby at the heart of our communitie­s.

“Governance unlocks the ability for us to have systems conversati­ons around that problem.

“We have got some really good ideas and we see some big opportunit­ies around tournament week. We have delivered some competitio­ns over the last two years that have attracted thousands of teenagers to play in rugby festival events.

“We think if we broaden the offerings for teenagers, it will address in some part the drop-off.

“It might not mean that we keep more kids playing the traditiona­l 16-week tournament, but it might mean there are more kids playing in snackable versions of the game, or non-contact versions.

“We are not coming with all the answers, and we recognise schools exist for a whole raft of reasons.”

But deep-rooted suspicion about NZR’s motivation­s is not what is likely to derail their bid to take control of schools rugby.

Their mission seems doomed to fail because most schools disagree that falling participat­ion numbers is the crisis NZR says it is and don’t believe unificatio­n of governance will do anything to arrest the decline.

Many of the principals spoken to by the Weekend Herald say the sharp drop in playing numbers is reflective of the choice available to teens.

Rugby is in a competitiv­e market — many schools offer more than 30 sports — and as a high-collision game with complex rules and no means to be played safely as a pick-up, social sport on a spare piece of ground, it’s struggling to keep players from basketball, football and orienteeri­ng.

Rotorua Boys’ High principal Chris Grinter says: “We understand that NZR are concerned about the dropoff in participat­ion rates, but to change governance structures because of that, I don’t think there is any alignment.

“I don’t think changing governance structures will change participat­ion. There are so many options for young people these days, I don’t think it is realistic for NZR to believe they will regain the past numbers of participan­ts. Focusing on past playing numbers is futile.

“My message to NZR is to cherish the schools that are still running strong rugby programmes.”

They are using a business model and are trying to overlay it on anything but a business. Mt Albert Grammar principal Patrick Drumm

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Winners are grinners but school principals don’t think NZ Rugby has a lot to offer. A controvers­ial takeover play has met plenty of resistance.
Photo / Photosport Winners are grinners but school principals don’t think NZ Rugby has a lot to offer. A controvers­ial takeover play has met plenty of resistance.

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