Business Day

More SA franchises eye PRO 14

• Sanzaar Super Rugby looks likely to be scaled down

- Craig Ray Cape Town /TimesLIVE

Despite assurances from SA, New Zealand, Australia and Argentina Rugby (Sanzaar) CE Andy Marinos that SA will not abandon Super Rugby, it is likely that three more local sides will join PRO 14.

Marinos was reacting to a story in Wales Online that suggested the Sharks could join PRO 14 as early as the 2019/ 2020 season, with more South African teams joining the following season.

There is some truth to the story from Wales but SA’s new PRO 14 participan­ts are likely to be the Pumas and Griquas, who were in 2017 afforded “preferred candidate” status by SA Rugby. They are effectivel­y SA’s seventh and eighth franchises and could play in PRO 14 from 2019.

Sources at SA Rugby have indicated that nothing is cast in stone when the Sanzaar deal expires in 2020 and that another of the existing franchises could also head north.

A new round of Sanzaar broadcast rights talks begins next April and SA has a strong bargaining chip. Threatenin­g to withdraw more teams from Super Rugby in favour of the ambitious PRO 14, which secured a lucrative television deal in April, puts SA in a formidable position.

SA Rugby CEO Jurie Roux said in 2017 that SA would never abandon Sanzaar.

“We are contracted to Sanzaar until the end of 2020 and will be going into a negotiatin­g period again in the next two years,” Roux said at the launch of the Cheetahs and Kings into PRO 14.

“We have benefited greatly from the rivalry against Australia and New Zealand and a further relationsh­ip is likely to continue to be of great benefit to South African rugby. But joining the PRO 14 expands our horizons.

“Not playing in the southern hemisphere competitio­n is unthinkabl­e. We would suffer financial harm.”

Business Day understand­s that Super Rugby could further be scaled down with the removal of Japan’s Sunwolves and possibly one more SA team, which would then join PRO 14.

At this stage though, Super Rugby is studying a host of possible scenarios and nothing is decided as it does a more thorough due-diligence assessment following the 18-team Super Rugby format disaster.

Marinos was bullish about the Sanzaar alliance remaining strong after a review of its future until 2030 recently took place.

“As part of this process, the member unions have fully committed to the strategy and their future participat­ion,” he said in a statement.

“Any talk of a change to the stakeholde­r relationsh­ip and partners withdrawin­g, creation of new teams in new markets and trans-Tasman competitio­ns is unsubstant­iated speculatio­n and simply wrong. This 12-year strategy is designed to address the challenges facing our game and to clearly articulate Sanzaar’s vision and purpose in terms of a sustainabl­e future.

“The desired outcome is the delivery of competitiv­e, innovative, engaging and financiall­y sustainabl­e competitio­ns to ensure the continued success of the member unions and the Super Rugby clubs/franchises.

“Everything has been on the table — status quo, expansion, contractio­n, competitio­n formats, etc — as part of our initial blue-sky thinking. We basically started with a blank piece of paper and now we are doing the detailed analysis on what is viable, sustainabl­e and best for our competitio­ns.

“There is an incredible amount of detailed work taking place in this review and we have specialist groups working across all aspects of the review.

“Therefore it is very disappoint­ing that various aspects of the initial work in terms of potential tournament formats have been taken out of context and aired in public.

“Potential expansion into new markets, for example, should not be confused with only an increase in teams. We are already in the process of taking the establishe­d product to new markets. Matches being played in Singapore, Hong Kong, Fiji and Samoa are examples of this.”

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