The Citizen (Gauteng)

WorldRugby putting greed before fairness

- @KenBorland Ken Borland

WorldRugby this week confirmed the hosts of their World Cup tournament­s for men and women through to 2033. They have proved again that, as the governing body for the sport, they are mainly concerned with making as much money as possible and not necessaril­y the good of the game or sporting principles like fairness and equity.

Of the nine men’s World Cup tournament­s held, six have been won by New Zealand and South Africa, and yet they are the countries most unlikely to ever host rugby’s showpiece tournament again, purely for economic reasons.

New Zealand’s small population and time zone issues mean the 2011 tournament they won may have been the last one they ever host, while South Africa are mainly prejudiced by their weak economy.

Although the exchange rate does make hosting the tournament cheaper, WorldRugby still demand a guarantee of about R2 billion from whoever stages a World Cup.

That sort of money can only really be stumped up by northern hemisphere nations and Australia.

But having put on some of the greatest sporting events ever held – Madiba’s 1995 Rugby World Cup at the dawn of democracy, the 2003 Cricket World Cup and the 2010 Fifa Football World Cup – there is no denying South African rugby fans feel tremendous­ly hurt at being snubbed by WorldRugby.

That hurt is only made greater by the skulldugge­ry that saw France snatching the hosting rights for next year’s World Cup, after WorldRugby’s own evaluation committee had recommende­d South Africa.

But when it came to the WorldRugby council voting on the issue, the powerful European bloc backed France.

The worse betrayal of all came from Rugby Africa, the continenta­l body which has its offices in Cape Town, paid for by SA Rugby, and who also voted for France.

Much like in African football, there is a growing sense of north African teams seizing power and aligning themselves with the old colonial power of France.

In a decision WorldRugby chairman Bill Beaumont, the former England captain, said would “accelerate the growth and impact of rugby globally”, Australia were awarded the 2027 World Cup and the USA the 2031 edition.

The next three Women’s World Cups (2025, 2029 & 2033) will be hosted by England, Australia and the USA.

Apart from an obvious trend towards favouring the Anglospher­e, the USA are hardly a rugby power. Their women may be ranked seventh in the world, but the men’s game is still taking baby steps.

Major League Rugby has been on the go in America since 2017 and the sport is growing in the world’s biggest commercial market. But the USA would be the weakest team to ever host the World Cup and they still only attract around 20 000 people to their home matches.

Sevens rugby is their most popular format, with nine million TV viewers for the Rugby World Cup Sevens in San Francisco in 2018.

Having been kind enough to help Australia out of their financial hole, one hopes WorldRugby will show the same generosity to New Zealand and South Africa,

But it will be at least 40 years between World Cups for South Africa and New Zealand.

Oh and don’t forget that both these great nations cannot pour enough of that all-important cash into WorldRugby’s greedy coffers.

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