The Citizen (KZN)

Player wealth to be spread in SA

- Ken Borland

A new contractin­g model that stops certain unions from hogging all the talent as well as expanded South African participat­ion in the Pro14 are both in the pipeline for SA Rugby, president Mark Alexander (above) said yesterday.

The two initiative­s are certainly linked as the success of South African teams playing in the Pro14 will depend on them performing well on the field, and there is little doubt the Southern Kings and Free State Cheetahs need to improve their depth to be competitiv­e this year and beyond. Adding two more franchises to the mix will also put more of a premium on player resources.

“We are going to have more South African teams involved in the Pro14, possibly from 2020, we’re in negotiatio­ns about it and we are excited about it. We will then have four teams in the southern hemisphere and four in the north, which gives our players more opportunit­y. The Pro14 works financiall­y for us, especially when we become full members in 2019/20.

“Griquas and Mpumalanga are now part of our franchise system and we are preparing them to play in Europe. We ignored the north for too long, it’s a very strong competitio­n. Sanzaar is also a great competitio­n for us, but the biggest problem is the distances you have to travel. Playing in the Pro14 helps with player welfare and being in the same time zone helps the broadcaste­rs,” Alexander said at the tournament launch at Super Sport’s studios yesterday.

Alexander added there had also been broad support for a new contractin­g model that limits the number of senior players each union can have on their books, as well as providing for a loan system that will help all the franchises.

“The new contractin­g system will allow for a draft. We cannot sustain a system with 990 profession­al players, but I believe we have enough players. But some franchises are sitting with six locks signed from Craven Week and a lot of them are not playing.

“The new player contractin­g model is vital in this regard, it will limit the number of players a union can sign to around 45 to 50 senior players, but there won’t be any pay limit in terms of budgets. This new model has come from the players’ associatio­n and it is a very good document. We have created a false market in this country and we need to be responsibl­e because the first thing junior players do when they get signed is stop studying,” Alexander said.

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