The Mercury

Alexander will never forget Super Rugby slight

- ASHFAK MOHAMED ashfak.mohamed@inl.co.za

SUPER Rugby had its time, but the honest feeling towards the travel component of that competitio­n for South African players was that they “hated it”.

That was what SA Rugby president Mark Alexander explained in Doha on Sunday following the announceme­nt of a three-year partnershi­p with Qatar Airways with the United Rugby Championsh­ip (URC) and European Profession­al Club Rugby (EPCR) competitio­ns.

The deal will see South Africa’s five franchises – the Stormers, Bulls, Sharks and Lions, as well as the Cheetahs – have their flights in those tournament­s sponsored by Qatar Airways, who are now the official SA airline partners of the EPCR, and the official airline partner of the URC.

So, add in the fact that SA and Europe are in similar time zones, and it is a far cry from those nightmare tours to Australia and New Zealand.

And while the Bulls were the only SA team to win the Super Rugby title, the Pretoria-based team contested the URC final in their first season, along with the Stormers, with the Capetonian­s becoming the inaugural champions.

“Unbelievab­le (in terms of player welfare),” Alexander said at a media briefing in Doha. “In Super Rugby, our guys were away for five weeks.

“Consider that they were all young men, recently married guys. When they wake up in the morning, their families are sleeping.

“So, they wake up 3am – they are not supposed to do that, but they do – so that they can talk to their families.

“The players hated it: the travel to Australasi­a. Five weeks away, so many different time zones.”

The fact that SA Rugby were also dumped out of that tournament by New Zealand Rugby hasn’t been forgotten

either.

“And in saying that, one must also consider what happened to us on July 16, 2020, when New Zealand announced in the press that they are not continuing Super Rugby in its current form,” Alexander said.

“Thank God that two years before that, we invested in the PRO16 (with the Cheetahs and Southern Kings). They (New Zealand Rugby) threw us under the bus

“That had the potential to cripple South African rugby forever. It is the manner in which it was done. We are still hurting from that. We are exploring other avenues with other things, but I will never forget ...

“When you have partners, you normally give each other notice. When Australia were going through bad times, we did a sacrifice with our broadcast money to make sure they stay alive.

“Similarly, when there were problems with the earthquake­s in New Zealand …

“But when we had to drop two teams, we were on our own. We have to do things that is the best for South African rugby, and that is our principle now.

“It works for us (travelling via Doha), and works when we are preparing our teams. A lot of our players play in Europe, and using this as a base is ideal.”

 ?? | BackpagePi­x ?? MARK Alexander
| BackpagePi­x MARK Alexander

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