The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Six Nations damaging rugby, claims All Blacks chief

Europe accused over bitter global game dispute

- Daniel Schofield in Sapporo

Steve Tew, the New Zealand Rugby chief executive, last night ramped up the north-south divide on the eve of the World Cup as he accused the Six Nations of putting their own interests ahead of those of the game of rugby.

Tew said that the split between the northern and southern hemisphere­s had never been greater after the Six Nations rejected World Rugby’s proposal to establish a Nations Championsh­ip.

Earlier this week, it was revealed that the Six Nations, who blocked the plan which would have made tier-two nations more secure financiall­y and offered them the chance of promotion, was instead on the cusp of accepting a £300 million bid for a 15 per cent stake from private equity firm CVC.

Asked whether he was hopeful of any renewed attempts of establishi­ng a united global calendar between north and south, Tew told The Daily Telegraph: “We all have a responsibi­lity to keep talking about how we better structure internatio­nal rugby. I have been involved for a very long time, so I am not holding my breath.”

Tew, who also questioned England’s use of the eligibilit­y laws, described the divisive debate as “a Six Nations versus everyone else thing”. And while accepting the need for individual nations to look after their own best interests, he said they also owe a responsibi­lity “to make sure the global game also moves forward because they are closely linked”.

“How we find common ground is very challengin­g,” he added. “On some issues we collaborat­e pretty well together. Around player welfare, for example, there is a common understand­ing of what we want to achieve. Things like the season structure, we clearly have different views. Other people can decide who is right and wrong, but if you can’t get an agreement then you can’t move forward.”

The outgoing chief executive’s comments come as hosts Japan prepare to take on Russia in Tokyo tomorrow in the first match of the ninth Rugby World Cup. The All Blacks take on South Africa on a blockbuste­r opening weekend which also features Ireland v Scotland and England v Tonga.

The Nations Championsh­ip would have featured a 12-team top league, offering financial security to the southern hemisphere unions as well as an opportunit­y for tiertwo nations to play regular matches against establishe­d countries.

World Rugby claimed to have secured equity support worth £6.1 billion over 12 years, but in June it announced it was abandoning the plan after Six Nations objections to the inclusion of promotion and relegation.

Tew said: “The two critical issues with the proposal were, was the offer in front of us big enough to deliver revenue for everybody involved as long as it was mooted? That was a conversati­on that had to be concluded. The second issue was whether there was an opportunit­y for the tier-two countries to join the tierone countries at some stage and that was a stumbling block for the Six Nations. It is as simple as that.

“We made it very clear that we were prepared to allow for promotion and relegation and we were also prepared to allow the expansion of the Rugby Championsh­ip, which would have come with some risk. The stumbling block was not with the southern hemisphere.”

Currently, the hope of reaching a common understand­ing seems as far removed as it ever has. That extends to the vexed issue of eligibilit­y laws, with some controvers­y over Eddie Jones’s surprise selection in his England squad of New Zealand-born Willi Heinz, the Gloucester scrum-half.

Despite living in New Zealand for 28 years, Heinz qualifies for England through a grandmothe­r. Jones has previously selected Kiwis Ben Te’o and Brad Shields before they had played a game in the country. Tew said, pointedly: “If other countries think they can prosper by selecting players who meet certain eligibilit­y criteria then that’s their decision.”

By contrast, Fiji, Samoa and Tonga are barred from selecting players who have already represente­d another country. Tew says he would have no problem with former All Blacks Charles Piutau and Steven Luatua playing for Tonga or Samoa respective­ly, but once again the opposition comes from Six Nations teams who benefit from the current eligibilit­y laws.

Again, Tew is not slow to twist the knife in. He said: “If you genuinely want tier-two countries to be competitiv­e in World Cups, then having internatio­nal players who have that genuine link and are finished with the countries they first represente­d would make a difference. We have supported that, but we have not got it across the line. Yet at the same time we have to maintain the sanctity of internatio­nal rugby. You see the criticism of countries who pick players very quickly.

“Eyebrows were raised here when Brad [Shields] was picked. We were pleased he had the opportunit­y to play internatio­nal rugby, but to wear a Test jersey before you had even played a game in that country was an interestin­g concept. The rules must be applied according to the way they are written. Then it is up to countries to decide what their jersey means to them.”

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