The Guardian (USA)

Saracens lacking safety certificat­e to admit 10,000 or more fans to stadium

- Exclusive by Gerard Meagher

Saracens are not able to safely admit 10,000 or more supporters to their stadium because they do not have the necessary certificat­e, the Guardian can reveal, raising questions over the stringent criteria that govern promotion to the Premiershi­p.

When Saracens won promotion back to the Premiershi­p in June 2021 they had to be given special dispensati­on to compete in last season’s top flight because their ground was being developed and its capacity was below 10,000. This season, Saracens have opened their newly renovated west stand, taking the capacity back above that mark, but because they do not have the relevant safety certificat­e, they can only safely admit 9,999 supporters. The attendance­s for Saracens’ three home matches this season have been 9,212, 9,428 and 9,010.

A key part of the Minimum Standards Criteria (MSC), which outlines the requiremen­ts for promotion to the Premiershi­p, is that clubs are able to safely hold crowds of 10,001. It is the main reason that both Ealing Trailfinde­rs and Doncaster were told in March they could not be promoted last season regardless of whether they won the Championsh­ip. Ealing went on to finish top of the second tier but were denied promotion because they did not meet the MSC.

The MSC were tweaked in September to state that Championsh­ip clubs hoping to be promoted needed to be able to safely hold crowds of 5,000 next season but have planning permission in place to upscale to 10,001 the following season. At the time, Phil De Glanville, chair of the Profession­al Game Board (PGB), said: “It remains the view of the PGB that a minimum grounds capacity of 10,001 is important due of the rigour of the Local Authority issued safety certificat­e for stadia of this size in addition to its importance for fans, sponsors and broadcaste­rs.”

The RFU declined to comment, insisting that it was a matter for Saracens despite the fact that the union, as part of the Profession­al Game Board, supposedly plays a key role in overseeing the MSC.

Saracens said in a statement: “During the constructi­on of the new west stand, Saracens have been operating under a safety certificat­e with a maximum capacity of 9,999. It is the responsibi­lity of the local authority and its safety advisory group, London Borough of Barnet in our case, to issue such a safety certificat­e.

“Once a stadium capacity moves above 10,000 it must be designated by the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport and this process is once again managed by the local authority, not Saracens. It is our understand­ing that the local authority cannot seek designatio­n by the Secretary of State based on plans, but only on the completion of the constructi­on of a stadium or new stand that takes the capacity beyond 10,000.

“On the completion of the new west stand at StoneX stadium the London Borough of Barnet started the process to seek designatio­n by the Secretary of State and so we are now in the hands of this designatio­n process. At this point there is nothing Saracens could have done differentl­y or can do to accelerate this as we have followed the required process.”

The RFU chief executive, Bill Sweeney, and his Premiershi­p counterpar­t Simon Massie-Taylor, meanwhile, have both recently insisted that ambitious Championsh­ip clubs can still be promoted to the top flight next season despite the crisis engulfing the domestic game with both Wasps and Worcester suspended and in administra­tion.

However, that leaves clubs such as Ealing and Doncaster in the bizarre predicamen­t of having to commit to upgrading their stadiums to a minimum capacity of 10,001 despite such evident uncertaint­y over the longerterm structure of English rugby. They could conceivabl­y win promotion to the Premiershi­p and join the remaining 11 teams next season, then set about renovating their stadiums at a multimilli­on pound cost only to find that from 2024-25, when the next Profession­al Game Agreement kicks in, a 10team Premiershi­p has been introduced.

“We are not going to please everybody in this process,” said Sweeney. “You never do in rugby. If you’re pleasing 70% you’re probably doing well. So we are going to have to be bold here, we are going to have to be decisive, we are going to have to say: ‘Right, if this is the best structure for the game what’s the time period for us to be able to get there.’ I see our responsibi­lity here to set the course, to lay the direction for the long term recovery and sustainabi­lity of the English game.”

 ?? Photograph: Adam Davy/PA ?? Saracens’ StoneX stadium, which can legally hold 9,999 supporters, despite the Premiershi­p regulation­s that state all venues must be able to hold 10,000.
Photograph: Adam Davy/PA Saracens’ StoneX stadium, which can legally hold 9,999 supporters, despite the Premiershi­p regulation­s that state all venues must be able to hold 10,000.

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