Eurosport - Tue, 03 Mar 16:43:00 2009
An eight-year agreement between the RFU and the English clubs could be torn up after less than a season because of the global financial crisis.
An RFU spokesman said all financial aspects of the game would be discussed at a meeting of the management board and Premiership clubs on Tuesday.
Reports said automatic promotion and relegation to and from the Premiership would be one of the issues on the agenda.
"The union's policy is clear - promotion and relegation is written into the contract for eight years," RFU management board chairman Martyn Thomas said recently.
"That said, it's 100 years since we've faced an economic climate like this.
"We don't want to wreck this agreement one year in but we understand that the clubs are facing critical problems.
"We need a successful, solvent Premiership producing quality England players. Public hangings are exciting, just as long as you're not the bloke standing on the trap. We have to keep an open mind; it would be wrong to rule out anything."
Many clubs already safely in the top flight might agree and have argued that it is impossible to make financial plans while the spectre of relegation looms.
One theory is that the clubs will request a suspension of promotion and relegation in return for a cut in the numbers of overseas players they register.
That might well appeal to the likes of Rob Andrew, now England's elite director of rugby, who spent many years fighting for the clubs in his role as Newcastle boss.
Fears of a thinning of English talent in the Premiership were fuelled when Saracens announced they would be sacking 15 players at the end of the season to make way for a group of South Africans expected to arrive with new coach Brendan Venter.
That announcement came days after England trio James Haskell, Riki Flutey and Tom Palmer said they would be leaving Wasps to join French clubs.
With England haemorrhaging points on the field and players off it, and the clubs looking at multi-million pound losses despite growing attendances, both sides may feel justified in taking radical action.
However, Leeds Carnegie and Exeter, currently giving their all at the top National League One and no doubt with their own business plans based on potential promotion to the Premiership, might take a different view.
Bristol are currently bottom of the Premiership table, 12 points adrift of Worcester who also have a game in hand.
Comment 1 - 4 of 4
I have a great idea...expand the Premiership by 16 team and then divide it into 2 teams of 8 (Premiership and Championship of rugby) on a two-up, two-down basis. My 16 teams would be...the current Premiership teams plus Leeds Carnegie, Cornish Pirates, Rotherham Titans and Bedford Blues. Only the top 8 teams could reach Europe where as, in the lower Championship Division, only the top 4 can make it into the European Challenge Cup. This will give all the teams something to fight for until the end of the season.
Expand the premiership and let Leeds and Exeter in then get rid of relegation, none of the other league one sides are good enough any way and the Celtic league seems to be working well with out relegation.
Promote both Leeds and Exeter and expand the competition, then maybe suspend promotion for two seasons at the most.
Relegation and promotion have been the basis of football and rugby in this country for years and years. Surely if it aint broke don't fix it. Every club in the bottom half of the premiership and the top half of league 1, must have a similar business plan/budget. So why are the top clubs worried about this issue. Surely they posses the quality to maintain a good business plan and a good team to stay in the same sort of position. End of the day. Every business in the world is having to adjust to the world climate. Deal with it and stop trying to grab extra money for yourself. Every team should be treated fairly!!!!
Please login to post a comment
Not already a Yahoo! user ? Sign up to get a free Yahoo! Account