Heineken Champions/Challenge Cup 2022 Semi-Finals Weekend

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Torquemada 1420
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JM2K6 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 12:24 pm
Torquemada 1420 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 12:04 pm
CM11 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 10:54 am I mean you've picked the most homegrown squad in Europe and accused us of poaching. :lol:
I doubt that's the case now with France only having Willemse in as a regular amongst the poaches (Atonio's likelihood of inclusion is questionable).

As an aside, funny how France improves once it stops poaching and filling its clubs with foreign players.............
He misunderstood and thought the reference was to Leinster, not Ireland (Aki, Gibson-Park, Lowe, Lowry, Herring - plus guys like Stander and Kleyn recently).

I must stress I do not give two shits about whether they're poaches or not really, everyone does it.
Ah. OK.

On bold bit, do you not care in principle or just because it has become ubiquitous?
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Tichtheid wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 11:14 am
I like neeps wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 10:57 am
Tichtheid wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 8:44 am
The derbies can be tight, edgy affairs, but the quality of entertainment is roughly the same across the GP and URC.

The Top 14 used to be dire, and to be honest I haven't seen a lot of it for a couple of years now.
I don't agree. I watch both the GP and watch only Edinburgh and Glasgow games in the URC and can absolutely say without hesitation the GP is more entertaining.

The quality of premiership games these last two years for entertainment value has been really amazing. Glasgow and Edinburgh will have a good game here and there against Ulster and Munster, the SA teams have been quite interesting. But mostly it's against teams without a rivalry edge in a competition that I don't understand how it works. Edinburgh under Blair are a great watch which has made a difference. Glasgow under Wilson are not.

I just find it basically impossible to sit down and watch a non Scottish URC match but happily watch the prem weekly.

Well, I guess it's subjective, but I really enjoy the Irish derbies, Connacht get right up for the Leinster games and usually do well in them and I have a soft spot for Ulster due to family ties, the atmosphere at the Kingspan is brilliant.
The Welsh derbies have been really good in the past, the Cardiff Dragons game at the weekend was dire, though.

The addition of the South African teams has been brilliant, I really enjoy the competition as it is now. The only reason I don't watch more is solely down to time, with all eight games being televised I just can't watch that and the GP over one weekend.

I do enjoy the GP, it's a great competition.
I do quite like Connacht. Irish derbies maybe but Leinster Vs Cardiff or Ulster Vs Treviso I just can't bring myself to be interested in that.

The SA clubs are a cool addition but agree about the stadiums points made and I just know nothing about them so again it's hard to be too interested.

And agree I think your point is the 8 games live means weird kick off times. I like the simplicity of following the AP. The URC is just too chaotic for me. I liked the Pro12 more.
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OomStruisbaai
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There are a lot of Saffers playing in the GP but I struggle to watch the games. It's our first season in the URC and loving it. I,ll even watch two Welsh team playing nowadays. For some reason I love watching Leinster specially now in the European league. They feel part of us now. I am sure the URC is a great competition and will grow fast.
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Camroc2 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 1:03 pm
JM2K6 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 12:44 pm
CM11 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 12:35 pm

Lowry and Herring?

But yes, I did think miss the move to talking about Ireland. Same comment applies though, we're not going to bother with the 5 year residency. Last person to qualify was Lowe via that route and he was signed 5 years ago.

Number of NIQs in Ireland have dropped off in recent years, even down from when we reduced it 5/6 years ago.

No idea why I typed Lowry. I watched Bad Boys again recently, maybe that's it. I meant Mack Hansen.

Herring's been in the system for a while but he's a bona fide Saffer. Totally fine to split hairs there given he was in Ireland at a reasonably young age (though we had him first!).
Hansen's mother is from Cork, so not really a poach in the same manner; he was eligible to play for Ireland from the day he was born.
Everyone is eligible when they get selected, it's not really the point.
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Torquemada 1420 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 1:31 pm
JM2K6 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 12:24 pm
Torquemada 1420 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 12:04 pm
I doubt that's the case now with France only having Willemse in as a regular amongst the poaches (Atonio's likelihood of inclusion is questionable).

As an aside, funny how France improves once it stops poaching and filling its clubs with foreign players.............
He misunderstood and thought the reference was to Leinster, not Ireland (Aki, Gibson-Park, Lowe, Lowry, Herring - plus guys like Stander and Kleyn recently).

I must stress I do not give two shits about whether they're poaches or not really, everyone does it.
Ah. OK.

On bold bit, do you not care in principle or just because it has become ubiquitous?
I don't think it matters and I don't think there's any country taking the piss.
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PornDog
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I do have a problem with residency poaches, especially the way Ireland deliberately exploited it, but that ship has sailed and I accept the way things are now. Those days are gone now (to all intents and purposes). I also wouldn't have a bad word to say about the likes of Bundee, Lowe or Stander etc. - great guys, they're just not Irish.

Hansen and Herring are Irish by blood though (Hansen has a Cork mammy while Herring's is from Belfast), so whatever people's opinions on "the granny rule" may be, those two are objectively different cases to the residency poaches.


On the GP - it used to be largely a rather dire slugfest that I really couldn't bring myself to watch. In fairness that has completely swung 180 in the last couple of years - fair play!
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Again, I'm not sure it really matters how they qualify. Ol' Brendan Laney qualified for Scotland by blood.
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CM11 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 10:54 am
petej wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 9:01 am
Tichtheid wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 8:44 am



The derbies can be tight, edgy affairs, but the quality of entertainment is roughly the same across the GP and URC.

The Top 14 used to be dire, and to be honest I haven't seen a lot of it for a couple of years now.
The GP is better entertainment because it is far more random. As a flatter league teams can go from shit to good and vice versa very quickly (no chance of Leinster ever finishing bottom of the erc).

The Irish teams have very stable playing squads which helps compared to English and French teams and Leinster are essentially the URC's Bayern Munich or Real Madrid. South Africans should be cautious about getting in the URC as Ireland are expert poachers so having your players in that shop window might not be a plus. If the irfu want the URC to succeed they really actually need to get together with the other unions in it and help them get into shape (the wru in particular need lessons).
Expert poachers? :lol:

We have one non Irish qualified player in our squad. We have two more who qualified via the old residency rules. That's it. We won't be bothered doing the same with the 5 year rule.

I mean you've picked the most homegrown squad in Europe and accused us of poaching. :lol:
Ireland not Leinster. I said expert which means quality over quantity and not filling your squads mediocre foreign journeyman. Lowe, aki and stander are great examples compared to the list of dross England has poached. Recruitment of none Irish players seems to be carefully managed. This is different from England and France. Tigers under cockerilll spent years recruiting aged mediocre foreign journeyman to fill up squad space while ignoring youth squads.

Also while there has undoubtedly been some poor coaches in the Irish regions they seem to be moved on relatively quickly and there does seem to be an effort to recruit and develop decent coaches. Can't remember when the dragons last had a decent coach if ever.
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JM2K6 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 2:44 pm
Torquemada 1420 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 1:31 pm
JM2K6 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 12:24 pm

He misunderstood and thought the reference was to Leinster, not Ireland (Aki, Gibson-Park, Lowe, Lowry, Herring - plus guys like Stander and Kleyn recently).

I must stress I do not give two shits about whether they're poaches or not really, everyone does it.
Ah. OK.

On bold bit, do you not care in principle or just because it has become ubiquitous?
I don't think it matters and I don't think there's any country taking the piss.


The Scottish are definitely near the 'taking the piss' category.
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Torquemada 1420
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Kawazaki wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 3:32 pm
JM2K6 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 2:44 pm
Torquemada 1420 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 1:31 pm
Ah. OK.

On bold bit, do you not care in principle or just because it has become ubiquitous?
I don't think it matters and I don't think there's any country taking the piss.


The Scottish are definitely near the 'taking the piss' category.
I guess I'm in a minority but I just think it demeans the idea of a national comp. Plus it's always the smaller nations that come off worst as a result.
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CM11
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JM2K6 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 2:54 pm Again, I'm not sure it really matters how they qualify. Ol' Brendan Laney qualified for Scotland by blood.
How did Laney qualify?

I think it's fair to make a distinction between players qualifying via parents rather than grand parents. It's also fair to make a distinction between those who arrive early in their career and have to fight their way into the team compared to those arriving all but fully developed.
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The root is the country where they were in school. That's where rugby players develop the most.
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JM2K6
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CM11 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 5:42 pm
JM2K6 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 2:54 pm Again, I'm not sure it really matters how they qualify. Ol' Brendan Laney qualified for Scotland by blood.
How did Laney qualify?

I think it's fair to make a distinction between players qualifying via parents rather than grand parents. It's also fair to make a distinction between those who arrive early in their career and have to fight their way into the team compared to those arriving all but fully developed.
Hey, you can draw the line wherever you feel like it. There's two things here: one is that anyone who is eligible is eligible and that's that; the other is that everyone has a different opinion of what poaching means. For you and porndog, Mack Hansen, born in Canberra, educated in Canberra, produced by the Canberra rugby structure, former Canberra Vikings player, former Australia U20 player, and with 3 seasons at the Brumbies is not a poach, because his Mum's Irish. Which means you draw the line at blood. But only a certain amount of blood, as Laney is right out. As long as they're qualified from birth you don't see the problem. And that's fine - other people may disagree. Which is why I think talking about whether they're eligible or not is somewhat pointless, because a player can be eligible while retaining absolutely no link to the "mother" country and seriously depriving the country they were developed in of a talent they invested in heavily; meanwhile someone who qualifies on residency alone might owe their entire rugby development, personal development, and professional career to their adopted country but is considered less legitimate than the guy flying in from Australia or whatever.

There's never going to be any agreement on it and there's no point telling me that Hansen and Herring qualify for Ireland. I know this already.
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OomStruisbaai wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:15 pm The root is the country where they were in school. That's where rugby players develop the most.
Nope ...



There is 0 school rugby in France.
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CM11
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JMK

I know what you're saying but I disagree that you can just go 'are they eligible or not' and say all things are equal (or irrelevant) if they are. By your logic Rhys Ruddock is a poach. And plenty of, normally English educated, UK players who don't play for the nation they went to school in are too. Where you start to get into more clear poaching using your definition is when you go to the SH. But I would still argue that it's not for you or me to know how much affinity any person has with the country of their parents or grandparents. I do agree with you though when you say that a residency poach can care more about their adopted nation than a blood 'poach'. Keith Gleeson is an example of a player who retired, went back to Aus and was never heard from again while I sometimes forget Andy Ward wasn't Irish by birth.

In summary, while I accept that some blood 'poaches' are no better, it's still far more likely that a player either born in the country or with some direct connection via a parent has a real connection to their new nation so it's not fair to lump them in with residency poaches without being sure of that affinity. I also don't think it's fair to say they're poaches just because they were educated in a certain nation. Players don't have the autonomy to move until they're adults.
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OomStruisbaai
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laurent wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:47 pm
OomStruisbaai wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:15 pm The root is the country where they were in school. That's where rugby players develop the most.
Nope ...



There is 0 school rugby in France.
So your rugby players don't go to school?
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CM11
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laurent wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:47 pm
OomStruisbaai wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:15 pm The root is the country where they were in school. That's where rugby players develop the most.
Nope ...



There is 0 school rugby in France.
I think you can rephrase his post to 'where they were in their teenage years' to cover all bases.
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laurent
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OomStruisbaai wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:53 pm
laurent wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:47 pm
OomStruisbaai wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:15 pm The root is the country where they were in school. That's where rugby players develop the most.
Nope ...



There is 0 school rugby in France.
So your rugby players don't go to school?
Education system is widely different from the British based one.
In France the schools are supposed to Provide as much choice as possible as part of sport education.
Sports are managed by clubs.
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OomStruisbaai
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CM11 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:53 pm
laurent wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:47 pm
OomStruisbaai wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:15 pm The root is the country where they were in school. That's where rugby players develop the most.
Nope ...



There is 0 school rugby in France.
I think you can rephrase his post to 'where they were in their teenage years' to cover all bases.
Yep, sorry my english are kak.
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JM2K6
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CM11 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 7:52 pm JMK

I know what you're saying but I disagree that you can just go 'are they eligible or not' and say all things are equal (or irrelevant) if they are. By your logic Rhys Ruddock is a poach. And plenty of, normally English educated, UK players who don't play for the nation they went to school in are too. Where you start to get into more clear poaching using your definition is when you go to the SH. But I would still argue that it's not for you or me to know how much affinity any person has with the country of their parents or grandparents. I do agree with you though when you say that a residency poach can care more about their adopted nation than a blood 'poach'. Keith Gleeson is an example of a player who retired, went back to Aus and was never heard from again while I sometimes forget Andy Ward wasn't Irish by birth.
Well, if your personal line is "anyone who grew up in an entirely different country and was developed by another country's rugby system all the way through to professional level, who's either a) been here long enough to qualify on residency (Herring [note: Oh, apparently this is a grandfather thing - which makes it even stranger that Laney is not okay but he is!]) or b) has a blood relation (Hansen) is all absolutely great and not a poach" in your mind - which is perfectly fine and logical - then all you're actually saying is "anyone who is eligible to play is not a poach". There is nothing wrong with that - not technically, not legally, not morally. But it does make it a bit pointless to start splitting hairs about people like Brendan Laney or whoever.

I don't get the Rhys Ruddock thing btw - he's come through the Irish system as much as the Welsh one, and has a pretty close connection to Ireland, so why would he be considered a poach? I think you may have misunderstood what I was saying. I think it's fairly clear with Hansen and co we're not talking about kids who were at school somewhere else, but fully developed professional players.

To be clear about my own position, my irritation at England's "poaching" tends to be on a case by case basis, and is often most strongly influenced by the reasons behind the poaching. For example, a number of half-arsed players with super rugby experience got promoted by Eddie Jones. I don't believe Brad Shields had any particular ties to England, despite an English parent, and I certainly don't think it matters that Willi Heinz qualified through a grandmother rather than a mother - the pull was the chance to play top level international rugby and earn a packet, not some misty-eyed bollocks about representing a country that is clearly not #1 in their affections. And what bothered me about both was that they leapfrogged better players and hurt England's development because of Eddie's desire to shoehorn them because of their "real" roots, i.e. NZ rugby and Super Rugby. The specifics of how they qualify are irrelevant to me.

I would expect every team to pick players based on a) all the options available to them and b) what benefits the country the most. In some cases that means not picking overseas players; in others it means scouring the globe for anyone with a grandparent with the right nationality. I have no objection to any of this, and when it comes to my objections for England, it's because I think it's a mistake. But I also don't think it's good to pretend it's not just "using the laws as written" and that there's actually varying levels of morality around it all (there aren't in the vast majority of cases)
In summary, while I accept that some blood 'poaches' are no better, it's still far more likely that a player either born in the country or with some direct connection via a parent has a real connection to their new nation so it's not fair to lump them in with residency poaches without being sure of that affinity. I also don't think it's fair to say they're poaches just because they were educated in a certain nation. Players don't have the autonomy to move until they're adults.
To be even more clear here: I never said they were poaches. I simply explained the logical steps you had to take to object to both Hansen and Herring being included on a list with someone like Stander or Lowe. With respect to players who are born in another country, raised in another country, and developed as a professional in another country, the concept of "poach" we're talking about here has nothing to do with their autonomy to move or how much they like their Mum's stories about home - it's purely a comment on everything that has shaped that person, particularly in a rugby sense, and the effort and investment that has been put into that person by their host country. We're not talking Jamie Heaslip or Marcus Smith or even Manu Tuilagi or Taulupe Faletau here.

You could (and indeed, some do) easily argue that residency players are far less problematic simply because they've done their time and in many cases have settled in the country, so could and maybe should be considered far more "local" than the blow-in with the right passport. We're absolutely fine with that outside of a sporting context, so it seems a little off to me when people get arsey about it in the poaching discussion and view residency picks as the ultimate mercenaries. But as I said, everyone draws the line somewhere. My contention is drawing a line anywhere that isn't the World Rugby eligibility criteria is ultimately spurious and a waste of everyone's time and effort unless there is genuine harm being done to another country or a group of players as a result of exploiting some loophole.

Besides that, I think more people should stop biting on the poaching accusations and make peace with the eligbility rules, which includes an honest appraisal of how they view their own players vs other nations.
Last edited by JM2K6 on Tue May 17, 2022 5:26 am, edited 3 times in total.
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JM2K6
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I will also write another 1000 words to show just how much I really don't care about poaching, I guess
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fishfoodie
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JM2K6 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 11:06 pm I will also write another 1000 words to show just how much I really don't care about poaching, I guess
Please Don't !

The last thing we need is Rugby's equivalent of the Reichs Racial Purity Laws, to define who is, & isn't a "Poach" :wink:
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JM2K6
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fishfoodie wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 11:32 pm
JM2K6 wrote: Mon May 16, 2022 11:06 pm I will also write another 1000 words to show just how much I really don't care about poaching, I guess
Please Don't !

The last thing we need is Rugby's equivalent of the Reichs Racial Purity Laws, to define who is, & isn't a "Poach" :wink:
Well apparently l need to. Because I'm the guy who thinks the term is meaningless and is happy to view 100% of eligible players as not poaches...

(I was also joking about the essay I just wrote)
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Kawazaki
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Good post by JM, agree with it 99.9%.

Regards calling a player a poach, we all really know one when we see one. Mack Hansen is a poach in every conceivable definition that we all understand what a poach is. But he's eligible to play for Ireland.

What I find annoying is when national unions actively approach young players who have come through another unions development system and approach and recruit them at around the U20/23 kind of stage of their career having shown little or zero interest in them prior to then. It's underhand and undermines all the investment and time that the union losing the player has put in.

I would add here that I don't think having a head coach like Eddie Jones helps England retain young talent for some of the examples JM outlined (Shields and Heinz).
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Tichtheid
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Is Cameron Redpath a "poach" ? (shit word btw)

Born in France, son of a Scotland captain, brought up in England where he learned his rugby.


How about the Tongan kids shipped off to school in Japan on scholarships so they can play rugby for the Japanese national side? They learn their rugby in Japan, so they're a product of their rugby system.


Saracens have opened up "partnerships" with clubs in Timisoara, Tbilisi, Sao Paulo, Kuala Lumpur, Tonga, Nairobi and Abu Dhabi.
Saracensworld.com, the Network’s website, keeps visitors up-to-date with the latest news concerning each club and how their seasons are progressing.
It’s a wonderful idea that not only promotes and improves the quality of rugby in each of those countries but also works very well for Saracens indeed. Not only to they open their team up to potentially huge new markets across the world, but it allows the club to develop quite an impressive scouting network should any impressive new talents emerge. The fact that one player from across the world can win a Saracens Academy contract each year is testament to this. It’s a symbiotic relationship that benefits both Saracens and its partner clubs.
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Kawazaki
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Tichtheid wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 7:58 am Is Cameron Redpath a "poach" ? (shit word btw)

Born in France, son of a Scotland captain, brought up in England where he learned his rugby.


How about the Tongan kids shipped off to school in Japan on scholarships so they can play rugby for the Japanese national side? They learn their rugby in Japan, so they're a product of their rugby system.


Saracens have opened up "partnerships" with clubs in Timisoara, Tbilisi, Sao Paulo, Kuala Lumpur, Tonga, Nairobi and Abu Dhabi.
Saracensworld.com, the Network’s website, keeps visitors up-to-date with the latest news concerning each club and how their seasons are progressing.
It’s a wonderful idea that not only promotes and improves the quality of rugby in each of those countries but also works very well for Saracens indeed. Not only to they open their team up to potentially huge new markets across the world, but it allows the club to develop quite an impressive scouting network should any impressive new talents emerge. The fact that one player from across the world can win a Saracens Academy contract each year is testament to this. It’s a symbiotic relationship that benefits both Saracens and its partner clubs.

You realise club rugby is not the same as test rugby right?

And yeah, Redpath is a poach. The SRU should have taken him through their own youth pathways.
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Tichtheid
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Kawazaki wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:01 am
Tichtheid wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 7:58 am Is Cameron Redpath a "poach" ? (shit word btw)

Born in France, son of a Scotland captain, brought up in England where he learned his rugby.


How about the Tongan kids shipped off to school in Japan on scholarships so they can play rugby for the Japanese national side? They learn their rugby in Japan, so they're a product of their rugby system.


Saracens have opened up "partnerships" with clubs in Timisoara, Tbilisi, Sao Paulo, Kuala Lumpur, Tonga, Nairobi and Abu Dhabi.
Saracensworld.com, the Network’s website, keeps visitors up-to-date with the latest news concerning each club and how their seasons are progressing.
It’s a wonderful idea that not only promotes and improves the quality of rugby in each of those countries but also works very well for Saracens indeed. Not only to they open their team up to potentially huge new markets across the world, but it allows the club to develop quite an impressive scouting network should any impressive new talents emerge. The fact that one player from across the world can win a Saracens Academy contract each year is testament to this. It’s a symbiotic relationship that benefits both Saracens and its partner clubs.

You realise club rugby is not the same as test rugby right?


who would they play for at international level if they made it that far?
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JM2K6
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Tichtheid wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 7:58 am Is Cameron Redpath a "poach" ? (shit word btw)

Born in France, son of a Scotland captain, brought up in England where he learned his rugby.


How about the Tongan kids shipped off to school in Japan on scholarships so they can play rugby for the Japanese national side? They learn their rugby in Japan, so they're a product of their rugby system.


Saracens have opened up "partnerships" with clubs in Timisoara, Tbilisi, Sao Paulo, Kuala Lumpur, Tonga, Nairobi and Abu Dhabi.
Saracensworld.com, the Network’s website, keeps visitors up-to-date with the latest news concerning each club and how their seasons are progressing.
It’s a wonderful idea that not only promotes and improves the quality of rugby in each of those countries but also works very well for Saracens indeed. Not only to they open their team up to potentially huge new markets across the world, but it allows the club to develop quite an impressive scouting network should any impressive new talents emerge. The fact that one player from across the world can win a Saracens Academy contract each year is testament to this. It’s a symbiotic relationship that benefits both Saracens and its partner clubs.
As with pretty much everything in this eternal argument, the answer is: Yes, he's a poach. No, he's not a poach. I hope that clears it up! :-)

Seriously though, it's people like Redpath that expose the lunacy of trying to rules-lawyer the eligibility argument. No-one can agree on a definition, and it's always malleable and prone to personal bias. You can easily make arguments for or against him being a poach, so it's a waste of time. Outside of a genuine game-altering problem, why even bother trying to split those particular hairs? We might as well pitch the poaching argument into the bin - my preferred solution - and concentrate on things that are an existential threat to the sport. I don't know anything about Japan's system re: Tonga, but even though they're a poor country who always struggle to keep hold of their players, there's no shortage of Tongan players outside of Japan so in my incredibly uninformed opinion it doesn't seem to be a problem. Yet. If it turns out that there's a generation of players being stolen away then yeah, sign me up for complaining about it.

Would also add to that that Tonga/Samoa/Fiji players actively seek whatever will bring them and their families financial stability, along with the cultural ties they have to certain nations. It's not like they'd stay home and develop as players if they didn't migrate.

This also ties into a slightly woolly point I have about how national sides reflecting the unions and domestic game can be a double edged sword. For example, England gets a lot of shit for being a big country that still picks a lot of foreign-born players. Well, our domestic game is full of South Africans, Kiwis, Australians, etc etc. And that in itself reflects English society - we have huge expat populations. It would be strange to demand a national side that didn't reflect the sport in this country or indeed the aspects of our society that influence it. That also includes the after-effects of empire in terms of having settled in other countries, leading to a lot of people with ties "back home".

Anyway, my only emotional reaction to Redpath is fuck, I wish we'd been able to persuade him to play for us :sad:
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Tichtheid wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:05 am
Kawazaki wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:01 am
Tichtheid wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 7:58 am Is Cameron Redpath a "poach" ? (shit word btw)

Born in France, son of a Scotland captain, brought up in England where he learned his rugby.


How about the Tongan kids shipped off to school in Japan on scholarships so they can play rugby for the Japanese national side? They learn their rugby in Japan, so they're a product of their rugby system.


Saracens have opened up "partnerships" with clubs in Timisoara, Tbilisi, Sao Paulo, Kuala Lumpur, Tonga, Nairobi and Abu Dhabi.


You realise club rugby is not the same as test rugby right?


who would they play for at international level if they made it that far?


Saracens don't pick the England team.

These are Saracens clubs in those countries.
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JM2K6
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I cannot see the negative behind the idea that if a really good player emerges in Abu Dhabi they might end up at a professional club in a T1 country and maybe represent that country. That seems pretty aspirational to me!
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Tichtheid
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I'm in agreement with you JM2K6.

It's just this subject gets its "oh here we go again" six monthly airing and it's all a bit dull. The laws were up for changing recently and they went to five years for residency as per the Olympic rules, with a caveat due to Covid.

If anyone is breaking the rules then it's worth noting.
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Kawazaki
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JM2K6 wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:15 am Anyway, my only emotional reaction to Redpath is fuck, I wish we'd been able to persuade him to play for us :sad:

I doubt Jones even bothered trying. That's the trouble when you employ a national head coach with no skin in the game. Why would Jones give a toss about the future of England rugby, it's just another contract to him.
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Tichtheid
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JM2K6 wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:22 am I cannot see the negative behind the idea that if a really good player emerges in Abu Dhabi they might end up at a professional club in a T1 country and maybe represent that country. That seems pretty aspirational to me!

I'm all for it too.

but one is scouting and another is poaching, depending solely on where one's allegiances lie
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Kawazaki
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Tichtheid wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:26 am
JM2K6 wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:22 am I cannot see the negative behind the idea that if a really good player emerges in Abu Dhabi they might end up at a professional club in a T1 country and maybe represent that country. That seems pretty aspirational to me!

I'm all for it too.

but one is scouting and another is poaching, depending solely on where one's allegiances lie


You've made enormous assumptions and joined some extremely disparate dots based on events that haven't happened or been close to happening and reached a conclusion as if it is as factual as Redpath wearing an England shirt one week and a Scotland shirt the next.

Even by daft internet logic this is a doozy.
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JM2K6
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Tichtheid wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:26 am
JM2K6 wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:22 am I cannot see the negative behind the idea that if a really good player emerges in Abu Dhabi they might end up at a professional club in a T1 country and maybe represent that country. That seems pretty aspirational to me!

I'm all for it too.

but one is scouting and another is poaching, depending solely on where one's allegiances lie
Yup, exactly. And I'm with you that this argument cropping up every 6 months is incredibly tedious. It shouldn't happen because people should be bright enough to realise that every country has done something that could reasonably be described as poaching, every country obeys the eligibility laws, and ultimately none of this is worth the energy people put into getting angry about it / defending their own line in the sand. It's a recipe for shitfights based on nothing but piss and vinegar.
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Tichtheid
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Kawazaki wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:31 am
as factual as Redpath wearing an England shirt one week and a Scotland shirt the next.


Did he do that?
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Kawazaki
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Tichtheid wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:33 am
Kawazaki wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:31 am
as factual as Redpath wearing an England shirt one week and a Scotland shirt the next.


Did he do that?


What was the time elapsed between his last cap for England U20s and his first Scotland cap?

I hope this isn't a 'well it wasn't a week' whine. :roll:
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CM11
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JMK

A bit to unpack there.

- I didn't say Laney wasn't OK and Herring/Hansen were. I did say that there's a distinction between parent and grandparent with the former more likely to have a connection to the parents country. Someone said Herring had an Irish parent, that's it.

- Herring actually meets your residency criteria somewhat. Bar an isolated cap in 2014, his first proper run in the squad started in 2017, 5 years after he joined Ulster. He also had very little adult rugby in SA, as he joined the London Irish academy and was picked up by Ulster soon after he returned to SA.

- The point about Ruddock was that all of his formative years were in Wales and he initially joined the Ospreys academy. If he was a 19 year old from Aus, you'd count him in your list.

- my whole point was that every case is different so you can't put the same label on them. Hansen has been labeled a poach despite growing up with a real connection to Ireland and a wish to play for us. I'm not so naive to think that if Aus got in first he would have said 'nope, I've eyes only for Ireland' but we weren't a country he didn't feel connected to or think about playing for growing up.

- I'm talking specifics here with some examples but it's a general point. I accept that most of the drive comes from the provinces/clubs/unions rather than players but it's unfair to essentially label people eligible from birth as mercenaries. Some are, some aren't.

- finally, I suppose on reflection I've just gone the opposite way to you for simplicity. I start with giving the benefit of the doubt to anyone qualifying via blood, you've decided not to. Both of us are wrong depending on the specific case.
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Kawazaki
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JM2K6 wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:32 am
Tichtheid wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:26 am
JM2K6 wrote: Tue May 17, 2022 8:22 am I cannot see the negative behind the idea that if a really good player emerges in Abu Dhabi they might end up at a professional club in a T1 country and maybe represent that country. That seems pretty aspirational to me!

I'm all for it too.

but one is scouting and another is poaching, depending solely on where one's allegiances lie
Yup, exactly. And I'm with you that this argument cropping up every 6 months is incredibly tedious. It shouldn't happen because people should be bright enough to realise that every country has done something that could reasonably be described as poaching, every country obeys the eligibility laws, and ultimately none of this is worth the energy people put into getting angry about it / defending their own line in the sand. It's a recipe for shitfights based on nothing but piss and vinegar.

Just so we're clear - Saracens are not developing partnership clubs in T2 and T3 countries to develop future England internationals.

It's a ridiculous strawman and I've got no idea why you think it's relevant let alone reply to it!
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PornDog
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Good insights JM :thumbup:

I guess when you get down to it, my main two objections are -
1 The cynical way that the IRFU exploited the residency rule, actively setting up structures (the 4+1 rule) to promote signing of player with an eye on them qualifying through residency. It doesn't reflect on my opinion of those players themselves, but it was some cynical bullshit that really left a sour taste in my mouth. Thankfully that's gone now
2 As you say, the preferential bias often times given to 'foreign' players over domestic ones. You gave some good examples from an English perspective, thankfully I can't really think of of any Irish ones off the top of my head (though Brian Smith and Dion O'Cuinneagain would probably fall into that category in times past), but the whole Edinbokke thing can't be good for the long term development of Scottish rugby
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