Worcester and Wasps GONE?

Where goats go to escape
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SaintK
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inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 10:00 am Apparently August wages not completely paid for Backoffice staff, despite assurances.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/62820629
And the two bastard spivs that own the club are still fucking about with the stadium and land. I reckon they're done for!
The fate of crisis club Worcester Warriors took another twist on Tuesday after it emerged an application has been made to transfer ownership of the Sixways Stadium and the surrounding land to a new company.
Land Registry documents seen by Telegraph Sport detail an application made on Friday to transfer the deeds for Sixways and seven other parcels of land around the stadium to a company called Triangle Estate & Petroleum Limited. The managing director is listed as Peter Feathersone, who appears to have had no previous involvement in rugby union.

Last month, it emerged that the club’s owners Colin Goldring and Jason Whittingham had sold the land around the stadium to companies they owned leading to fears that they were asset-stripping their own club, a claim they have vehemently denied.
https://12ft.io/proxy?q=https%3A%2F ... ship%2F
inactionman
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SaintK wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 11:13 am
inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 10:00 am Apparently August wages not completely paid for Backoffice staff, despite assurances.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/62820629
And the two bastard spivs that own the club are still fucking about with the stadium and land. I reckon they're done for!
The fate of crisis club Worcester Warriors took another twist on Tuesday after it emerged an application has been made to transfer ownership of the Sixways Stadium and the surrounding land to a new company.
Land Registry documents seen by Telegraph Sport detail an application made on Friday to transfer the deeds for Sixways and seven other parcels of land around the stadium to a company called Triangle Estate & Petroleum Limited. The managing director is listed as Peter Feathersone, who appears to have had no previous involvement in rugby union.

Last month, it emerged that the club’s owners Colin Goldring and Jason Whittingham had sold the land around the stadium to companies they owned leading to fears that they were asset-stripping their own club, a claim they have vehemently denied.
https://12ft.io/proxy?q=https%3A%2F ... ship%2F
Utterly disgraceful.

Don't suppose there's a covenant on the land to prevent it being used for anything else (i.e. make it useless for anything other than a sports club). Even if not, I'd hope the local council would make approval for any other use impossible to achieve.
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Paddington Bear
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It looks over IMHO
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sockwithaticket
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Diamond was pretty bullish on the BBC pod yesterday stating that Worcester would be able to see out the season.
inactionman
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sockwithaticket wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 11:24 am Diamond was pretty bullish on the BBC pod yesterday stating that Worcester would be able to see out the season.
Not sure a 'can do' attitude is going to cut it if they can't pay HMRC and suppliers, let alone staff.

Diamond strikes me a great person to have next to you in a trench, but the war here isn't on the pitch.

Also, the owners do not seem particularly transparent (read: honest) so I'm not convinced Dimes knows quite how deep the hole is.
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inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 11:27 am
sockwithaticket wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 11:24 am Diamond was pretty bullish on the BBC pod yesterday stating that Worcester would be able to see out the season.
Not sure a 'can do' attitude is going to cut it if they can't pay HMRC and suppliers, let alone staff.

Diamond strikes me a great person to have next to you in a trench, but the war here isn't on the pitch.

Also, the owners do not seem particularly transparent (read: honest) so I'm not convinced Dimes knows quite how deep the hole is.
From the way he told it, he's become somewhat involved in the business side of things to help streamline the organisation and find value, but I guess there's no way of knowing to what extent.

Press reports certainly make it seem like the owners are very shady and primarily focused on asset stripping.
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inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 11:27 am
sockwithaticket wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 11:24 am Diamond was pretty bullish on the BBC pod yesterday stating that Worcester would be able to see out the season.
Not sure a 'can do' attitude is going to cut it if they can't pay HMRC and suppliers, let alone staff.

Diamond strikes me a great person to have next to you in a trench, but the war here isn't on the pitch.

Also, the owners do not seem particularly transparent (read: honest) so I'm not convinced Dimes knows quite how deep the hole is.


It was a bit more than just a 'can do' attitude, he said specifically that Worcester have secured enough finance to run the club for the next 12 months.
inactionman
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Kawazaki wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 12:37 pm
inactionman wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 11:27 am
sockwithaticket wrote: Wed Sep 07, 2022 11:24 am Diamond was pretty bullish on the BBC pod yesterday stating that Worcester would be able to see out the season.
Not sure a 'can do' attitude is going to cut it if they can't pay HMRC and suppliers, let alone staff.

Diamond strikes me a great person to have next to you in a trench, but the war here isn't on the pitch.

Also, the owners do not seem particularly transparent (read: honest) so I'm not convinced Dimes knows quite how deep the hole is.


It was a bit more than just a 'can do' attitude, he said specifically that Worcester have secured enough finance to run the club for the next 12 months.
I hope he's not being bluffed by the bluffers
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Torquemada 1420
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Bernol's last report reckons they are gone this week unless money is stumped up

https://www.midi-olympique.fr/2022/09/1 ... 537592.php
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Margin__Walker
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Sounds like sale terms agreed with someone (I suspect not the Jim O'Toole consortium)
Warriors can confirm that owners Colin Goldring and Jason Whittingham have agreed the terms of the sale of the club to an interested party.

The Heads of Terms are now with the legal representatives of the respective parties who are going through the detail of the agreement.

As of 5pm on Tuesday September 13 the Heads of Terms have yet to be signed.

In the meantime, we have been working closely with the interested party on the immediate deposit of significant funds which will allow Sunday’s Gallagher Premiership match against Exeter Chiefs at Sixways and Saturday’s Allianz Cup tie between University of Worcester Warriors and Harlequins to go ahead as scheduled.

We will provide a further update both on the sale of the club and this weekend’s matches on Wednesday.
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SaintK
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Margin__Walker wrote: Tue Sep 13, 2022 4:28 pm Sounds like sale terms agreed with someone (I suspect not the Jim O'Toole consortium)
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Warriors can confirm that owners Colin Goldring and Jason Whittingham have agreed the terms of the sale of the club to an interested party.

The Heads of Terms are now with the legal representatives of the respective parties who are going through the detail of the agreement.

As of 5pm on Tuesday September 13 the Heads of Terms have yet to be signed.

In the meantime, we have been working closely with the interested party on the immediate deposit of significant funds which will allow Sunday’s Gallagher Premiership match against Exeter Chiefs at Sixways and Saturday’s Allianz Cup tie between University of Worcester Warriors and Harlequins to go ahead as scheduled.

We will provide a further update both on the sale of the club and this weekend’s matches on Wednesday.
It's not. Apparently, they will only proceed if the club is put into administration.
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Kawazaki
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SaintK wrote: Tue Sep 13, 2022 4:53 pm
Margin__Walker wrote: Tue Sep 13, 2022 4:28 pm Sounds like sale terms agreed with someone (I suspect not the Jim O'Toole consortium)
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Warriors can confirm that owners Colin Goldring and Jason Whittingham have agreed the terms of the sale of the club to an interested party.

The Heads of Terms are now with the legal representatives of the respective parties who are going through the detail of the agreement.

As of 5pm on Tuesday September 13 the Heads of Terms have yet to be signed.

In the meantime, we have been working closely with the interested party on the immediate deposit of significant funds which will allow Sunday’s Gallagher Premiership match against Exeter Chiefs at Sixways and Saturday’s Allianz Cup tie between University of Worcester Warriors and Harlequins to go ahead as scheduled.

We will provide a further update both on the sale of the club and this weekend’s matches on Wednesday.
It's not. Apparently, they will only proceed if the club is put into administration.

In a no relegation season, that's a good time to do it. Not great for creditors though.
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SaintK
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Reckon they're just about dead and buried. No movement since Tuesday and have to confirm the home match against Exeter today.
The sale of Worcester to a new buyer has yet to be completed, escalating concerns over the club’s ability to stage their first home Gallagher Premiership game of the season on Sunday. While an agreement has been reached between co-owners Colin Goldring and Jason Whittingham and the undisclosed investor, the Warriors confirmed in a statement that a contract has yet to be signed.
https://www.rugbypass.com/news/worce ... iership/
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Kawazaki
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It appears the owners overplayed their hand.

Stupid conmen.
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SaintK
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Kawazaki wrote: Thu Sep 15, 2022 9:57 am It appears the owners overplayed their hand.

Stupid conmen.
Bastards, I bet they're not out of pocket especially with the land they sold to several of their other companies
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Kawazaki
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SaintK wrote: Thu Sep 15, 2022 10:35 am
Kawazaki wrote: Thu Sep 15, 2022 9:57 am It appears the owners overplayed their hand.

Stupid conmen.
Bastards, I bet they're not out of pocket especially with the land they sold to several of their other companies


HMRC will see through that.
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Kawazaki wrote: Thu Sep 15, 2022 10:40 am
SaintK wrote: Thu Sep 15, 2022 10:35 am
Kawazaki wrote: Thu Sep 15, 2022 9:57 am It appears the owners overplayed their hand.

Stupid conmen.
Bastards, I bet they're not out of pocket especially with the land they sold to several of their other companies


HMRC will see through that.
They already have. The real issue is whether they will be allowed to pursue it.
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Slick
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All looks finished really, what a shame.
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The spivs that run the club remind me very strongly of the sort of people that asset strip lower league football clubs. Worcester is probably about the same levels of finance and fan support.
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SaintK
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Hal Jordan wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 12:20 pm The spivs that run the club remind me very strongly of the sort of people that asset strip lower league football clubs. Worcester is probably about the same levels of finance and fan support.
They own Morecombe FC and have just put it up for sale!!!
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SaintK
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ia801310 wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 7:56 am Doesn't look good

https://www.worcesternews.co.uk/news/21 ... ugby-club/
By the skin of their tyeeth
Financially troubled Worcester Warriors have been given permission to play this weekend after proving they can safely host matches at Sixways.

Sunday's Premiership game against Exeter can go ahead after they showed the Rugby Football Union they had obtained a general safety certificate.

The club met Friday's midday deadline, to allow the match to be played
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Tichtheid
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SaintK wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 12:41 pm
ia801310 wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 7:56 am Doesn't look good

https://www.worcesternews.co.uk/news/21 ... ugby-club/
By the skin of their tyeeth
Financially troubled Worcester Warriors have been given permission to play this weekend after proving they can safely host matches at Sixways.

Sunday's Premiership game against Exeter can go ahead after they showed the Rugby Football Union they had obtained a general safety certificate.

The club met Friday's midday deadline, to allow the match to be played


Does anyone know why a safety certificate would be a problem?

Would it be paying for the certification? Policing?
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laurent
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Tichtheid wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 12:47 pm
SaintK wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 12:41 pm
ia801310 wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 7:56 am Doesn't look good

https://www.worcesternews.co.uk/news/21 ... ugby-club/
By the skin of their tyeeth
Financially troubled Worcester Warriors have been given permission to play this weekend after proving they can safely host matches at Sixways.

Sunday's Premiership game against Exeter can go ahead after they showed the Rugby Football Union they had obtained a general safety certificate.

The club met Friday's midday deadline, to allow the match to be played


Does anyone know why a safety certificate would be a problem?

Would it be paying for the certification? Policing?
Potentially that they can pay stewarts paramedics and other to host the game.
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Tichtheid
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laurent wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 1:53 pm
Tichtheid wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 12:47 pm
SaintK wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 12:41 pm
By the skin of their tyeeth


Does anyone know why a safety certificate would be a problem?

Would it be paying for the certification? Policing?
Potentially that they can pay stewarts paramedics and other to host the game.
I did wonder about stewards right enough
Good point about paramedics, there are probably all sorts of costs I don’t know about

All things considered, it can’t be that much to put on a match, not compared to salaries, so if the club is sailing this close to the wind it doesn’t bode well for its future
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Margin__Walker
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Really not a game you'd want to get injured in as a worcester player.
ia801310
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Fantastic news. Worcester are my favourite premiership team, followed by Newcastle. I like rooting for the underdogs.

I assume this means that the RFU are confident that Worcester will survive otherwise they wouldn't have let them play.
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Image

Apparently this has been doing the rounds on the social media of various Worcester employees and the owners are threatening to fire any of them who don't take it down.
Slick
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Tichtheid wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 2:03 pm
laurent wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 1:53 pm
Tichtheid wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 12:47 pm



Does anyone know why a safety certificate would be a problem?

Would it be paying for the certification? Policing?
Potentially that they can pay stewarts paramedics and other to host the game.
I did wonder about stewards right enough
Good point about paramedics, there are probably all sorts of costs I don’t know about

All things considered, it can’t be that much to put on a match, not compared to salaries, so if the club is sailing this close to the wind it doesn’t bode well for its future
I've seen £120,000 as a figure for them to put on a game
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sockwithaticket wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 5:32 pm Image

Apparently this has been doing the rounds on the social media of various Worcester employees and the owners are threatening to fire any of them who don't take it down.
Be interesting to see what the grounds for dismissal would be! Doubt the owners could afford an employment tribunal.
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Torquemada 1420 wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 6:58 pm
sockwithaticket wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 5:32 pm Image

Apparently this has been doing the rounds on the social media of various Worcester employees and the owners are threatening to fire any of them who don't take it down.
Be interesting to see what the grounds for dismissal would be! Doubt the owners could afford an employment tribunal.
Oh I'm sure their personal finances are fine, it's just the club they're allowing to fall into ruin. Also it seems like the whole operation is largely being run on the goodwill of staff towards each other and the wider community at the moment. Good luck holding it together long enough to sell it if they all stop giving a shit/get fired.
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sockwithaticket wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 7:40 pm
Oh I'm sure their personal finances are fine, it's just the club they're allowing to fall into ruin. Also it seems like the whole operation is largely being run on the goodwill of staff towards each other and the wider community at the moment. Good luck holding it together long enough to sell it if they all stop giving a shit/get fired.
Good point.

Worcester is the UK in microcosm. The poor subsidising the rich's illegal excesses whilst the authorities are either impotent or outright complicit.
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SaintK
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sockwithaticket wrote: Fri Sep 16, 2022 5:32 pm Image

Apparently this has been doing the rounds on the social media of various Worcester employees and the owners are threatening to fire any of them who don't take it down.
These bastards are also cowards as they havent't been seen at Sixways for a while
Neither Goldring, thought to have failed the English Football League’s owners’ and directors’ test despite becoming a director at Morecambe Football Club nor Jason Whittingham, Warriors’ other co-owner, have been seen at Sixways this month. Instead, they have apparently chosen to work from their homes in Essex.

“We have had a lovely letter from the RFU thanking staff for their efforts,” said a club source. “But all we have heard from the owners is threats with menaces at a time when most staff are being destroyed mentally and financially.”
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SaintK
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Shit or bust today I reckon!
Worcester Warriors staff will hold a meeting on Tuesday where they will decide whether they are going to continue to work for the financially stricken club.
Despite a statement from co-owners Jason Whittingham and Colin Goldring on Sunday – released an hour before their match against Exeter Chiefs kicked off at Sixways – no player, coach or non-playing member of staff has received any direct correspondence from the duo since Friday.
No one at the club, including director of rugby Steve Diamond, was aware of the presence of Whittingham's statement, nor the content of it, when it was released at 2pm on Sunday.
https://12ft.io/proxy?q=https%3A%2F%2F ... isis%2F
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Tichtheid
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SaintK wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 8:47 am Shit or bust today I reckon!
Worcester Warriors staff will hold a meeting on Tuesday where they will decide whether they are going to continue to work for the financially stricken club.
Despite a statement from co-owners Jason Whittingham and Colin Goldring on Sunday – released an hour before their match against Exeter Chiefs kicked off at Sixways – no player, coach or non-playing member of staff has received any direct correspondence from the duo since Friday.
No one at the club, including director of rugby Steve Diamond, was aware of the presence of Whittingham's statement, nor the content of it, when it was released at 2pm on Sunday.
https://12ft.io/proxy?q=https%3A%2F%2F ... isis%2F

I really hope they make it, the round of applause for the non-playing staff on the 65th minute against Exeter was quite something
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Camroc2
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Keith Wood, on the Off the Ball podcast last night, said that he had heard that five premiership clubs were unofficially up for sale, ie that the current owners wanted out.

Is it time for the RFU to bestir itself and take control ?
inactionman
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Camroc2 wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 9:37 am Keith Wood, on the Off the Ball podcast last night, said that he had heard that five premiership clubs were unofficially up for sale, ie that the current owners wanted out.

Is it time for the RFU to bestir itself and take control ?
Which ones, I wonder?

Ongoing rumours that Bruce Craig is looking to get out and selling Bath to James Dyson, but that might just be random connection-making
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Margin__Walker
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Camroc2 wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 9:37 am Keith Wood, on the Off the Ball podcast last night, said that he had heard that five premiership clubs were unofficially up for sale, ie that the current owners wanted out.

Is it time for the RFU to bestir itself and take control ?
How? They've not got 'buy the clubs' money, so there's not a way I can see that they can take control.
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Margin__Walker
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Interesting article outlining some of the challenges

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/coul ... -r5006pvzh
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Could NFL model give English clubs route out of crisis?
Domestic game has lost £500m in professional era and relies far too heavily on rich owners, yet French league is in rude health. Alex Lowe asks where rugby in this country goes from here

Alex Lowe
, Rugby Correspondent
Tuesday September 20 2022, 12.01am, The Times

Let’s not pull any punches. The state of play in the Gallagher Premiership, a league that is thrilling on the field and enjoys growing fan engagement, is grim. Five of the 13 member clubs are in effect up for sale, with many owners suffering investor fatigue from losing millions each year.

Some clubs are reaching out to potential suitors. Mick Crossan has said that he would sell London Irish for £1. Newcastle Falcons and Gloucester are also believed to be open to offers. Simon Orange at Sale Sharks tweeted in July that he would be up for “partnering with a billionaire” (if he could find one).

Wasps have been struggling financially and Worcester Warriors have been brought to their knees by debt and alleged mismanagement, with questions being asked about whether the £15 million Sport England pandemic loan, with a 20-year repayment at only 2 per cent interest, was used as the government had intended.

The RFU is under pressure to strengthen its scrutiny of club owners and their business plans. It really should be the job of Premiership Rugby (PRL) but it was set up in 1996 as a commercial entity with no regulatory power. That needs to change.

“The governance of the Premiership is completely and utterly inappropriate,” Mark Evans, the former chief executive of Harlequins and Melbourne Storm, said.

The wider rugby landscape is littered with challenges. The club season clashes with the international season, denuding both. The Premiership will have its England stars on parade for roughly half of the fixtures.

England, meanwhile, will complain about a lack of access and a shortage of preparation time. It has been ever thus since the game went professional in 1995 and the RFU sat on its hands while the clubs snapped up all the players.

The concussion issue presents an existential crisis for rugby. One headmaster at a private school said recently: “If we have to get parents to sign a waiver that permits their child to play then it’s all over.”

Nevertheless the potential for growth at the professional end of the sport has been identified by organisations with clout. CVC, the private equity firm, has invested about £1 billion in rugby while Roc Nation, the talent agency, says it wants to elevate the sport by turning the players into stars.

That potential will be tethered while club rugby remains weighed down by its politics, its conflicts and its governance structures — but there is a growing acceptance across the league that the Premiership model is broken. The big question is how to fix it and what the future of the club game should look like.


A ten-team league? Two fully professional divisions? An NFL-style franchise system run centrally by PRL. The RFU has, within the past decade, investigated raising capital to bring the Premiership more directly under its control. Would it do so again?

How did it come to this?
“I don’t think the game has been sustainable since it turned professional,” one senior club executive said. “I’ve heard recently that the clubs have lost £500 million since the start. The competition is fantastic but it is not commercialised as well as it should be.

“We are paying players too much money and not getting the relevant income in. We are losing millions a year and the current situation of wealthy owners covering the costs just can’t go on.”

The spending on salaries has been driven by the international game, where the England players receive up to £25,000 a Test in return for selling out Twickenham and generating upwards of £10 million in revenue for some fixtures. That has had a knock-on effect and the elite players have benefited from being paid by two masters — but the club game has failed to keep pace commercially.

PRL made a dog’s dinner of its most recent television-rights deal so BT Sport re-signed for about the same as it had previously been paying, at about £40 million a season. The French Top 14, by contrast, achieved a 17 per cent uplift in its deal with Canal+, worth £390 million over four years, 40 per cent of which goes to a thriving second tier.

CVC injected £200 million into PRL when it bought a 27 per cent stake, which gave the clubs a cash windfall of about £13 million each. Although earmarked for facilities, the money was swallowed up by the pandemic and the clubs now receive 20 per cent less in annual commercial income as a result of the deal.

The pandemic led to clubs checking their spending on players, initially imposing a league-wide pay cut, then lowering the salary cap from £6.4 million to £5 million as they battled to stay afloat, precipitating smaller squads and an exodus of big-name overseas players. The clubs are now essentially propped up by wealthy owners and long-term government loans.

Does the league need a commissioner?
“There is a reason why we have never fixed the business model in the Premiership and that is because you can’t get it through 13 voting clubs,” Evans said. “It is a ludicrous situation where you have to call a meeting of 13 shareholders who are all conflicted. It needs far more executive power.”

Simon Massie-Taylor, the chief executive of PRL, and Martyn Phillips, the chairman, want to secure a mandate from the board so they can make strategic decisions in the best interests of the league.

That would emulate the governance models used successfully to drive up the value of the NFL and the AFL, the governing body of Australian Rules football, which this month landed a staggering seven-year television deal for its 18 clubs worth £2.64 billion.

Not all club owners are convinced by the commissioner-style model but PRL’s mission is to attract the nine million people who watch England in the Six Nations but do not engage in the Premiership. By definition, that requires broader thinking and a more centralised approach.

“Then you can make decisions for the long-term benefit of the league, which in hindsight we have struggled to do,” one club owner said.

“We need to double our TV money; we need to double or triple our sponsorship money. Somebody independent should be given the authority to come up with a new way of doing it.”

The magic number?
The salary-cap debate is indicative of the fork in the road at which PRL finds itself. The cap is due to return to £6.4 million in 2024-25 unless more than ten clubs vote to keep it down.

Those clubs in a more perilous financial position want it to remain at its present level, or drop even further and for it to only move up in line with revenues. It will go back up because there are enough clubs who take the opposite view: that if the league is to be a commercial success, with the star names on the field, it cannot move at the speed of the slowest.

“All that happens is that you take it down to the lowest common denominator and that, in the longer term, is not a feasible option,” one senior club figure said.

“You have clubs with a turnover of around £10 million — £4 million of that is central revenue and they are probably paying more than £6 million on players. It just does not make sense. It is like going to a casino and you want to play on a table with a minimum bet of £5,000 but you only have £100 in your pocket. It doesn’t work. At a certain point you just can’t play. You can’t continue with three or four clubs that shouldn’t be there.”

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If Worcester survive, the Premiership is likely to comprise 14 teams in 2023-24, with Ealing Trailfinders favourites for promotion. Rob Baxter, the Exeter Chiefs director of rugby, and Pat Lam, his counterpart at Bristol Bears, have expressed a view that a ten-club league would be optimal. A 12-team league could also work, depending on the structure of the European competitions.

“It feels odd that we’ve allowed a system to develop where it has become quite difficult [for clubs] to have England players,” Baxter said. “You have to expect them to be away for more than half of your Premiership games. It feels difficult to be a real supporter of the England team.”

There has been an idea floated about the league expanding into two divisions of eight teams with a 70-30 revenue split, which may help those less commercially successful clubs find a natural level while remaining fully professional.

The most radical option would be for PRL to secure the required funding from an investment bank, buy the clubs and turn the whole league into a centrally run franchise competition, underpinned by a collective bargaining agreement. There is a theory, too, that CVC is biding its time with a plan to do just that.

Even if the franchise idea never comes close to reality, PRL has been looking to the United States for inspiration. The NFL has a commissioner and it has a revenue-share arrangement that places all ticketing, merchandise and sponsorship money into one pot. The NFL franchises have agreed to sacrifice home games to play international regular-season fixtures in England, Germany and Mexico.

“The foresight of those owners in the NFL was unbelievable. The big-market teams said they would share their revenue equally, which means Green Bay can compete with the New York Giants — and look at what has happened to their revenues,” Martin Anayi, chief executive of the United Rugby Championship (URC), said.

“Collaboration was really, really important. Getting something that works across all those markets took unanimous buy-in.”

At present, PRL has 13 clubs operating independently, trying to market themselves, push ticket sales and sell merchandise within their existing markets. If professional club rugby is to become more commercially successful, if it is to appeal to those floating nine million rugby fans, then it will require a more unified strategy.

If that NFL system were transposed on to Premiership Rugby, the league would take regular-season games into new territories to grow its appeal outside the catchment area of each club.

There are vast swathes of the South East, through Essex, Kent, Sussex and Hampshire, where rugby is huge but there is no top-flight club, so games in Brighton? A double-header at Elland Road in Leeds? Moving the final from Twickenham is already under consideration.

The URC shares a London office with PRL and Six Nations Rugby, three CVC properties under one roof, and collaboration is high on their agenda. Could they move the Bristol versus Bath derby to the Principality Stadium in Cardiff and stage it as part of a double-header with a URC game? It is not beyond the realms of possibility.

“We share an office because we pretty much do the same things but not in the same markets. So isn’t that the best business case to grow as much as we can collaboratively? Until we really do that, I don’t think rugby as a game is optimised,” Anayi said.

This kind of thinking at PRL will be accelerated by the imminent arrival of a new chief marketing officer, Rob Calder, who was one of the brains behind the Hundred, the new cricket competition that upset traditionalists but has engaged a younger generation and boosted the women’s sport.

His actual job title will be chief growth officer, which demonstrates quite clearly the league’s intention to use this financial crisis as an opportunity for evolution — if not revolution.
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