NH club rugby
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the red card in teh Sharks game set my new benchmark for "softest i have ever seen"
not that any rugby player would ever do it, but the tackled player made a meal of it, and whined to the ref.
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Came across that tweet above, when viewing this thread on reddit. https://www.reddit.com/r/rugbyunion/comments/zjzlbk/attendances_for_champions_cup_round_1/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android_app&utm_name=androidcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button
In that thread, some comments about how the new format is ruining it
I didn't know about this, I assume it is related to adding South African trans to the comp. It used to be 6 groups of 4. Now, Google tells me the format is:TOURNAMENT FORMAT
The Tier 1 clubs and the Tier 4 clubs which have been drawn in the same pool, but which are not in the same league, play one another home and away. The Tier 2 clubs and the Tier 3 clubs which have been drawn in the same pool, but which are not in the same league, play one another home and away .... etc etc ....
Jeepers.
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Would be ironic if a once popular and perfectly sized comp was butchered by demands to include extra teams from South Africa.
Could I narrow it down to just that? Yes.*
.* if I ignore cold snap, FIFA world cup quarter between Eng v Fra, recession, and the fact pro rugby has become unwatchable.
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@OomPB said in NH club rugby:
@ Rather have a look at the format of the competition which changed before SA was in the picture. It's worst then the S100 on its worst format.
Yes, you're right there. Looks like they changed the format during covid, and have stuck with it.
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@Catogrande said in NH club rugby:
Christ! Are things really that bad?
Yep
Still got fucking idiots testing for Covid down this way
Midweek matches to catch up with the schedule are the hardest
People are working
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New competition from 2024: Asia Rugby Grand League. This could mean that we'll lose even more fringe SRP/club rugby players to professional clubs overseas.
Thursday marked a big step forward for rugby in Asia with the local federation announcing a new pan-Asia competition set to kick off in 2024.
Eight clubs from around Asia will compete in the first edition of the newly conceived Grand League, with the competition set to expand further in the years following.
While teams for the Grand League have not yet been confirmed, it’s anticipated that the likes of Hong Kong, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines could all take part in the new tournament.
“Council was briefed [at the latest general meeting] on the brand new Asia Rugby Grand League, a clubs franchise-oriented competition planned to see lights during quarter one and two in the year 2024,” Asia Rugby said in a statement.
“Eight targeted national federations have been identified and will commence constructive collaboration during the first working group meeting scheduled for Friday 3rd February 2023 in Singapore.
“The concept will be rolled out on phases running from the year 2024 to 2027.”
Asia Rugby president Qais Al Dhalai – who was also confirmed as the continent’s new World Rugby council member at the meeting – suggested on Twitter that the intention was to ostensibly mimic the developments that have occurred in South America, in part thanks to the introduction of the Super Liga Americana de Rugby.
The SLAR has seen franchises from across South America go to battle over the past three years, with two expansion sides from North America set to join the competition in 2023. -
Watched the Saints/Quinns game this morning. Geez Quinns looked like they forgot to get out of bed, but was mightily impressed with Ramm on the wing for Saints, Finn Smith at 10 looks a good young un, and the * for thm impressed the hell out of me before he went off.
Quinns were as I said ,looking very very sluggish, though I thought Dombrant at 8 put in a bloody good shift I thought. Was well worth the watch. -
Not sure if this has been reported on here before or not
Will be hard getting competitive given they will have to scratch around to get a squad together, presumably of semi-professional players and starting with a bank balance of zero.
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Another head knock for Sexton, but I can't see anything about him being cited for the head clash,although comments about a soak tackle...man all these new tackle types.
I want less cards, but the inconsistency is ridiculous.
Didn't see it, but reading it would appear the other fella didn't go straight off despite clear evidence of a heavy collision.
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@taniwharugby said in NH club rugby:
but the inconsistency is ridiculous.
Yep, considering some if the ones we saw for head clashes last year, guys who were going lower than that were getting carded.
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Summer rugby seem to be popular in South Africa
URC
Fans Turn Up in Record Numbers as URC Makes HistoryHistory was made as the overall attendance record for a single round in the United Rugby Championship was broken in Round 11 with over 123,000 fans packing into stadiums across both hemispheres.
The total of 123,307 surpassed the previous record of 121,177 as sell-out crowds and season-high attendances were reported in Belfast, Cardiff, Dublin, Durban, Edinburgh and Parma.Both the 1872 Cup game between Edinburgh and Glasgow Warriors in Scotland and the Cell C Sharks v Vodacom Bulls fixture drew in crowds of 25,000 while games in Dublin (17,560), Belfast (16,672) and Cape Town (15,001) all drew attendances of over 15,000.
It caps an impressive two-week period for the United Rugby Championship with nearly a quarter of a million fans attending the Christmas and New Year derby games. Of those 16 fixtures there were three sell-outs and a total of nine season-high attendances.
Underscoring the impressive achievement, Martin Anayi, CEO, United Rugby Championship said: “To break the overall attendance record for a single round in the league’s history is yet another boost for the United Rugby Championship. This comes just a week after the Christmas attendance was broken and again shows the superb work our clubs are doing to grow the game.
“To put this achievement in context, the previous record included a 62,000 crowd from Judgement Day in Cardiff in 2018, so to break it without hosting a major double-header is fantastic. There was barely a spare seat in Ireland, the Cardiff Arms Park in Wales was full, Edinburgh did a terrific job to get so many into BT Murrayfield for the 1872 Cup game while Zebre also had their biggest crowd of the season.
“In South Africa, the concept of playing over Christmas and New Year was very new to their market but fans have embraced ‘summer rugby’ with almost 100,000 attending over two weekends. Right now fans will have lots of demands on how they spend their money and to see so many choosing to buy tickets to support their teams in the URC is humbling.”
R10 and R11 URC Attendances
30,003 DHL Stormers v Vodacom Bulls (R10)
25,813 Cell C Sharks v Vodacom Bulls (R11)
25,600 Munster v Leinster (R10)
25,137 Edinburgh v Glasgow Warriors (R11)
24,721 Cell C Sharks v Emirates Lions (R10)
17,560 Leinster v Connacht (R11)
16,672 Ulster v Munster (R11)
15,001 DHL Stormers v Emirates Lions (R11)
12,125 Cardiff Rugby v Ospreys (R11)
11,480 Ospreys v Scarlets (R10)
8,566 Scarlets v Dragons RFC (R11)
8,582 Dragons RFC v Cardiff Rugby (R10)
7,338 Glasgow Warriors v Edinburgh (R10)
6,041 Connacht v Ulster (R10)
3,683 Benetton v Zebre Parma (R10)
2,433 Zebre Parma v Benetton (R11)
Across Round 10 and 11 of the United Rugby Championship close to a quarter of a million fans attended 16 games where the average attendance was 12,500. South Africa had the highest attendance by country with 95,538 fans attending the four derby matches in Cape Town and Durban.
This was followed by 65,873 in Ireland with one game apiece played in Belfast, Dublin, Galway and Limerick while in Wales there were two sell-outs and a season high attendance (Ospreys) across Cardiff, Llanelli, Newport and Swansea among the 40,753 attendees.
Top Three League Attendances for a Single Round
123,307 R11 Dec 30-Jan 1, 2022/23
121,117 R21 Apr 28, 2018
117,448 R10 Dec 23-26, 2022