World Rugby Board elections
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@booboo said in World Rugby Board elections:
@Catogrande sorry. Left off the fishing emoji ...
That’s either careless or cruel. I’ll go back over the last 10 years of your posts to determine which.
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@Catogrande said in World Rugby Board elections:
@booboo said in World Rugby Board elections:
@Catogrande sorry. Left off the fishing emoji ...
That’s either careless or cruel. I’ll go back over the last 10 years of your posts to determine which.
Quicker to assess which don’t need it, smaller number
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Why not make it you can change countries once (that you meet representative criteria for), but have a five year stand down? And make that between the last game that you played.
That means sitting out basically half your professional international career.
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@Catogrande said in World Rugby Board elections:
@booboo said in World Rugby Board elections:
@Catogrande said in World Rugby Board elections:
@MajorRage said in World Rugby Board elections:
@mariner4life said in World Rugby Board elections:
The only way to ever solve this is to make sure you get paid the same whether you play a test for Samoa or for England. Then you can choose to play for the country where you live, and who taught you to play rugby, or the country where your parents were born.
Agree in principle. The downside is that the NH clubs will have far too much power and the international game may well be downgraded.
But it's bullshit that when England play Fiji at Twickenham, the England players get 20-30k for the match, whilst the Fiji players get a couple of hundred.
On your last point I think it would be great to see a unified match fee for all players in the squads, paid directly to the players and paid for by the home nation. This would help alleviate the absurd discrepancy in match day earnings and also bypass the issue of funds getting swallowed up in "expenses". The downside is that this may well prove a bigger obstacle to getting T1 nations to play in places like the PIs. Maybe World Rugby should fund match day fees from a central pot obtained from levies from the respective Unions.
Why don't we just share revenue equally?
Because it is not equitable. On many levels. Twickenham and the Principality Stadium , for instance, have much bigger capacity and can command much higher ticket prices. This is in part due to the investment the respective unions have put in. Cost of living, cost of real estate are different across countries. Currency movement makes a mockery of any idea of equality. NZ, SA and Aus get a Lions tour every 12 years. TV rights are different. Population is different. Many things against it.
Main argument for it? Seems to be “we want more money”.
If we start sharing revenue, we have start sharing costs too. Fucked if we really want NZR paying for NH stadia.
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@junior said in World Rugby Board elections:
@Catogrande said in World Rugby Board elections:
@booboo said in World Rugby Board elections:
@Catogrande said in World Rugby Board elections:
@MajorRage said in World Rugby Board elections:
@mariner4life said in World Rugby Board elections:
The only way to ever solve this is to make sure you get paid the same whether you play a test for Samoa or for England. Then you can choose to play for the country where you live, and who taught you to play rugby, or the country where your parents were born.
Agree in principle. The downside is that the NH clubs will have far too much power and the international game may well be downgraded.
But it's bullshit that when England play Fiji at Twickenham, the England players get 20-30k for the match, whilst the Fiji players get a couple of hundred.
On your last point I think it would be great to see a unified match fee for all players in the squads, paid directly to the players and paid for by the home nation. This would help alleviate the absurd discrepancy in match day earnings and also bypass the issue of funds getting swallowed up in "expenses". The downside is that this may well prove a bigger obstacle to getting T1 nations to play in places like the PIs. Maybe World Rugby should fund match day fees from a central pot obtained from levies from the respective Unions.
Why don't we just share revenue equally?
Because it is not equitable. On many levels. Twickenham and the Principality Stadium , for instance, have much bigger capacity and can command much higher ticket prices. This is in part due to the investment the respective unions have put in. Cost of living, cost of real estate are different across countries. Currency movement makes a mockery of any idea of equality. NZ, SA and Aus get a Lions tour every 12 years. TV rights are different. Population is different. Many things against it.
Main argument for it? Seems to be “we want more money”.
If we start sharing revenue, we have start sharing costs too. Fucked if we really want NZR paying for NH stadia.
Not to mention the gin bill.
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@Catogrande said in World Rugby Board elections:
@junior said in World Rugby Board elections:
@Catogrande said in World Rugby Board elections:
@booboo said in World Rugby Board elections:
@Catogrande said in World Rugby Board elections:
@MajorRage said in World Rugby Board elections:
@mariner4life said in World Rugby Board elections:
The only way to ever solve this is to make sure you get paid the same whether you play a test for Samoa or for England. Then you can choose to play for the country where you live, and who taught you to play rugby, or the country where your parents were born.
Agree in principle. The downside is that the NH clubs will have far too much power and the international game may well be downgraded.
But it's bullshit that when England play Fiji at Twickenham, the England players get 20-30k for the match, whilst the Fiji players get a couple of hundred.
On your last point I think it would be great to see a unified match fee for all players in the squads, paid directly to the players and paid for by the home nation. This would help alleviate the absurd discrepancy in match day earnings and also bypass the issue of funds getting swallowed up in "expenses". The downside is that this may well prove a bigger obstacle to getting T1 nations to play in places like the PIs. Maybe World Rugby should fund match day fees from a central pot obtained from levies from the respective Unions.
Why don't we just share revenue equally?
Because it is not equitable. On many levels. Twickenham and the Principality Stadium , for instance, have much bigger capacity and can command much higher ticket prices. This is in part due to the investment the respective unions have put in. Cost of living, cost of real estate are different across countries. Currency movement makes a mockery of any idea of equality. NZ, SA and Aus get a Lions tour every 12 years. TV rights are different. Population is different. Many things against it.
Main argument for it? Seems to be “we want more money”.
If we start sharing revenue, we have start sharing costs too. Fucked if we really want NZR paying for NH stadia.
Not to mention the gin bill.
Cucumber sandwiches don't come cheap these days
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New World Rugby interim committee appointments include
Rassie Erasmus, Melodie Robinson, Conrad Smith and Bryan Habana are among a host of leading players and coaches who have been appointed to World Rugby interim committees.
Building on a productive agreement between the international federation and International Rugby Players (IRP), each of the 12 committees will feature player representation nominated by IRP. With the core objective of contributing to the decision-making process, the player representatives will combine extensive rugby experience with relevant expertise, including broadcast, digital media, welfare, medical, commercial and legal business backgrounds.
With World Rugby Chairman Sir Bill Beaumont committed to building on transformational governance reform implemented in 2015 to further representation, efficiency and effectiveness, every committee features broader nation, female and independent representation with 30 per cent of all committee members women and three committees chaired by female Council members.
Rassie Erasmus and Steve Hansen join Eddie Jones, Fabien Galthié, Mario Ledesma, Gregor Townsend, Lesley McKenzie and David Nucifora as coaching representatives on the new High Performance 15s Committee. Rugby World Cup winners Bryan Habana, Conrad Smith and Rachael Burford along with Wales’s Dr Jamie Roberts and Canada’s Dr Araba Chintoh have been appointed as player representatives with medical expertise on the same committee.
Appointments across the committees include former Ireland captain and broadcaster Brian O’Driscoll and New Zealand’s two-time Rugby World Cup winner, sports journalist and presenter Melodie Robinson, who join the Rugby World Cup Board, while England’s Deborah Griffin, independent and fan-engagement expert Angela Ruggiero and former All Blacks and Black Ferns team doctor Deb Robinson will each chair committees.
Link to all Committees: https://www.world.rugby/organisation/structure/council-committees