NPC - news, injuries etc
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@Chris-B I think I can remember Jamie Spowart playing for Kings Colllege up here in Auckland a few seasons back..
He is actually very swift,can remember a try he scored against Manawatu in the Mitre 10 Cup last year, off a lineout he actually burnt the turbos defence like they were standing still. -
@Canes4life said in Mitre 10 Cup - news, injuries etc:
@Nepia why would he jump ship to a team shitter than the one he's in now?
To get regular starts? To play alongside the best lock in the world?
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@Nepia he is getting regular starts, Plumtree has already stated his reasoning for easing him into the season and it has paid dividends. I saw a video last year of how he always wanted to play for the Canes from a young age so I don't think that will change, unless he has serious beef with someone at the Canes. I think an NPC shift is probably more because he wants to be closer to home for some of the year.
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Okay, so summarised:
New structure: all 14 teams play 10 other teams in one single table. The teams ranked 1-4 after the regular season play semi-finals and a final for the Rugby Cup and the teams ranked 5 - 8 play semi-finals and a final for the Championship Cup.
The consequence of this is that - unlike now - the teams ranked 9 - 14 are done after the regular season. Very often, those teams will be the same provinces, although rankings may differ. For how that works out, I'll use Hawke's Bay as an example.
Under the current structure, the Bay finished 3rd in the Championship division in 2018 and qualified for the semi-finals of that division and only lost by one point. With a bit more luck, we could have played the final and go for silverware.
Under the new structure, we would have finished in 10th place, so season over and no (semi-)finals to play and not competing for a cup.Realistically speaking, some provinces will very rarely play for silverware under the new structure. That will mainly affect - to varying degrees - Otago, Hawke's Bay, Northland, BOP, Manawatu and Southland, unless they somehow manage to climb up the ladder like - for example - Ta$man did a few years ago and stay in that top 8.
Supporters of the top provinces probably won't have a problem with that, but imagine your team missing out almost every year.
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@Stargazer like the blues?
Really that's pro sport, and I don't have a problem with the worst teams being at the bottom, rather than some participation cup. When the division were properly split it made sense, now with cross play, it doesn't imo. I suppose you could go full Monty and have almost everyone in, like the sevens, which I would be happy with
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@Machpants If all provinces, big and small, had an equal chance of finishing 1 - 8, I'd have no problem with it, because rankings could change every year. But in a competition where a reasonably identical group of smaller provinces risk ending up in the bottom 6 of the competition each and every year, I think there should be an opportunity to play for some kind of trophy for them as well. They could, indeed, do that similar to sevens, with the 9 - 12 ranked teams playing for a 3rd Cup, Bowl or Plate of some sort.
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I like the single table structure but NOT the prospect of an uneven draw where everyone doesn't play everyone. That is the worst aspect of Super Rugby when it went to the conference system and why people turned off it.
The 'less strong' provinces in particular have ebbs and flows in their strength through the years and some will get a hard draw in the very year they peak. Vice versa an average team could get into finals due to a favourable draw in comparison to rivals. -
@gt12 said in Mitre 10 Cup - news, injuries etc:
Why not divide into two conferences with the top four teams from each going on to a finals series?
i like that much better than the current format where you play for points against a team in another competition entirely, that never made sense to me.
Reading Stargazer's post below, from my perspective, the entire competition is to see who plays (and in the main, loses to) Canterbury every year. The rest doesn't really mean all that much. When a losing record will get you a Div 2 semi final, is that really a good sporting competition?
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@mariner4life Not sure what you mean with "losing record" here.
from my perspective, the entire competition is to see who plays (and in the main, loses to) Canterbury every year. The rest doesn't really mean all that much.
Then you just don't care about provincial rugby. To me, every game that my team plays matters.
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@Stargazer said in Mitre 10 Cup - news, injuries etc:
@mariner4life Not sure what you mean with "losing record" here.
Theoretically you could make a semi by losing more games than you have won in a season.