So the WRU are worried about falling attendances at Rugby matches. It should come as no surprise to them
because no thought has been given to the person who braves the elements and
actually wants to watch a game in the flesh.
At the international level, admission prices have soared and
the average rugby fan does not think it is a bargain to have to travel on
overcrowded trains or pay exorbitant car parking fees to mix with the drunken
hordes that gather in Cardiff.
As a debenture holder, I still attend every home match but, rugby apart, the
enjoyment is waning. It is evident to me that the people who actually watch
rugby at club level and have attempted to understand the ever more complicated
laws of the game are in the minority. This is evidenced by the shouting and
bawling of absurd comments often using foul language. On top of this a large
proportion of the match is taken up either letting people pass with trays of
drink or inevitably making a trip to empty overflowing bladders. The WRU would
argue that they still manage to fill the ground for most matches so why worry.
At the
regional level, attendances are generally low and the majority of games take
place in cavernous stadia with little atmosphere. It is a wonder that the TV
companies do not feel the need to dub on canned crowd noise. We have ended up
with four regional franchises that are divided into two pairs with stadia that
are only separated by about ten miles. The games are played on an ever-changing
mixture of days and kick off times to suit the TV and of course virtually all
are televised live. Most fans I talk to would prefer to plan their lives around
attending a rugby match on a Saturday afternoon. The concentrated nature of the
locations of the regional teams and their reluctance to travel to play in other
parts of their region means that the regional teams are restricting their
fan-base. With games televised, high admission prices, rising fuel costs and
limited parking it is no wonder that fans are quite content to watch at home or
in the local pub. If this was not bad enough, two of the regions are based in
soccer dominated cities where they will always come a poor second in terms of
attendances. One of the joys of attending rugby matches was the chance to
mingle with opposition fans but away attendance has also dwindled with
the RaboDirect Pro League.
There is
still Premiership rugby in the regions you will say. Unfortunately this too is
gravitating towards the South leaving large swathes of our rugby hinterland
unrepresented even at this level. The recent WRU plan to reduce the Premiership
to ten clubs from fourteen with four of these teams based in the same place as
the regional team and two actually playing on the same ground (with another
likely to move in the same direction) actively encouraged this. It was pleasing
to see that they back-tracked on this ill-conceived plan and allowed Carmarthen
Quins and Bridgend (incidentally two of the more southerly based clubs) to
remain in the league. This still leaves, for example, the whole of Gwent east
of Newport unrepresented including the Eastern
and Western Valleys that have long been a breeding
ground for Welsh rugby talent. Think of Pontypool,
Ebbw Vale, Newbridge and Abertillery and you think of tough forwards like
Graham Price, Clive Burgess, Clive Davies and Alun Pask. There was a plan to
include North Wales too but this seems to have
been ditched somewhere along the way. It is barmy to go forward on this basis. It is even more barmy when you consider that the WRU are still dithering about what to do with the game at regional level
If these
sides are good enough they will rise to the top in our league structure you
might argue. The plan is to ring fence the Premiership for the foreseeable
future so no hope of that happening. The WRU in its wisdom decided to reduce
the number of clubs to improve the standard by concentrating the better
players. Take this to its logical conclusion and we could end up with just a
league of regional second teams. The basis on which the original ten (and now
twelve) was chosen was a complicated mixture of the quality of facilities,
playing record and a host of other factors. The standard of facilities required
was overblown and the position that a side achieves in the Premiership would
seem to be determined by how deep their sponsors’ pockets are and how many
regional players are released to play for them. It does not seem that the heart
and soul of the cub, the number of members and supporters, has been taken into
account as some of the clubs that have been selected could never be described
as well supported. The upshot of the reduction to twelve clubs will probably be
even less people watching rugby and a decline in interest and participation in
previously highly productive parts of Wales. The Premiership has been
badly organised from the outset with no one quite sure what was going to happen
at the end of the season even halfway though it. The current situation with
half of the league playing Anglo-Irish cup matches and the other half playing
league matches is a good example of poor planning. What is the bottom half of
the league going to do while the top half are catching up on league matches?
Then we have the play-offs at the end of the season again for the top clubs.
The lower half of the league is just not playing enough rugby and this is
unsatisfactory for both the players and the spectators. I believe that too many
promising young players are spending their time in the gym, on the practice
ground and sat on the bench rather than getting match-hardened - maybe this
would even reduce the number of injuries.
Would it
not be a better approach to give more young players the opportunity to play at
this level and rub shoulders with professionals and expand the league to
sixteen and ditch the unpopular Anglo-Irish Cup - incidentally the size of the
Western Mail Championship in the glory days of Welsh rugby? We should think carefully
about spreading these clubs geographically about the regions to try and correct
the current unbalanced situation even if it needs a re-evaluation of the way
the WRU’s money is distributed. You will say we cannot turn back time and
things have moved on. They may have moved on but is it at the cost of damaging
the roots of Welsh Rugby and perpetuating a downward spiral? We should be
taking advantage of the positivity from the recent performances of the national
team in New Zealand and in the 6 Nations Championship
and trying to grow the game not shrink it.