fishfoodie wrote: Thu Mar 30, 2023 9:20 pm
Paddington Bear wrote: Thu Mar 30, 2023 12:03 pm
With the 10 team talk not going anywhere that increasingly suggests Newcastle are being lined up as the lamb to be slaughtered.
How low can the League go ?
I mean the pips are already squeaking with the loss of two teams, & their fixtures & the associated gates, so how will losing another fixture possibly be sustained ?
BT, & the ERC, must have clauses in their contracts that link the money they pay out, to the participation, & if the league drops 20% of teams, it's not unreasonable that the broadcasters would reduce their payments by a similar ratio ?
It's a rare case of the Politicians actually doing their jobs & calling the inevitable, potential disaster, & telling the administrators they need to act, & act fast !
Probably to 10 teams. There's a rumour that there's one other side with financial issues but that's just speculation. On TV rights I'm not sure it matters so much - a 10 team league means there doesn't need to be any games during international windows, I can't imagine that a Sunday lunchtime kick off the day after England have played is drawing in BT's larger viewing numbers, and these weekends are a general drag on attendances and therefore ticket/bar/food sales etc anyway. BT never televised Worcester anyway!
In terms of 'we need to act' - what's the solution? Crowds are pretty healthy across the league, there's a good tv deal, the on field product is good and salaries are coming down. The challenge is particularly acute due to covid debts, if the clubs can weather this they ought to be fine in the medium term.
When we look at other club models:
Wales is in a worse state on any metric
France has more resources and men willing to chuck their cash at teams
Scotland has two pro sides underwritten by their governing body, both with average to poor attendances compared to almost all English clubs
Ireland has unique and well discussed advantages, England can't and won't copy the model