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Heartlands League |
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Richard Lowther
Coaching staff Moderator Joined: 19 May 2007 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 6605 |
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Posted: 19 Jul 2020 at 15:56 |
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Anyone want to comment, speculate, praise, moan on the article in today's Rugby Paper about plans for a 16 team Heartlands League?
Gist is two pools of 8, top four go into Cup format, bottom four fight it out to avoid relegation. Also combined XV to play touring Tier 2 sides. No mention of automatic promotion for winners.
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Robb
World Cup Winner Joined: 24 Jan 2017 Location: South East Status: Offline Points: 1595 |
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Not another provincial style system....
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Dalesman
World Cup Winner Joined: 22 May 2007 Location: Yorkshire Status: Offline Points: 673 |
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Not enough home games to keep the Treasurers happy.
But I like the concept. |
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cheshire exile
World Cup Winner Joined: 05 Feb 2009 Status: Offline Points: 2523 |
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In what way is it a “provincial style system”??
It makes a lot of sense to me, provided enough Nat1 clubs can be persuaded to regard it as a worthwhile objective. Regionalising the first stage would reduce travelling costs significantly for many clubs and getting rid of the Championship Cup would be very welcome. The question of promotion is frankly being taken out of the Championship clubs’ hands. This proposal also reflects the fact that RFU funding is likely to disappear altogether and that the gap between Premiership and Championship likely to widen further with CVC’s involvement. According to Paul Myners’ report, 100 Premiership players are currently paid £300k per season or more. Hopefully promotion to the Premiership can be kept on the table, even if it’s not guaranteed every season, but in light of the RFU’s recent behaviour and the pandemic there is no way the Championship clubs can just sit and leave the competition unchanged beyond next season.
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Hopping Mad
World Cup Winner Joined: 14 Dec 2009 Status: Offline Points: 1019 |
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Next season going to be a “complete disaster” and Championship clubs have lost faith in the RFU to make appropriate decisions. The funding for Championship will end at completion of 20/21 season and when Sarries are promoted it will then be a ringfenced 13.
There will be no route left open. If it is PRL will breakaway itself. When it’s confirmed the Championship clubs will lead a breakaway of their own. View that RFU will do a deal that will allow PRL to keep TV revenues in future in return for reduced RFU subsidy for supporting the “13”. The Championship wants to run the “Heartland” competition which would comprise the National Leagues. Lots of clubs see if the NCA as irrelevant as it’s delivered no improvement in profile, revenues or sustainability as a whole. Discussions between clubs at all levels been ongoing now for weeks. Reason for regional conferences is to level up the representation to ensure buy in and attract more national and regional sponsors to pool monies into one pot. In return clubs will only be able to join if they agree to strict criteria on facilities, infrastructure etc. Some current clubs aren’t going to be given long to get up to speed. Clear division on salary cap levels still to be resolved. This will not be a full time professional entity. It will be semi pro with club sustainability at the forefront.
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JonDee
World Cup Winner Joined: 25 May 2007 Location: Nottingam Status: Offline Points: 1395 |
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prior to making any comment could someone post a link please
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gerg_861
World Cup Winner Joined: 11 Jun 2017 Location: Ealing Status: Online Points: 2729 |
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This was just in The Rugby Paper today, so I don't think that a public link will be available until next week. It is interesting that the article stated that their plan was to "get back to grassroots" and "away from being a business.", however the way that they've put together these proposals, circulated them, and gotten out in front of whatever the RFU might have been planning (probably nothing but more malicious neglect), was a very business-oriented way of thinking. I applaud the clubs involved for seeing the writing on the wall and taking the initiative. I'm also a fan of the minimum ground standards. My highschool in a town of 500 people in the US had floodlights for our American Football games; if you can't achieve that, then I don't think there's enough ambition to compete in level 2. In terms of number of teams/pro vs. semi-pro, I can only say that I'd be a fan of anything that gave meaningful games on a regular schedule. The cup just wasn't working, and last year's schedule sometimes caused teams to go a month without a home game.
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Hopping Mad
World Cup Winner Joined: 14 Dec 2009 Status: Offline Points: 1019 |
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Also need to forget of this new structure as being “Level 2”.
The Championship will be dead. The pro game will have sailed off into the distance. This is a new club structure led by the clubs for the clubs.
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Camquin
World Cup Winner Joined: 01 Jun 2007 Location: Cambridge Status: Offline Points: 11491 |
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Why not a top level National League with sixteen teams made up of the 11 Championship clubs (10 if Ealing get included in the Premiership) and the top National 1 sides.
Then regionalise below that if wanted. And if any of the Championship sides want to step down to the regional tier I am sure there would be Nat 1 sides who would be prepared to step up. We are used to a National league with no support. Actually many clubs find getting sponsors easier when in a National League. As the the NCA's ability to promote the game, I am not sure FDR have done any better. However, John Inverdale has stated that he will make promotion of the game a priority. Let's give him a little time. |
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Sweeney Delenda Est
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Raider999
World Cup Winner Joined: 18 Jan 2013 Location: Crawley Status: Offline Points: 4488 |
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Doesn't the RFU survey indicate teams only want a maximum of 14 teams in a division? |
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RAID ON
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Raider999
World Cup Winner Joined: 18 Jan 2013 Location: Crawley Status: Offline Points: 4488 |
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It will still be level 2 |
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RAID ON
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Camquin
World Cup Winner Joined: 01 Jun 2007 Location: Cambridge Status: Offline Points: 11491 |
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The point of self determination is to ask the question to the correct constituency.
And that survey did not include the Championship clubs.
But if there are 20 clubs and 800 players who want to be in a sixteen team National league that is enough to fill it and ensure there are plenty competing to replace them. If the players need breaks, they could play into May as their players would not be playing in the County Championship. As I understand it breaks were the main reason most wanted 28 games plus the county championship. This does not prevent the remaining clubs from having 14 team leagues. Indeed one sixteen team league and three 14 team leagues would take fifty eight teams, which as there are currently sixty Championship and National 1 sides Which would put the Regional Premiership and some of the Regional 1 sides and possibly some second XVs filling the next tier. Which if we follow a pattern would be nine leagues of 14. And if I was drawing up the tables, everyone else in county leagues: thus keeping the Lancastian sides happy and bring them back into the pyramid. But fortunately I am not involved in organisation as it is obviously more complex than I can comprehend. |
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Sweeney Delenda Est
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JonDee
World Cup Winner Joined: 25 May 2007 Location: Nottingam Status: Offline Points: 1395 |
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The Championship has been dead since it was forced on the clubs by the RFU Council, from Wikipedia which is basically true On 10 November 2008 it was proposed by the Rugby Football Union that the second tier of the English rugby union system should be a fully professional twelve club Championship. The proposal was criticised by the then National League One chairman Geoff Irvine, representing the clubs, who described it as "financial suicide", although six League One clubs subsequently supported the proposal. The proposals required five clubs to be relegated to National Division Two, with only one club being promoted from that division and one club joining the league from the Premiership.[2] On 15 November 2008 the RFU Council voted overwhelmingly in favour of the new proposal, which began in September 2009.[3] Under the proposal the RFU paid £2.3 million a year to help fund the change, with future rises due through television rights.[2] The last comment re TV rights is the most laughable |
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Richard Lowther
Coaching staff Moderator Joined: 19 May 2007 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 6605 |
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The game needed to change before the current pandemic at all levels but people are slow to recognise the fact.
The pandemic has opened peoples eyes and closed others wallets and will hopefully act as a catalyst for that change. We can all debate what that change will look like but i guarantee no one will fully accept what ever is proposed but I hope all clubs survive to participate in whatever new structure emerges.
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Halliford
World Cup Winner Joined: 17 Feb 2010 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 4250 |
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This might upset a few posters but I do think the RFU has handled the crisis pretty well. They are constrained by the agreement with PRL which was poorly conceived and didn’t see this coming (!). So far few Clubs have taken advantage of their loan funding or other support. Most NCA Clubs have, like mine, used the Government grant and furlough schemes to manage our cash flow. My club has lost approx £160k in revenue so far but remain in operation and looking ahead.
NCA Clubs have learned to live without RFU money and until international matches with full crowds can be staged, many more Clubs will have to live on their own resources. Wales is in an even worse position!
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Camp Freddie
British and Irish Lion Joined: 04 Jul 2018 Location: Lancs Status: Offline Points: 153 |
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Camquin, after the recent webinars I think that putting 2nd XVs in leagues in the North will have the effect of more clubs leaving the pyramid than rejoining.
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The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom.
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islander
World Cup Winner Joined: 17 Mar 2010 Location: jersey Status: Offline Points: 7627 |
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Link to Sunday's TRP front page article...
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Rabbie Burns
World Cup Winner Joined: 18 Jul 2007 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 3359 |
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First I have seen that and the formula seems okay. In Nat 1 we have operated in 16 team leagues for a while now and it works. Would prefer it rejiggeda little to spread the free weekends out so it’s not stop-start after Christmas. The mute point is always about player welfare but I think very few players played in all 30 games
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So many Christians not enough Lions
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islander
World Cup Winner Joined: 17 Mar 2010 Location: jersey Status: Offline Points: 7627 |
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The proposed Heartland league may have 16 teams, but does that necessarily mean teams would play 30 games? In some conference arrangements elsewhere I believe teams play H/A against teams in their own conference while having just one game against teams from the other conference... more likely, surely, if play-offs were to be added? Although that might mean the end of the Championship Cup, which could lead to massive nationwide upset...
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Camquin
World Cup Winner Joined: 01 Jun 2007 Location: Cambridge Status: Offline Points: 11491 |
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Not a lot more detail. Why would a National One side want to be promoted to a competition that seems to only offers 14 games. How on earth could that generate sufficient income. What is the divisional championship - how does that relate to the heartland championship. Is that the current national Leauges If you do have two pools I think the Northern Pool is Ampthill Bedford Coventry Chinnor Doncaster Harpury Jersey Nottingham Jersey becuae someone has to come North and once you have to fly you may as well fly to East Midlands or manchester as Gatwick. The South have the London clubs, Rams and Pirates and if not Saracens then Plymouth. Tough of course the exact sides promoted will depend on next seasons results and could be very different. And yes I know I have utterly discounted Leeds Tykes.
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Sweeney Delenda Est
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