Time for a move to
better-weather rugby?
 T HE WIND
blows and the snow snows and once again
Scottish club rugby is facing a mountain of cancelled fixtures
and a season extending into late April or May, well beyond
the mid-March target date set by the clubs last year.
Since the advent of seasonal bad weather before
Christmas, 246 games have been
played with 309 cancelled.
This winter may have been the harshest on record for 30
years, but all recent seasons have had that in common -
they extended into April and May
for weather-related
reasons, from icy roads to hard or waterlogged pitches.
Summer season
While the
SRU’s Championship Committee wrestles with innumerable and unlikely ways to
resolve the fixture backlog, a more level-headed observer might think that it’s
time for a
decisive move to a better-weather season. That indeed is the basis of a new proposal
from FOSRS, the
Forum of Scottish Rugby Supporters.
The
organisation calls for the club season to start in March and run until mid-November,
with a mid-season summer holiday break in August. The winter months would be given
over to international and
cross-border matches.
Free run
One of the
obvious advantages is that the domestic game would suddenly take on a more
attractive and practical shape. Instead of the leagues being interrupted by a dozen
international, cross-border, Cup and standby games,
the clubs would have a free,
uninterrupted run for their fixtures calendar.
It is an
arrangement that should be welcomed with open arms by SRU and clubs alike.
Without competing club matches over the winter months, the SRU could look
forward to
some improvemment in attendance at Murrayfield internationals and Pro team
sorties. All
clubs would enjoy a shorter season, due to the need for fewer
standby dates. And the
Premier clubs would be particularly pleased to have
their age grade internationals and IRB
7s players available for almost the full
league season.
International bonanza
For the
supporter, the move would offer a particularly welcome solution. If not quite beer
and barbeque Saturdays, the amateur end of the game could expect to gain a new,
sunnier lease of life and a welcome income boost. The club season would be followed by
a 19-week bonanza of top-flight international rugby at the better,
more weather-proof
stadiums from mid-November to mid March. As well as the
Autumn Internationals and
6 Nations, fans would have an attractive menu of 10
Magners League and Heineken
Cup matches, the Clubs International clashes and
the pool stages of the new British &
Irish Cup.
There would
even be a 6-week window for the return of an Inter-District championship,
a
traditional shopwindow for club players in the past, which clubs in the Borders
and
Caledonia are keen to see reintroduced.
Technical skills
A switch to
better-weather rugby has been called for by many coaches, including Grand
Slam
architect Jim Telfer. They have long argued that training and playing on muddy
pitches in inclement weather does not lend itself to developing the technical
or attacking
skills that Scottish teams need to compete.
There are
of course arguments against a season change. The ground can be harder in
summer
and risk injury, a number of clubs lose the use of school playing fields and some
players depart for the delights of cricket, athletics and other summer
sports.
However,
FOSRS does not view these as major obstacles. Clubs already play into April
and May and start pre-season training and friendly games in August. The new season
would only require the addition of June and July to the club
calendar. Pitches can be
watered
for the brief period of a Scottish summer and players and school pitches are
already lost after Easter, without any particular impact on the league season,
as clubs
generally have alternative options in place.
10-team leagues
One
side-effect of the change would be to encourage 10-team rather than 12-team leagues, in order to fit
club fixtures comfortably within the new season. The
SRU has reportedly been looking at a variant of this,
splitting 12-teams into two pools at mid season and playing a reduced total of 16 rather than 22 league
fixtures.
Either way,
the Scottish season could change markedly for the better and encourage more players,
volunteers and supporters to participate, in balmier climatic
conditions.
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