Wobbly Waratahs must deliver as Aussie crowds crumble

By Will Knight / Expert

If the paltry crowd at the Brumbies’ home game last week made jaws drop, there’s a good chance the forecast fan count at Allianz Stadium on Saturday night will make plenty more squirm.

Fan numbers are in freefall at Australia’s Super Rugby fixtures, and all while the Western Force stick the middle finger up to Rugby Australia – and anyone else who thought their axing last year was a good idea – with some solid crowds at their World Series Rugby openers.

In Canberra last Saturday night when the Brumbies hosted the Melbourne Rebels at GIO Stadium, there were 5283 die-hards. It’s a woeful figure that’s barely believable almost a week later.

Not that the Rebels are themselves immune to such a thin crowd: they got 5538 just five weeks ago when the Jaguares visited.

Melbourne had also reeled in 16,135 a week earlier against the Hurricanes at AAMI Stadium – proving how bipolar the Victorian rugby crowds can be.

Perhaps more pertinent is it proves a big win will beat any slick marketing tagline when trying to sell tickets; the Rebels were coming off a 46-14 thrashing of the Sharks at home.

Which is why the Waratahs, on a three-match losing streak, will likely struggle to get 10,000 in Sydney on Saturday night against the Highlanders.

And the vibe could’ve been so different had they forged on to victory from a 29-0 lead over the Crusaders in Christchurch. ‘The Streak’ would’ve been dead and buried at 38 against the Kiwi teams – and ended against the defending champions.

It would’ve been an appropriate antidote for Australian rugby only a few hours after the Sunwolves hammered the Queensland Reds. Israel Folau would’ve been welcomed back with open arms; not a man-love hug, but a simple celebratory embrace.

Curtis Rona (Photo by Kai Schwoerer/Getty Images)

But now the Tahs are faced with already fickle fans becoming more disengaged as the season goes on – and one that following the removal of the Force, started with so much hope that the consolidation of talent was going to lift Aussie rugby.

Will the Waratahs crowd drop below the dreaded 10,000 mark?

They might be struggling to match the crowd turning up at the Shute Shield local derby between Manly and Warringah at Manly Oval the same afternoon.

Will they even announce a crowd figure? Bizarrely, no crowd figure has been made official at three home games this year, against the Rebels, Lions and Blues. It was estimated there were about 15,000 at Brookvale Oval for the clash with the Blues but maybe the figures at the other two Allianz Stadium encounters were too unpalatable to release. The secrecy is strange and naturally invites suspicion.

The record for the lowest-ever Waratahs home crowd was set last year when 10,555 fans rocked up for the loss to the now-defunct Southern Kings.

It’s hard to think that those Tahs fans that spent their Saturday night at Moore Park four weeks ago as their team got strangled by the Lions 29-0 will be itching to get back to the venue.

The Sydney Swans are playing next door at the SCG at the same time too. The last time that happened – on the same night as the Lions flogging – the Swans got 38,000 up against the Adelaide Crows.

It’s been a steady decline in Tahs crowds since the title-winning year of 2014, with the average home crowd from last season sitting at 14,500. That will almost certainly fall again this year.

At least the seats are the right colour. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

The Waratahs and RA can ill-afford to be coming up short on gate takings. The both still want to re-sign Michael Hooper, Folau and Bernard Foley over the next few months. And it also means unlikely they will have the money and resources to aggressively address the mini-crisis in western Sydney following the demise of the Penrith Emus.

Waratahs fans are crying out for a performance they can get buzzing about. Time is running out this season. They were close in Christchurch, not to mention mightily unlucky given all the dud calls they copped. Folau was enormous then and he’s most likely to light it up again.

But you get the feeling a decent chunk of Tahs fans would love for Folau to fail on the field given his social media gay repenting crusade. A few more defeats and a few more Folau tweets and there’s the chance things might get a bit more toxic.

However there’s also plenty to be optimistic about heading into the next three games before the June Test break. A big win over the Highlanders would win back some fans, although as the following games are away against the Chiefs in Waikato and Reds in Brisbane, they won’t be able to immediately capitalise at home.

Two losses out of the next three games and the Waratahs will be relying on the Wallabies knocking over Six Nations champions Ireland to ensure some goodwill filters down to the last sector of their Super Rugby campaign.

The Crowd Says:

2018-05-20T10:04:12+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


As opposed to you who has no thoughts of his own.

2018-05-20T10:00:12+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Bang on the Brumbies marketing is atrocious. Licenced venues don't get fixtures from the Brumbies and Foxsports so need to be reminded by customers the game was on. Media partners who sponsor the team don't promote the games and the players.

2018-05-20T09:53:57+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Most of the extra 30 million went to prop up the Rebels, pay outs and consultants. The grassroots have seen little increase in funding.

2018-05-20T09:50:48+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Even when the SA teams bar the Sharks were bankable bonus point wins away from SA the Boks still formed a strong side on paper.

2018-05-20T09:42:52+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Free only to junior players

2018-05-20T09:41:34+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


No Cameron as per the board minutes it was decided in October 2016.

2018-05-20T09:39:37+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Rubbish Bill.

2018-05-20T09:35:09+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


The window doesn't cover the whole of the 4 Nations. Du Preez and Habana were only able a portion of the competition.

2018-05-20T09:33:16+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Carter was the same age at the RWC.

2018-05-20T09:31:53+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Tomane needs to lose a lot of weight.

2018-05-19T08:15:10+00:00

Malo

Guest


7000 at ladies day at Easts vs Uni d. Great day, tribal rugby ?. None of this pre maddona loser crap.

2018-05-19T07:28:50+00:00

Ken Catchpole’s Other Leg

Guest


Great post, Ed. Especially the bit about the rugby media letting Cheika get away with rubbish responses to the number 10 question. It is our code, not Cheika’s fiefdom, no? Between Cheika and Thorn I predict that we will see the end of the ‘sole selector’ clause in coach contracts. Who is your first choice 10 Mr Cheika? Second, third and fourth choice? And what is your logic for this opinion? Ditto to Mr Thorn. Our coaches are not so much lunatics in charge of the asylum, as much as teenagers on work experience, on seriously big coin, and no one to answer to.

2018-05-19T06:36:00+00:00

MH01

Guest


Problem is out society at present, everything is “hate speach” . So if you don’t like something , you just have to call it hate speach. My questions is, do people know what a facist is ? Key words are , forcible suppression of opposition and control - and categorising so much as “hate speach “ these days is enabling facist behaviour in media . Problem I think is that people don’t understand free speach - it’s only free speach as long as they don’t hear certain words . That is control .....

2018-05-19T00:30:44+00:00

romiley rider

Guest


are all AUS rugby crowds down because not enough kids are playing/interested in rugby? kids usually bug parents to take them to games(mine did). I see a lot of families at NZ and SA games and only a sprinkling here?? may be the kids have too many options here....... whilst AUS rugby has no $$$ we will head deeper into the abyss. bring on Shute Shield Rugby........

2018-05-18T22:38:18+00:00

Simon_Sez

Roar Guru


I agree with Paul Cully from the Sydney Morning Herald. Australia should pull out of Super Rugby. I too agree the Super party is over and it is time to everyone to go home. Super Rugby was built to keep the Wallabies competitive. Super Rugby is killing the game in Australia and the supporter base. The trajectory for the Wallabies in the long term has a strong chance to be complete failure if there is no support locally. Australia and the Wallabies in my opinion will more competitive on the world stage in the long term if one really cares, with a strong vibrant domestic competition coupled with an enthusiastic growing player base. I think it is time for RA to pass this signal onto NZ & SA that we have had enough and wish them good luck. We can easily grow the game in Australia and expand it to the Pacific nations and Asia. Australia is not a surrogate of NZ. It is Australia where the population and money is ..not NZ. RA needs to flex its muscles. Australia has no choice.

2018-05-18T21:06:32+00:00

i miss the force

Guest


absolutely hideous idea. sometimes think before writing , Johnno?

2018-05-18T21:04:58+00:00

i miss the force

Guest


Ex force fan to be the CEO! one of the great minds

2018-05-18T21:01:37+00:00

i miss the force

Guest


yeah, the fact that tickets are free and only 2 protest games means nothing

2018-05-18T21:00:45+00:00

i miss the force

Guest


maybe you should become CEO? yu seem to have simple easy answers but i am guessing your boss still needs you to clean the toilets

2018-05-18T20:59:09+00:00

i miss the force

Guest


sounds sustainable.

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