Return of the old Sydney jersey the final missing piece of the NRC puzzle

By Brett McKay / Expert

It’s taken until season six, but it certainly appears the penny has dropped within the corridors of NSW Rugby as to the best way of integrating the National Rugby Championship into their professional rugby pathways.

The Rays have made way simply for ‘Sydney’, with the Sydney Rugby Union crest, anchor and all, reborn to take its place as a genuine representative team within the NRC this season.

And it’s not just the SRU anchor. The old-school royal blue jersey with the two gold stripes across the chest and, wait for it, a GOLD COLLAR is back as well.

How good?! Rugby jerseys with collars again!

All that this picture needs is for NSW Country to forget small details like the Laws of the game and run the famous circa-1975 ‘ball up the jumper’ set play again, when the two teams meet at Apex Oval in Dubbo to kick off the 2019 NRC season on Saturday.

The return of the SRU logo and jersey to top-flight Australian rugby is significant, and in many ways, it could be the last missing piece that finally legitimises the NRC in the eyes of rugby fans in the harbour city.

While the Queensland Rugby Union saw the obvious benefits of giving new life to the old Brisbane City and Queensland Country brands from day one of the NRC back in 2014, the landscape within NSW has been one of shifting sands and shrinking ambitions.

Charles Abel of Sydney. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

Four NSW-based teams were required when the competition was born five years ago to reflect the strength of the game in the country’s most populous state, we were told at the time.

Then three teams made more sense from a not-wanting-to-spread-the-talent-too-thin perspective for the next few seasons. For the last few years, two independent teams with more input from the Waratahs was going to make the big difference.

This year, though, the change is real. For many seasons, the evident lack of buy-in of the Waratahs – even when they said they were – has been the biggest bugbear of the NRC, and is almost certainly a major reason why the competition just hasn’t been able to gain any traction in Sydney.

If the state’s Super Rugby side doesn’t seem to give a ‘rats’ about the NRC, why should the average supporter?

This season is already very different.

For one thing, the announcement back in July of the Sydney and NSW Country coaches – Waratahs assistant Chris Whittaker and Sydney Uni’s Premiership coach Rob Taylor, respectively – was actually the first major piece of NRC news for the upcoming season.

But it was back then that we also learned that the Sydney Rays are no more as an organisation, with the new Sydney side coming firmly under the umbrella of NSW Rugby.

The Eagles will remain nominally under the banner of the NSW Country Rugby Union, but like the Queensland teams have done since day dot out of Ballymore, both teams will operate and train out of the Waratahs base at the University of NSW in Sydney’s eastern suburbs.

After the Queenslanders have claimed three NRC title in five seasons, NSW Rugby have realised that that two-team in-house model might be worth following after all.

And it’s had a impact on how the squads have been formed already, too.

In previous seasons, even as the number of Sydney-based teams decreased, there were still loose geographical leanings in play, with the four north shore clubs – who were in a joint venture, in fairness – supplying to the Sydney Rays, and with Randwick, Eastern Suburbs, and Sydney Uni to NSW Country, who were also getting first crack at players of country NSW origin.

In 2019, the only real criteria in place is that the country origin players are still aligned to the Eagles. After that, the allocation and distribution of contracted players is much more strategic. Which, of course, is exactly what the Queensland Rugby Union do with the Reds players.

And just as is the case north of the Tweed, it remains true that non-country-origin players will pull on a Country jersey. That was always going to be the case when there aren’t enough country-origin players to fill a squad.

But even if you just focus on the halves, you can see the planning in place.

Scrumhalf Jake Gordon remains with NSW Country, while the next no.9 in line for the Waratahs, Mitch Short, will play for Sydney. Exciting young playmakers Will Harrison and Ben Donaldson will pull on the collared royal blue jersey, while the chronically underprepared Mack Mason will again run out in Country orange.

Are NSW sides borrowing a Queensland strategy? (Photo by Brett Hemmings/Getty Images)

You can see it in the other positions, too, and it just makes obvious sense.

Beyond all this though, the return of the old Sydney jumper brings the last little bit of meaning to the NRC for those who lamented the ‘made-up names’ of the competition’s first few seasons.

Never mind that even the oldest names were made up at some point, if what Sydney rugby fans really want is meaning, then there really can’t be much more meaning than the blue jersey, the gold collar, and the anchor crest.

And if that’s enough for people in Sydney to get on board and start watching what has always been great rugby to watch played at the great rugby grounds around the country that we love, then that’s fantastic.

This weekend: Saturday (all times AEST)
12:00pm NSW Country vs Sydney; Apex Oval, Dubbo
1:30pm Melbourne vs Canberra; Box Hill Rugby Club, Melbourne
3:00pm Brisbane City vs Fiji; GPS Rugby, Ashgrove
5:00pm Western Force vs Queensland Country; McGillivray Oval, University of Western Australia

Full NRC fixture

The Crowd Says:

2019-09-02T01:11:08+00:00

El Gamba

Roar Guru


That app, rugby Xplorer, is excellent. Highlights for all games and match replays. Thanks mate.

2019-09-01T13:35:03+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Brett - bully for you.

2019-09-01T10:52:55+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


leaving Super rugby players needing to be replaced I think he means: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_2019%E2%80%9320_Super_Rugby_transfers About 30 each from oz and nz going north to Europe or Japan, 35 SA players. Imagine Wales and Ireland both losing 30 significant players from their comps every season.. Dont think theyd be knocking on no. 1 for much longer :laughing:

AUTHOR

2019-09-01T10:28:45+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


I don't quite get this as a criticism? How many departing players are you talking about?

AUTHOR

2019-09-01T10:27:53+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Sheek, I don't care if you're excited about the Sydney jersey or not. I just don't. Even though it's exatcly the kind of meaning you've been droaning on about for years, and which I think is fantastic that NSW have finally realised the error of their ways and made their NRC sides representative teams, you will still find something else to moan about. And I certainly don't care about your continually misguided lecturing about rugby in Canberra. Watch it, don't watch it; I don't care.

AUTHOR

2019-09-01T10:22:44+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


World Rugby are funding the Drua's participation in the NRC, Thugby, not Rugby Australia.

AUTHOR

2019-09-01T10:22:04+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Thugby, you can't have looked very hard, Fox Sport showed the NSW Country-Sydney game on Saturday, and will show one game every weekend. But now Kayo Sports (owned by Foxtel) are showing all four games every weekend - so your opening comment is well wide of the mark. Additionally, rugby.com.au are also showing all four games every week. Anyway, early days yet, but the LVs seemed to work pretty well, with the 50-22 kick option opening up some attacking opportunities that teams didn't have previously, which in turn will change the way teams defend their backfield. But we also wouldn't have seen more than 3 or 4 in any one game, so I don't think they'll be as big an impact as may have been thought..

AUTHOR

2019-09-01T10:17:16+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


We certainly saw plenty of young guys on both sides of the NSW Country-Sydney contest on Saturday, Luke, but a bit of competition for places isn't a bad thing for them. And more importantly, the guys that played on the weekend player very well..

AUTHOR

2019-09-01T10:15:37+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


EG, there's a couple of ways: - Fox are broadcasting one game per week - Kayo Sports are doing all four games every week, and - rugby.com.au are also showing all four games per week - and I discovered on the weekend, that this extends to the mobile Rugby Explorer app, which doubles as an up-to-date club rugby scorecard around the country during the season. So it's actually never been easier to watch! :happy:

AUTHOR

2019-09-01T10:13:00+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Well Ray, if every NRC game this year is as good as NSW Country-Sydney was on Saturday, I think we'll be in for a treat..

AUTHOR

2019-09-01T10:11:50+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


It's funny, Moondoggie, I actually thought the coverage had been pretty reasonably spread this week, with good write-ups in Sydney even! Plenty of the U20s stars standing out over the first weekend..

2019-09-01T05:50:46+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Yep, he's the Easts and U-20's number 8. Played solidly for NSW Country yesterday. Tahs obviously still have Wells and Dempsey, as well as another U-20's number 8 in Pat Tafa. I was just listing out Tahs primary lineout targets, which is the guys above plus Holloway and Staniforth.

2019-09-01T05:10:50+00:00

ThugbyFan

Roar Guru


Jez, do you mean Will Harris, the tall #8 from the Beasties? Has potential but I cannot see them dropping M.Wells at this stage but Harris should get time in SR2020 coming off the bench. And yes, you are dead right as Tahs seem to be overflowing with backrowers but are skinny on tough 2nd rowers to shake things up. R.Simmons and N.Flanigan with J.Hollaway from the bench are not quite a locking group to strike fear into any SR team. :unhappy:

2019-09-01T03:57:56+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


He can jump these days (and does) but he'll never be a primary jumper. Still a Tahs pack that has Simmons, Hanigan, Swinton and the new kid Harris (who already looks bigger than Hanigan) in it isn't crying out for a lineout lock, they need a hard shoulder on the clean out and in the carry.

2019-09-01T03:42:57+00:00

AndyS

Guest


How is it a trial if you don't put them up against the best available? Anyone realistically in the frame for a professional contract would already be playing, so if you excluded players soon to leave all you'd be replacing the with are amateurs already judged as not there yet for the NRC. That isn't who you need to see the next gen SR players up against.

2019-09-01T01:10:57+00:00

Hhmmm

Guest


Why are nrc teams using players that won’t be available next year ? I would have thought that players leaving for overseas should be non selected and other club options would be looked at. Isn’t this the virtue of this Comp ie trialing new talent ?

2019-08-31T08:47:10+00:00

nufz

Guest


22/07/1992 All Blacks vs. Sydney at Sydney, lost 17 - 40

2019-08-31T08:44:54+00:00

nufz

Guest


a while ago & not a win but pretty good. 31/05/1980 All Blacks vs. Sydney at Sydney, draw 13 - 13

2019-08-31T01:13:12+00:00

Pickett

Guest


Bring. Back. The. COLLARS!!

2019-08-30T23:02:13+00:00

Machooka

Roar Guru


sheek... please leave my kids outta this. Surely, they can't help it if their g/parents live in Yass... which is almost a suburb of Canberra, eh. And, ummm... you are the guy from 1945! :silly:

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar