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Opinion

Super Rugby shake-up: How 19 rounds, top-six finals, and Origin-style Tests would look

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Roar Rookie
25th September, 2022
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2441 Reads

On paper, 2022 has looked pretty bleak for Australian rugby.

With just three wins from seven Tests, the Wallabies have slipped to ninth in the World Rugby rankings – their lowest ever position – and are facing one of the toughest challenges this weekend when they travel to Eden Park.

They’ll then recoup to face Scotland, France, Italy, Ireland, and Wales on a blockbuster Spring tour where wins (excluding the Azzuri) will be at a premium.

Meanwhile, the Wallaroos have managed just one win from their seven outings – a 36-19 scramble against Fijiana in early May – and would be disappointed not to have accounted for Japan and USA ahead of their upcoming Rugby World Cup campaign.

Coach Jay Tregonning has set a quarter-final benchmark for his team but few are expecting the still-amateur Wallaroos to push for a top-four berth against professional outfits like the Red Roses and Black Ferns in New Zealand.

But from where I’m standing, there’s something stirring in the heart of our game.

And it feels fantastic.

With over 1 million viewers tuning into last week’s Bledisloe thriller and average home crowds in 2022 exceeding 44,000, we’re seeing more and more spectators return to the fold.

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We’re seeing our world-class men’s and women’s sevens teams taking home silverware, renewed interest in clubland footy with Brisbane’s Hospital Cup in particularly rude health, and a growing community of content creators doing their part to spread the game online.

The likes of The Rugby Column, Rugby Bloke, Pick and Drive, and Green and Gold Rugby have been extremely active over the past few months and it’s bloody good to see and hear rugby news and views coming through on a daily basis.

People are talking about the rugby – and it’s not just punters here on The Roar or fan-run accounts.

Bernard Foley of the Wallabies kicks the ball during The Rugby Championship & Bledisloe Cup match between the Australia Wallabies and the New Zealand All Blacks at Marvel Stadium on September 15, 2022 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Morgan Hancock/Getty Images)

Bernard Foley of the Wallabies (Photo by Morgan Hancock/Getty Images)

Work colleagues are bailing me up to talk about the Bledisloe.

My old schoolmates who lean towards league have stopped hanging shit on union and started chatting Wallaby selections. Even my parents and siblings have shaken off decades of Wallaby-induced trauma and are cautiously tuning in to Channel Nine to catch our Aussie men and women in action.

We’re a little behind our Northern Hemisphere brothers and sisters but we’re seeing a renewed appetite for top-tier rugby in Australia. And with more eyeballs on our code heading into two world cups (plus the 2025 Lions tour and home RWC 2027/29 around the corner) it’s time for Rugby Australia and SANZAR to give them more to look at.

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So let’s give it to them. More games, fairer draws, and a finals system that rewards those who finish on top.

Here are a few suggestions to get the ball rolling…

A 19-round regular season
Super Rugby Pacific is still young and far from any expansion talks but extending the regular season from 15 to 19 games would be an excellent start.

A 19-round Super Rugby Pacific would hand all teams nine home and away games (plus Super Round) and see each franchise play each other once over the first 11 rounds.

Teams would then play four more sides from each pool (Australia vs Fiji and New Zealand vs Moana) to ensure a relatively balanced draw.

I’m sure the sides would much prefer to play the Drua or Moana twice as opposed to Brumbies or Crusaders but you get that on the big jobs – and it’s a damn sight fairer than playing teams exclusively from your so-called pool.

I’d also proposed that Super Round’s location alternate between Australia, NZ and Fiji every year on the three-year cycle.

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But already we’ve got four more rounds and a more balanced draw to lock in some eyeballs – how good.

The finals
Next up, I’m looking at finals.

Stuff the quarter-final system – it’s brilliant at a World Cup but it doesn’t reward teams for finishing up top and hardly seems fair to include the seventh and eighth-ranked sides in a 12-team comp.

So I’m proposing a top six. Call it Super Six.

The format would mirror the old McIntyre top-six system (see below) and ensures first and second are suitably rewarded with a double chance and two-week final incentive.

It achieves this reward without taking opportunities away from third and fourth to host up to two finals each (with fifth also a shot at hosting a semi).

Week 1 – elimination final A: third vs sixth, and elimination final B: fourth vs fifth
Week 2 – major semi-final: first vs second, and minor semi-final: winner of elimination final A vs winner of Elimination final B
Week 3 – preliminary final: loser of major semi-final vs winner of minor semi-final
Week 4 – grand final: winner of major semi-final vs winner of preliminary final

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(Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

Origin-style Test break
There’s a lot we can learn from our rival code, particularly when it comes to rep rugby, and one takeaway from the Thursday Bledisloe was audience numbers.

For that reason alone, I’d trial two of the three mid-year internationals on a Wednesday night (similar to Origin) and have the touring series spread between Round 10 and 13 of Super Rugby Pacific (see table below).

Not only would we see whether a mid-week crowd has long-term viability, but we would also empower fringe Super Rugby players to step up and fill the void of international reps.

It also generates additional hype for The Rugby Championship later in the year and plenty of media attention around Wallabies camp and movements while the Super Rugby cogs keep turning, which leads me nicely into…

Super W crossover
In an ideal world, I’d have every Super W game running the same day, in the same venue as an SRP fixture.

Whether it’s scheduled before or after the men, I’m not fussed. Mix it up – it’s still two for the price of one and puts the girls in the same space and rarefied air. They belong on the big stage.

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The Super W comp would align with the first ten rounds of SRP before a two-week finals series culminating in a grand final opening for the Wallabies’ second mid-year Test during a Super bye Round.

Put the boys in the arvo and give the girls primetime with a full crowd from the Test. God knows they deserve it.

Other international ideas
I’d love to see World Rugby lock in Pacific Four as an annual event for women’s rugby plus an O’Reilly Cup series aligned with the Bledisloe.

I’d also encourage RA to take an extended squad on Spring tours and combine the Test and Australia A fixtures into a seven-game tour with four Tests and three mid-week fixtures.

I tried laying out a Super fixture below encompassing mid-year touring Tests but it’s bloody difficult so props to the people who actually do this for a living.

Have a peek and give me your thoughts in the comments – thanks for sticking around.

Harry Wilson of Australia in the line out during game three of the International Test match series between the Australia Wallabies and England at the Sydney Cricket Ground on July 16, 2022 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Steve Christo - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)

Harry Wilson of Australia (Photo by Steve Christo – Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)

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R1: Mar 4-5 (incl Super W)
R2: Mar 11-12 (incl Super W)
R3: Mar 18-19 (incl Super W)
R4: Mar 24-25 (incl Super W)
R5: Apr 1-2 (incl Super W)
R6: Apr 8-9 (incl Super W)
R7: Apr 15-16 (incl Super W)
R8: Apr 22-23 (incl Super W)
R9: Apr 29-30 (incl Super W) * Wallabies form camp
R10: May 6-7 (incl Super W)
May 10 – Wallabies Test (Wednesday Night)
R11: May 13-14 (+ Super W QF)
Super bye – May 20-21 – Wallabies Test + Super W grand final, Wallaroos form camp
R12: May 27-28
May 31 – Wallabies Test (Wednesday Night) and international camp breaks
R13: June 3-4 (+PAC 4 R1)
R14: June 10-11 (+ PAC 4 R2)
R15: June 17-18 ( + PAC 4 R3)
R16: June 24-25 (+ PAC 4 R4)
R17: Jul 1-2
R18: Jul 8-9
R19: Jul 15-16
EFs
SFs
QF
Final

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