'Destroyed the soul of rugby': Ex-NZR boss delivers damning verdict of Super direction - and his plan to fix it

By Christy Doran / Editor

Rugby union in Australia and New Zealand is in danger of becoming irrelevant unless it reconnects to the community game and prioritises “quality over quantity”, according to former NZR chief David Moffett.

While the Super Rugby Pacific competition will get underway this weekend, the tournament has been dogged by the Melbourne Rebels’ fall into voluntary administration.

The Super Rugby franchise’s $20 million black hole has not only cast a dark cloud over the Rebels’ future but made the competition’s decision-makers sit up and have some uncomfortable conversations.

The Rebels aren’t the only side who are struggling financially, with Moana Pasifika’s future in the competition also on shaky ground.

It meant that last week’s Super Rugby Pacific launch was dominated by questions over the future of the competition and whether the tournament might return to Super 10 in 2025.

The difficult conversations come as Rugby Australia and New Zealand Rugby try to reignite interest in the flagging Super Rugby competition and, at the same time, nut out their next broadcast deals.

Nor has the player drain overseas, with half of the All Blacks’ starting side from last year’s World Cup final heading offshore, helped.

David Moffett says rugby in Australia and New Zealand needs to get back into the community game. (Photo by Scott Barbour/ALLSPORT)

Moffett, the former New Zealand Rugby and National Rugby League boss, delivered the current administrations a reality check on the eve of the Super Rugby Pacific competition, which starts this weekend.

“It needs provoking, doesn’t it?” Moffett told The Roar.

“Any sports organisation that’s relying on broadcasting revenues for their future is completely misinformed as to what’s happening around them. They’ve got to have multiple opportunities in that area, not just a Stan broadcasting deal.”

He also questioned how Rugby Australia had allowed the Rebels to slump to the position they find themselves in.

“Didn’t they know that the Rebels were in trouble?” Moffett asked. “Of course they did. The media has been telling Rugby Australia that the Rebels are in trouble for a long time. What did they do about it? Nothing. Nothing. Zero.

“What did the Rugby Football Union do about those clubs that went broke up in England? Nothing.”

In particular, Moffett was scathing about the direction rugby has gone since the game turned professional in the mid-1990s.

“Professional rugby has got a lot to answer for,” he said.

“It has destroyed the soul of rugby. The soul of rugby still exists in the community. I don’t like the term grassroots. It’s the community game. It still exists there. But it doesn’t exist in professional rugby.

“All they’re after is money, and the worst of that is World Rugby. And then followed closely by the national governing bodies.

“It’s only about the money and it’s only about money to pay players. Hardly any of the money gets down to the community game. So what are they doing with it? They’re increasing the number of people who work for them.”

Waratahs captain Jake Gordon, Brumbies captain Allan Alaalatoa, Rebels captain Rob Leota, Force captain Michael Wells and Reds captain Tate McDermott at the 2024 Super Rugby Pacific Season Launch on February 14, 2024 in Auckland, New Zealand. (Photo by Dave Rowland/Getty Images for Rugby Australia)

Moffett, who ran NZR when Super Rugby first got up and running, said Australia and New Zealand needed to focus their attention on reconnecting with the community.

“I think Australia and New Zealand should be looking after their own backyard before they try and solve the problems of World Rugby because their own backyards are in trouble,” he said.

In particular, he advocated for a national club competition and a rapid-fire nine-round Super Rugby tournament.

“What I think needs to happen is that Australia and New Zealand need to sort out their own domestic competitions first,” Moffett said.

“That’s why I’m suggesting that the club competition in Australia should start the season. And guess what? All of the international players will play for their clubs.

“If you put all the Australian players into the club competition, where they can hone their skills, and then you pick the best for Queensland, New South Wales and the ACT to play in the Super Rugby competition, then you are going to start to see us really getting back to where we were at the beginning of professional rugby.

“The most successful period of Australian Rugby in the professional era is when they had three teams.”

The Crusaders have dominated the Super Rugby competition since 2017. (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

The various broadcasters, as well as the Super Rugby franchises, would likely wince at that proposal given it would provide them less content and fewer opportunities to bring in money from gate takings.

But Moffett said audiences would value “quality over quantity”.

“No, no you’re looking at it from the wrong way,” he said.

“They would increase their gate takings because at the moment their gate takings are crap.

“But because it’s a shorter period where people are not going to get bored with it, they’re only gone four home games one year and five the next, their gate takings will go up, and it will more than makeup for a longer tournament.”

Rugby Australia chief executive Phil Waugh has previously said the gap had widened too far between the professional and amateur levels of the game.

“I’ve got a very strong affiliation to club rugby and see the connection with the community is a massive part of my role leading the game in Australia,” Waugh said in his opening remarks as RA CEO.

“We’ve seen a really big gap evolve and get widened between the professional game and the amateur game over the last decade or so. How do we bring that back together? How do we ensure that we’re all working together to beat other teams in the world rather than compete against each other? I think that’s really important.”

Moffett, who has reached out to Waugh and RA chairman Daniel Herbert, also said the respective national unions needed to do more to capture its audience.

“Rugby is owned by the fans,” the businessman said. “You want to give the fans what they want: running rugby, instead of this bloody crap that they’re serving up at the moment.

“When you say to the average rugby person what business are you in, they’ll say, ‘We’re in the rugby business’ or if they’re a little bit more enlightened, they might say ‘they’re in the entertainment business.’ They’re both wrong. They’re in the business of actually winning time that people are prepared to spend on the sport. So, they’re in the time capture business.”

Having watched Super Rugby try to expand into Japan with the Sunwolves, and Argentina with the Jaguares, Moffett also issued a warning to officials to not overreach.

“They destroyed a competition that was the envy of the world because they went for quantity over quality,” he said.

“They’re still talking about going to Japan and America.

“Why would Japan have anything to do with Super Rugby? They’ve got their own competition up there that is attracting so many good players. It’s no longer somewhere players go to pick up their retirement fund.”

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-23T23:29:56+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


So he was there at the start and after almost thirty years can identify what has been bleeding obvious to everybody for at least 15. Moffett is not the answer, he used to be part of the problem. Rugby twelves was not a good idea, and nor is merging with the NRL. Starting the club competition in February, reducing the number of SR teams and the number of games played are not practical ideas either. Reducing to three SRP teams was always the right solution but that just moves the SRP to a full home and away season, so players would not be available for clubs. That also requires having a five or six team NRC to not cruel progress in the broader markets and player catchments. A solution which just makes those two teams NSW and Qld (or three with ACT) is not the answer either, almost as bad as just canning WA and Victoria. The answers are there somewhere but it seems we are burdened with too many wannabe business people interested in trophy directorships, or administration jobs because they can't get one in a profitable sector.

2024-02-23T09:22:25+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


No I don’t, I have an issue with sports and their fans who have an outsized view of their sports place in the world, like Australian soccer and rugby union in general.

2024-02-23T08:52:56+00:00

Phil Browne

Roar Rookie


You have real issues with big sports don't you Brett? Which one do you despise more? Rugby or soccer?

2024-02-22T10:33:02+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


You said you couldn’t see a NH team consistently competing with a Kiwi SR team. When I gave you obvious examples you then started on about the RWC QF.

2024-02-22T07:30:59+00:00

fiwiboy7042

Roar Rookie


NZ has been the better behaved of the partners. For the last few years, they have been giving the RA $5m which talked in the lockdown, I'd say. They are ramping that figure up to $8m for the next two seasons even despite HM's trolling. I'd say they are professional! :happy:

2024-02-22T05:46:02+00:00

David Moffett

Expert


NZR is a minnow compared to the NRL

2024-02-22T03:18:56+00:00

Bliksem

Roar Rookie


RA and NZR should be natural partners, however none of them act like partners. I think you are correct the partnership has reached a dead end. This will be tragic for both, as NZ doesn't have the population to make a domestic only competition commercially viable and Australia lost their appeal.

2024-02-22T03:14:39+00:00

Bliksem

Roar Rookie


Yes it has been a problem from the early 1900s

2024-02-22T02:47:55+00:00

AndyS

Roar Rookie


That said, my understanding is that the 15% included the $2M/yr to Premier Rugby, which was realistically wasted on paying players rather than actually spent on community rugby.

2024-02-22T01:45:49+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Sorry Im not sure what your point was there, but if you believe the Saders side that played Munster was anything close to their winning side from last year I suggest you google the teams named for each game.

2024-02-22T01:42:52+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


It just goes to show that no matter how much money each Union brings in the NH Unions really seem to be over spending. NZR runs on a minimalist budget and still remains financially viable and a top ranked nation. I suppose its more about good management rather than gross income.

2024-02-22T01:39:12+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Brendan thats not correct. SA wants it moved. NZ certainly see no need and Aus cant play rugby across their summer. Arg will continue happily in the August window. SA chose to move so they will need to deal with the fallout of off seasons as best they can. As has been proven often enough tho SA test players arnt playing too much rugby.

2024-02-22T01:35:44+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Oh sorry I thought losing to NZ all the time would have effected their rankings. NZ games arnt counted?

2024-02-22T01:33:26+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


No actually NZR didnt do that at all. The NZ govt made it impossible for anyone to come in to the country. This little thing called Covid happened.

2024-02-22T00:29:09+00:00

Gary Russell-Sharam

Roar Rookie


He makes so much sense it must be embarrassing for the heads at RA to read this. I have written about this before and agree with all that he has said. Super Rugby is dead, or shall I say it is dead with the current way that it is played. The season of top rugby is so short that it is insignificant for most of us who would want to watch each weekend. Better to have a national comp up and running of our top club teams from each state fighting it out over a complete season lasting from March to September. 16 team comp. 6 from Qld 6 from NSW 2 from Vic and 2 from WA. With private enterprise supporting clubs and free to air TV coupled with Stan. You can always have a play off at the end of the year Aus V NZ

2024-02-22T00:22:21+00:00

fiwiboy7042

Roar Rookie


Nope that's not it (in reply to your first 'point' and your last). Rugby is growing in other countries apart from the top 4 you mention. Look at Africa, Europe (Portugal did beat Fiji at the RWC, you know); Georgia is another case in point. Chile and Argentina as well. BTW: I'm originally from Fiji and I know a thing or two about hot weather rugby. Born into it, you might say The global calendar may be needed but the sport is working without it at present, and a good thing too given the issues around implementing the calendar. This game is also bigger than Australia; you say you want to watch rugby in summer? Fine. Lobby the RA to get the Shute Shield or Hospital Cup played during those months. You're dreaming if you think the RC will be played during an Aussie summer. No other country will want to be party to that.

2024-02-22T00:12:08+00:00

fiwiboy7042

Roar Rookie


Disagree about your last point but I think NZ does need to change its game. Couple of suggestions: 1. Put the geography back in their names; ie Auckland Blues, Canterbury/Christchurch Crusaders et al. When a team has a game at an outlying venue, they can adopt the home province name i.e. North Harbour Blues for a game at Albany, etc. The provinces will need to be sold on that. 2. Reduce the number of SR games and bring the NPC forward so the season flows from club/provincial to near-Test to Test levels. 3. Examine the option of supercharging the NPC and ditch Super Rugby. Ditch the SR and inject money into the game after reforming the administration of the provincial game (which is needed). Possibly, in a worst case scenario, add one or two Aussie Exiles sides to the NPC/FPC which would have the option of rotating their home games. Sell the competition to the world (they do anyway) with new/unique features not seen on domestic broadcasts such as 'home ground' profile which double up as a tourism promotional vehicle and hopefully secure a funding boost. A couple of ideas, mind.

2024-02-21T23:53:10+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


Soft as butter champ, and I love how you can’t actually acknowledge any other point I made because it doesn’t suit your narrative. Probably because I’m right.

2024-02-21T23:20:50+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


You brought up highlanders v Leinster mate, not me

2024-02-21T22:56:22+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


That last sentence is very true Scott. It's been so counterproductive to slash community spending. Overall the reduction in fans and players is huge.

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