• Categories
Collapse

The Silver Fern

Revenue Sharing

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Sports Talk
118 Posts 16 Posters 9.6k Views
Revenue Sharing
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to Rugger Quizzes on last edited by
    #80

    @rugger-quizzes said in Revenue Sharing:

    Frankly the RFU seems to have very little desire to grow the game globally.

    Since England toured North America in 2001 (Presumably during the Lions tour that year) they have not played a single game outside the 6 Nations countries or the Rugby Championship Countries.

    Which is pretty shameful. In that time NZ have played Samoa in Apia once and other than that, zip. Unless of course you want to count playing Ireland in Chicago as growing the game? Aus have (bizarrely) played away in Spain and that's it. So whilst England's record is pretty damn poor, it's no outlier.

    RapidoR CrucialC 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    wrote on last edited by
    #81

    The Hutt is an absolute Mecca. @Catogrande

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to Bones on last edited by
    #82

    @bones Over here, Mecca is a bingo hall. So that sort of fits with my impression.

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #83

    @catogrande said in Revenue Sharing:

    @rugger-quizzes said in Revenue Sharing:

    Frankly the RFU seems to have very little desire to grow the game globally.

    Since England toured North America in 2001 (Presumably during the Lions tour that year) they have not played a single game outside the 6 Nations countries or the Rugby Championship Countries.

    Which is pretty shameful. In that time NZ have played Samoa in Apia once and other than that, zip. Unless of course you want to count playing Ireland in Chicago as growing the game? Aus have (bizarrely) played away in Spain and that's it. So whilst England's record is pretty damn poor, it's no outlier.

    NZ have also played USA in Chicago & Japan in Tokyo in that time (Aus also played USA in Chicago) in that time. Aus are playing Japan next week. NZ playing Japan next year. All of these though outside IRB windows and for a (revenue sharing) price.

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #84

    @catogrande A very, very popular bingo hall.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to Rapido on last edited by
    #85

    @rapido I got the info from Wiki so wouldn't be totally surprised if not accurate. Went back a double checked and see I did miss the Japan game, still couldn't see the US game. Nonetheless, happy to take your word for it. Point still stands though, 3 games in 17 years is not much better than 1 game in 17 years.

    Worth noting also that since 2006 the England Saxons have played away in Canada, Russia, USA, Belgium and Portugal.

    SnowyS 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    wrote on last edited by Rapido
    #86

    300% better.

    😉

    1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    wrote on last edited by Rapido
    #87

    The latest IRB schedules (I think it's a 4 year cycle), agreed recently after the global season / revenue sharing stoush.

    It sees way more tier 1 v tier 2 games.
    I think it is mostly 6N teams that will play those T1 v T2 games. As there are 6 of them and only 4 Sanzar unions. Plus the Lions year.

    Will be able to crow about 'your' zeal to play in far flung corners of the tier 2 globe.

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to Rapido on last edited by
    #88

    @rapido If you listen carefully you can hear my crowing right now. Or maybe not. Have you got a link to that info at all?

    RapidoR 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    wrote on last edited by
    #89
    world.rugby

    Latest News | World Rugby

    Latest News | World Rugby

    The latest World Rugby news, including about the World Rankings, Tournaments, Player Welfare and the Laws of the Game


    • 39 per cent increase in tier one v tier two fixtures with emerging nations integrated on merit
    • Tier one tours to Pacific Islands, Japan, Canada, USA, Georgia and Romania

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #90

    @catogrande

    That's why I put the the quotes around 'your'. I agree it's clumsily written.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to Rapido on last edited by
    #91

    @rapido said in Revenue Sharing:

    world.rugby

    Latest News | World Rugby

    Latest News | World Rugby

    The latest World Rugby news, including about the World Rankings, Tournaments, Player Welfare and the Laws of the Game


    • 39 per cent increase in tier one v tier two fixtures with emerging nations integrated on merit
    • Tier one tours to Pacific Islands, Japan, Canada, USA, Georgia and Romania

    Looks like a step in the right direction.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #92

    @catogrande said in Revenue Sharing:

    @rugger-quizzes said in Revenue Sharing:

    Frankly the RFU seems to have very little desire to grow the game globally.

    Since England toured North America in 2001 (Presumably during the Lions tour that year) they have not played a single game outside the 6 Nations countries or the Rugby Championship Countries.

    Which is pretty shameful. In that time NZ have played Samoa in Apia once and other than that, zip. Unless of course you want to count playing Ireland in Chicago as growing the game? Aus have (bizarrely) played away in Spain and that's it. So whilst England's record is pretty damn poor, it's no outlier.

    2015 Samoa
    2014 USA
    2013 Japan
    2012 Scotland 😉
    2011 Fiji (in NZ but from memory Fiji were invited and received a gate share as a pre RWC hitout)

    Also the NZ v Samoa game this year was wrapped with the moved Tonga v Wales to reduce costs to Tonga and help provide a bigger take for them.

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #93

    @crucial Careful or you'll have @MN5 to deal with.

    MN5M 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5 Banned
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #94

    @catogrande said in Revenue Sharing:

    @crucial Careful or you'll have @MN5 to deal with.

    They're less minnowy than Wales, France and Argentina at the moment

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #95

    @catogrande said in Revenue Sharing:

    Worth noting also that since 2006 the England Saxons have played away in Canada, Russia, USA, Belgium and Portugal.

    Not really relevant. Have a look at Maori and NZ A tours. The 'B" teams don't count in this discussion that's just development for all unions involved. How is the revenue shared there? I honestly don't know.

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to Snowy on last edited by
    #96

    @snowy said in Revenue Sharing:

    @catogrande said in Revenue Sharing:

    Worth noting also that since 2006 the England Saxons have played away in Canada, Russia, USA, Belgium and Portugal.

    Not really relevant. Have a look at Maori and NZ A tours. The 'B" teams don't count in this discussion that's just development for all unions involved. How is the revenue shared there? I honestly don't know.

    I'm not so sure it's not relevant. For the Tier 2 nations and below it is not just about the money but also about opportunity to play at a higher level, in that the tours of the Saxons, Maori etc are very important. I have no idea about how any revenue is shared or how costs are covered.

    SnowyS 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #97

    @catogrande said in Revenue Sharing:

    I have no idea about how any revenue is shared or how costs are covered.

    Anyone know how that works for Saxons, Maori, NZ A?

    As for relevance can we compare an England match v Samoa for example, to a Saxons v Canada for revenue and how it is distributed? I guess that is just scale of funds. I thought the point was that the cash should be shared whomever the host nation is?

    RapidoR 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    replied to Snowy on last edited by
    #98

    @snowy said in Revenue Sharing:

    @catogrande said in Revenue Sharing:

    I have no idea about how any revenue is shared or how costs are covered.

    Anyone know how that works for Saxons, Maori, NZ A?

    As for relevance can we compare an England match v Samoa for example, to a Saxons v Canada for revenue and how it is distributed? I guess that is just scale of funds. I thought the point was that the cash should be shared whomever the host nation is?

    I don't know, but I believe it works on the traditional host keeps all method.

    But.

    Often these teams are piggy backing on tournaments (Churchill Cup, Pacific Cup) that have IRB funding.

    I'd say it's fluid.

    No tier 2 team are going to invite a tier 1 nation's A team on a loss making tour.

    I think the MABs have enough brand power to generate profits for the hosting nation. Where as NZ A (re-branded as the JABs) are little bit less sexy.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    wrote on last edited by Rapido
    #99

    For everyone's info, the IRB do directly fund T2 nations, via tournaments and the June and November tour windows.

    file:///C:/Users/758313/Downloads/World_Rugby_Investment_Programmes_brochure.pdf

    Funded Competition:
    15s 
    •	 RWC 2015/2019 and qualification
    •	 RWC Women’s 2017 and qualification
    •	 World Rugby Pacific Nations Cup, World Rugby Nations Cup, World Rugby Tbilisi Cup (HPT2 teams)
    •	 June and November Tours (HPT2 teams)
    •	 World Rugby Pacific Challenge, World Rugby Americas Cup (HPT2 “A” teams)
    •	 World Rugby U20 Championship, World Rugby U20 Trophy
    •	 Regional 15s Tournaments
    
    Sevens 
    •	 RWC Sevens 2018 and qualification
    •	 HSBC Sevens World Series and qualification
    •	 World Rugby Women’s Sevens Series and qualification
    •	 Olympic Games 2016/2020 qualifiers
    •	 Regional Sevens Tournaments
    

    and from;

    Home | Women's and Men's Rugby World Cup

    Home | Women's and Men's Rugby World Cup

    The official site of Rugby World Cup, with ticketing and event information, live streaming, news, videos, fixtures and results.

    RWC 2015 and the four-year RWC cycle ending in December 2015
    
    In this cycle World Rugby will have invested directly and indirectly approximately:
    
    £85m in tier one high performance unions or £8.5m each
    
    £50m or £5m each in tier two performance unions
    
    £28m in the remaining member unions and regional associations
    
    The tier two figure includes a new specific allocation of £5m directly focused on the costs of preparation for RWC 2015.
    
    In addition to the above investments, every participating union in RWC 2015 receives a participation fee of £150,000 [a further £75,000 if they reach the quarter-finals and a further £100,000 if they reach the semi-finals].
    
    In percentage terms, this amounts to investments of approximately 52 per cent in tier one and 48 per cent in tier two/other unions.
    
    This represents a significant redistribution of wealth as more than 85 per cent of the revenues for RWC 2015 are sourced from the high performance markets. The investments in the next tier of performance unions and elsewhere are starting to yield enhanced returns on and off the pitch in a number of those markets.
    

    http://www.rugbycanada.ca/media/leagues/3817/graphics/170327_jf_rwc_2019_press_pack_usa.pdf

    In total, between 2012-15, World Rugby invested £50m for the benefit of the 10 tier two
    unions participating in RWC 2015 – **£34m in direct grant funding** and a further £16m indirectly
    via provision of competitions.
    

    So on average, a union like Samoa diretly receive £3.4m form the IRB over 4 years. Which in post brexit world is about $7m NZD, BTW, why do the IRB report in pounds? They are in Dublin? Plus have about £1.6m of their costs covered via IRB competions

    I've looked for Samoa's annual reports but can't find online.

    So Samoa average $1.75m NZD a year in IRB funding. I'd say Samoa lose money hosting games, unless it is a funded tournament like RWC qualifying, and they must get a bit for jersey sponsorship and kit supplier. TV RIghts? for 1 game in the calendar year (which i watched on Sky and it looked like it was recorded on an analogue handycam) ... not much.

    Asking for $200k USD (300K NZD) from the RFU would be approx 20% of their annual income.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0

Revenue Sharing
Sports Talk
  • Login

  • Don't have an account? Register

  • Login or register to search.
  • First post
    Last post
0
  • Categories
  • Login

  • Don't have an account? Register

  • Login or register to search.