by: Tony McKeever
International rugby is really squaring up to a North vs. South battle between the hemispheres, as to who gets to harvest the financial returns or not.
The next 5 years will be particularly challenging for the SANZAR countries in spite of them occupying the top three slots of the IRB international rankings, with little financial returns.
The performance on the field of South Africa, New Zealand and Australia does not equate financially, to that off the field, to the France, Ireland, England, Wales combo that delivers powerhouse financial returns.
The SANZAR unions with the addition of Argentina, who is in 6th place in the world rankings, from 2012 and beyond as the Quad Nations, have yet to seek out new theatres of rugby tournaments and underwriters, to financially compete with the rugby products of the Six Nations, Heineken Cup, Guinness Premiership Super 14 and even Magners League, who have now introduced two Italian “Super Clubs”.
International “cross-pollination” amongst the Northern Hemisphere rugby union nations and their respective players is working a financial charm for the Six Nations and Heineken Cup, while SANZAR are dishing up the same fare of Super 14/15 and Tri-Nations and are in danger of presenting the same ho-hum tournaments, this has led to plummeting gate attendances and declining television viewership. This is not good for the sponsors anchoring each of the three unions. Sponsors want growth in numbers of spectators on site and they want television audiences to tune in to support their products and services.
In Australia, a sports mad country, the top 10 most watched programs in 2008 on free-to-air television, were sports, yet rugby union was not in this group. The addition of a 15th Super Rugby franchise in Melbourne, can not be left to the Melbourne Rebels to invigorate the game but the whole approach to Super Rugby and not just Super 15, is going to need an extreme make over by SANZAR and soon.
The old Sanzar broadcasting agreement with Rupert Murdoch’s News Ltd organisations was worth US$340 million over five years.
Now the new broadcast deal, which will run from 2011-2015, for another five years, will be worth a total of US$400 million – an increase of about 20 per cent, which will be split equally 3 ways between South Africa, New Zealand and Australia. At first glance this looks like a lucrative broadcast sponsorship.
But break this down to US$80m per annum and split that again amongst the 3 SANZAR partners each getting US$26.6m a year and the money starts to look lean, very lean with Newscorp getting a great deal.
The positive economic impact of Super Rugby in each of South Africa, New Zealand and Australia is limited to say the least, with the declining gate attendances and television viewership, so much so that each of the SANZAR unions have had to step in and throw lifelines to one or more of their respective franchises in each country.
Conversely, the positive economic impact of the 2010 rugby union Six Nations tournament is a monstrous $632.81 million, as quoted from a report commissioned by Mastercard.
Total attendance at the Six Nations matches was 1,054,654, while the total television audience across all matches was estimated to be 125 million, with three matches drawing viewerships of over 10 million – France v Ireland, Wales v France, and France v England.
The Tri-Nations and Super Rugby tournaments pale into comparison with these numbers. The average gate attendance for Home and Away matches in the 2009 Super 14 was 27,000.
The report emphasises the popularity of the Friday night scheduling of the Six Nations France v Wales match – which attracted a full house at the Millennium Stadium and an estimated 10.5 million television viewers.
England received the biggest economic benefit from the tournament, with a $132.82 million boost, followed by Ireland with $123.06 million, then France, $122.1 million, Wales, $109 million, Scotland, $94.56 million, and Italy, $51.27 million.
Now compare that to the receipt of $26.6m by each of South Africa, New Zealand and Australia in broadcast revenues and double it to $53m for a “generous positive economic impact” for good measure and still the Southern Hemisphere does not come even close to the revenues of the 6 Nations.
Rugby participation is increasing in the Six Nations, so says the report commissioned by MasterCard, a sponsor of the tournament, with increases since 2007 for Italy put at 36 per cent, for Ireland 33 per cent, Scotland 32 per cent, France 22 per cent, Wales 10 per cent, but England only by 5 per cent.
The MasterCard survey carried out by the International Business of Sport (CIBS) at Coventry University, analysed attendances, TV audience, visitor spend on tickets, accommodation, food and drink and other economic indicators in the tournament, which ran over five weekends during February and March and was won by France.
Five weekends in the Northern Hemisphere, certainly, financially, beats hands down the five months of Super Rugby and two months of Tri-Nations of the Southern Hemisphere.
The Southern Hemisphere has a mish-mash of tournaments and fixtures that have outlived their sell by date and the time is upon the SANZAR unions to rejuvenate and reinvent their tournaments with an extreme makeover that brings sponsors, spectators and viewers back to rugby union.
Not to mention slowing the exodus of Southern Hemisphere players to the Northern Hemisphere. These are “assets” of SANZAR with huge multi million dollar investments made in the players by the 3 home unions of SANZAR.
Wow…. the figures are staggering!
What is the solution. It looks ugly.
We must get our foot in somehow in the Northern Competitions.
Loius Luty’s son in law Riaan ……whoever always said that we should get out of SANZAR and start a competition with the NH. He was obviously not far from being wrong.
Lets face it, the S14 is a lekker competition, but the 3N is boring.
Bring back old fashioned tours with midweek games.
3 @ Loskoppie – Jaaaa, Riaan…. Riaan Holborsel…. cannot stand that oke, to me he is like a leech, a real parasite!
GBS
Jisja, sorry,will call you lter, I was at a noisy spot when you phoned…..lots of sulking Stormers around and I had to distribute the ‘tranquilizers”.
5@ Barman – Nee, dis reg so… moenie worry nie!
3 – Loosehead, Agree would love to see tours coming back with the mid-week games. Just have to think back to the Lions tour last year, it sort of brought back memories of the tours.
S14 for me is the best tourney in the world. Nothing to beat it.
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