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Wasps Rugby Discussion / Salary Cap Impacting?
« Last post by Neils on Today at 09:53:41 AM »

Premiership?s richest club Bristol Bears? spending to fall well short of salary cap


Director of rugby Pat Lam explains that club will move forward with smaller squad after Premiership clubs adapt to new financial landscape


Bristol Bears will be well under the increased Premiership salary cap ceiling next season despite the riches of Steve Lansdown, their billionaire owner, because of a forecast reduction in central funding to follow the new broadcast deal.

Pat Lam will bid farewell to 17 players over the summer, including Kyle Sinckler, as part of what he called a ?re-setting? process that will lean on experienced leaders such as Ellis Genge, Steven Lutatua and AJ MacGinty to guide a relatively young group.

Lam explained that a 10-team league has left him unable to assure players of game-time. However, another factor has been the renewed broadcast deal with TNT Sports. As things stand, it is expected that clubs will be around ?1 million worse off from television money over the next two seasons, with a view to a more lucrative, longer-term broadcast deal being secured after that period.

The shortfall will be offset by enhanced support from the Rugby Football Union as part of the new professional game partnership, as revealed by Telegraph Sport last month, but Lam said that Bristol, historically regarded as big-spenders in the days of Charles Piutau and Semi Radradra, have reassessed and plan to be some way short of the ?6.4 million salary cap.
?I don?t think we?re going to be up to ?5 million ? that?s fine?

?We?ve got a really exciting group coming through and we?re definitely going to be a smaller squad,? Lam explained on Tuesday. ?We won?t spend to the cap either. At the moment, I don?t think we?re going to be up to ?5 million ? and that?s fine.?

Lam labelled the approach as one of consolidation, stressing that Lansdown was still willing to commit funds.

?There?s no doubt Steve could put more money in if he wanted to, buy why would you?? Lam said. ?The product is really good, but the other side has to pick up as well. If anything, the money that he committed to us is still there. It hasn?t changed. The same amount. What has happened is that it?s the other side that has fallen down ? the TV deal. Every club is going to feel it.

?I believe Steve is testing us; saying ?can you run the club properly?? We?ve been doing that now. It just makes us get everything in order. We?re consolidating when, sure, he could add more money to it. Remember, this decision was made when news of this deal came around Christmas time. If anything. it?s sharpened our focus to make sure it?s not about the individuals, it?s about the right people to play as a team, the right people in the organisation to be efficient and purposeful, and get your jobs done really well.
?We?re no different to the other businesses Steve has?

?We?ve got too much fat on all the different edges ? and we?re no different to the other hundreds of businesses Steve has, or is looking to invest in. That?s why he?s very successful in what he does. I?ve found it really liberating working with Gavin Marshall [Bristol Sport CEO] and Tom Tainton [Bears COO], to work it through. It?s a great exercise for us.?

Over-reliance on a single benefactor has been shown to be fraught with danger and Bristol are evidently eager to avoid that; or at least to work towards a more sustainable approach.

?Sometimes it is ?oh this?ll be ok as Steve will put money in?,? Lam continued. ?He looked after us very well in Covid, and now it?s our turn to make sure that we look after his investment. I think we?ve shown in the last 10-11 weeks, we?re making huge improvements. That will continue next year.

?It has made us look at recruitment, bringing in the right people, let?s look at some gems. We?ve proven ourselves to be able to find gems in the Championship and in BUCS [British Universities and Colleges Sport] ? guys who are hungry.?
?We have a responsibility to make sure we make good decisions?

The decision to raise the salary cap from ?5 million to ?6.4 million for the 2024-25 campaign has divided the Premiership. While some clubs have voiced opposition, Rob Baxter, the Exeter Chiefs director of rugby, outlined his support, even if his club will also be below the limit. Lam, used to skinnier budgets from his time at Connacht, insisted that clubs would need to be disciplined.

?Put [the cap] at ?10 million; it doesn?t mean we?re going to go to it,? he said. ?The onus is on financial directors. Where I used to work I would say ?can I get this?? and they went ?no we don?t have that money? or ?yes you can, but this is all you?ve got?, rather than ?yeah buy that, we?ll find that money somewhere else?.

?All those clubs that went bust, I would look at the financial people, and the decision to spend money they didn?t have. Gambling. Put the cap at ?10 million, and if a club wants to go there, sure, but most clubs won?t if they?re clever as they?ll go bust.

?We have a responsibility to make sure we make very good decisions to be a successful rugby club and work in the means we can afford. What that means is we, not Steve. Our goal from the beginning was to be less reliant on a financial backer. Steve has been brilliant for us, and we were tracking [well], which has earnt us the trust and reputation to look after us during the Covid time.

?Now we?re getting back it?s ?let?s consolidate, look where we?re at?. Who knows what is around the corner so let?s focus on what we do, and be efficient in what we do and still try to be successful in what we do.?
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?The Championship is producing coaches ? but Premiership teams are not interested?

Interview: Harvey Biljon, who has impressed with Jersey Reds and now Rotherham Titans, says the pathway to the top is often blocked
Charlie Morgan, Senior Rugby Writer 7 May 2024 ? 1:41pm

Topping the second tier with an underdog team, landing a high-profile cup upset in front of the television cameras and then stirring a sleeping giant; Harvey Biljon has had some year. To put it crudely, he would be a household name with equivalent success in football and clubs would be scrambling for his signature. As it stands, the 46-year-old is striving for the recognition he deserves.

?Who?s got naked photos of me somewhere?? Biljon jokes. ?Who have I p----- off along the way? I don?t know. I would like to think I?ve got no skeletons in the closet.

?I?ve tried to build evidence with what I?ve been doing on the pitch with players. Bar a couple of occasions, when a big job has come up, I haven?t got in the room to have the discussion before a club has decided to go another way.?

This season has seemed so long and loaded with storylines that last September feels aeons ago. But it is only six months since Jersey Reds, still the Championship title holders, beat Bath with a statement performance at the Rec. That 34-10 victory in the Premiership Cup, which TNT Sports televised, was underpinned by powerful mauling and capped with a 70-metre counter-attack that laid on a try for Russell Bennett.


While the hosts were far from full-strength, Jersey?s rounded display endorsed a decade of progress under Biljon. And then, 10 days later, the club?s professional arm ceased to exist. Players and staff drifted in different directions, as was grimly familiar from the debacles at Worcester Warriors, Wasps and London Irish. Sam Grahamslaw, the loosehead prop, was recruited from Jersey by Bristol Bears, for instance.

Biljon had endured a unique summer in 2023. ?Absolute euphoria? over Jersey?s Championship victory was replaced by a sense of futility, because the club knew they could not go up to the Premiership on account of the league?s minimum standards criteria. A month after investors pulled the plug, citing a lack of clarity over league structures, Biljon joined Rotherham Titans to oversee the first-team with Gareth Lewis.

The Yorkshire outfit had been relegated to the fourth tier in 2020 when a mathematical formula was used to complete league results during Covid. Ahead of the 2023-24 season, Rotherham were aiming to celebrate their centenary by winning National 2 North. Do that and they would achieve their first promotion in 21 years, since earning a stint in the Premiership for 2003-04.

Biljon?s first act was to ?pull up the hand-brake? and ask his charges to look in the mirror. He interrogated data points ? unforced errors, penalty counts, conversion of opportunities ? and identified the ?superpowers? of his squad to develop complementary tactics.

?I needed to make sure people knew I was active as a coach and that I hadn?t gone into the wilderness,? admits Biljon. ?And, wherever I was coaching, that team were going to be making strides forward.?

With his young family staying in Jersey, Biljon flew over every Tuesday, staying until Sunday for two training sessions and a game. Rotherham tightened up their defence ? they would concede just over 18 points per match across 26 league outings ? and went on a phenomenal run of bonus-point wins after losing 26-20 to Leeds Tykes in November.
Biljon?s Jersey were a launchpad to a higher level

At the end of March, Titans ousted the Tykes, who slipped up again against Fylde. When Rotherham met Sheffield Tigers for their penultimate league match, they defied ?anxiety in the dressing room? to score 24 unanswered points in the second period. A week later, Titans completed their task by beating Billingham. Next season, they will be in National 1.

Biljon credits Charlie Capps, Jack Bergmanas and John Okafor as pivotal players. A ?very rewarding? experience has ?re-energised? him. Managing semi-professionals, and some amateurs, was a fresh challenge. Among the biggest compliments Biljon received was from Martin Jenkinson, the Rotherham director of rugby, who told him in the bar one evening: ?This club has got its mojo back?. Further success with Titans has consolidated Biljon?s impressive CV.

A scrum-half who arrived at Wasps from Natal Sharks in 2000 and scrapped with superstars like Matt Dawson and Rob Howley for game-time, Biljon began coaching at Blackheath. With Cornish Pirates, he won the British and Irish Cup in 2010 and, in the days before ringfencing, reached two play-off finals in 2011 and 2012. Biljon?s Jersey were renowned for a free-flowing style and as a launchpad towards a higher level for players and coaches. Unfortunately, Biljon himself now feels non-plussed as to how he can keep climbing the ladder. Uncertainty over the second tier cannot be helpful.

?At the moment, where do you go and earn your coaching spurs, where you?re in the trenches each week and you have to problem-solve and adapt?? Biljon asks. ?Where?s the pathway? It feels that when the opportunities come up, someone from abroad will come in or a 75-year-old will be appointed.?

Biljon offered his services to the Rugby Football Union as a sounding board on the second tier, without being enlisted. For now, he is back in a waiting pattern. ?You have to practice what you preach,? Biljon says. ?You talk to players about resilience and overcoming adversity; how, when they?re not selected, they need to stay motivated if an opportunity comes along, because they might be needed for the most important game of the season.

?It is not easy. I can only liken my situation to a player that has just come back from injury and isn?t picked for a quarter-final. They?ve got to train as hard as ever so they can deliver their best if, for whatever reason, they are needed in the semi-final and final.?


Jersey surprised everyone, including themselves, by winning the Championship last year. Their triumphant campaign, which turned out to be their last, was supposed to be the first step of a three-year plan with the goal of reaching the Premiership. On a personal level, Biljon was ambitious. However, he had stopped window-shopping to focus on what was in front of him.

?I remember looking towards whatever that next opportunity might be and thinking they were so few and far between,? he says. ?I made a conscious decision that, if I wanted to get to the top level, I was going to have to get Jersey Reds there myself.?

Rotherham are fortunate to have an individual with such drive, who believes he has ?much more to give?. More widely, English rugby union cannot afford for coaches to become disenchanted.
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Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Saracens
« Last post by Neils on Today at 09:49:54 AM »

Saracens? work hard, play hard culture is much lauded, but now feels tainted

Insider adamant that despite Billy Vunipola?s conviction, the team bonding sessions have fuelled their era of unprecedented success
Ben Coles, Rugby Reporter 8 May 2024 ? 6:57am


During an interview last week following his arrest after a drunken disagreement in a Majorcan bar, the Saracens No 8 Billy Vunipola, clearly remorseful for his actions after being tasered twice at half four in the morning by Spanish police, made the following remarks during a lengthy apology. ?I caused a huge amount of embarrassment and put a spotlight on the club when they were trying to do something nice for us... I ruined it for myself and for everyone else.?

Those comments help convey how important Saracens? team socials are to their players, aware that a negative spotlight was now shining on their mid-season trips abroad with the positive benefits pushed to one side.

Twice each season ? once during the campaign and another during the off-season ? the Saracens squad have gone abroad for similar trips, seen as valuable chances to bond off the field.

To be clear, Vunipola had splintered off from the rest of the group and was accompanied by one other player, prop Marco Riccioni. Based on the account provided by the owner of the Epic bar in Palma, Riccioni conducted himself impeccably and tried to assist as much as he could, albeit to no avail. Vunipola, drinking for the first time in months and continually refusing to put his shirt back on, was tasered twice and then arrested, sedated, bailed, fined by a court and released with a suspended four-month prison sentence.


Building a strong culture has been an integral part of Saracens? rise to the top over the past two decades, from the creation of the Wolfpack defence to the introduction of the Tiki Tonga celebration, around the same time of the first Saracens trip to Cape Town all the way back in 2009, which was markedly different to how Vunipola?s night finished.

The squad trained, did some community work building houses in a township and, yes, had some nights out. As the team became more successful in the early 2010s, the time available to make those trips happen decreased and they instead became mid-season events; finding weekends in the schedule, or Sunday-Monday trips if the squad had played on a Saturday.
?You get to know them on a deeper level?

?They became more like blowouts,? as one source who has been part of previous trips put it to Telegraph Sport, before adding that the ethos from the original idea to Cape Town remained the same. ?The basic principle was that you spend time together away from your families, your worries, just the boys together. You have some drinks, it does relax people, you become closer and more connected. You understand their motivations, what inspires them, anything that goes on in their family life ? you get to know them on a deeper level.?

Players would be given conversation cards which had to be kept on them at all times; some light-hearted, some deeper, from what superhero they would be to their greatest fear. There would be group lunches with other players they did not know as well, spending time with younger players in the squad but also the club?s coaching staff.

The source adds: ?If you have that increase in motivation and deeper respect for each other, that brotherhood, then in those toughest moments you will fight for that person even more. That?s the difference between winning and losing the biggest moments.?

Since the trips were first introduced, Saracens? players and management have been to around 20 locations. There has been skiing in Verbier (without much skiing), a music festival in Chicago, spending 36 hours in Barcelona, time training in Florida with the Miami Dolphins.

When the England head coach Steve Borthwick was Saracens captain he was due to attend the 2010 Heineken Cup launch in Cardiff, only to pull out at the last minute to attend what was described by Saracens at the time as an ?important squad meeting?. In Munich. At Oktoberfest. Saracens were fined ?4,240 by tournament organisers; money well spent, they would argue, given that led by Borthwick they went on to win the Premiership title for the first time the following summer.

In the ensuing 15 years since that first squad trip up Table Mountain, Saracens have won more trophies than any other English club with six league titles (having made a further three finals), and three European Cups in the space of four years. When the trips have gone well, which they have almost all of the time, they appear to be a resounding success.
?Usually it is self-policed?

The source added: ?Obviously, there?s been incidents. Of course, there have been times when people have gone too far, but usually, touch wood, it is self-policed ? the boys get the boys home. The golden rule we say on the trips is to look after each other and make sure we get home OK, have each other?s backs.? Hence the sight of Riccioni on the bar?s CCTV, having done what he could, watching Vunipola?s arrest unfold.

The club?s relationship historically with alcohol had been viewed in a positive light ? think Alex Goode?s multi-day session after Saracens? European Cup triumph in 2019, still in his full kit by Monday evening. It is therefore unfortunate timing, to say the least, that Vunipola?s arrest for disobedience and assaulting a police officer comes a year after Kapeli Pifeleti, the Saracens hooker, plead guilty to assaulting someone on a night out in Clapham, resulting in a fine from the courts and a formal warning from the club.

Vunipola?s arrest has been swiftly dealt with and was obviously serious ? give he was tasered twice by police officers ? although it pales in comparison with the 2015 incident involving a fire extinguisher in Budapest which ended up finishing the career of the club?s flanker, Matt Hankin, after a drinking game went too far. Wearing a metal helmet, Hankin received a ?tap on the head?, according to the High Court judgment, from the fire extinguisher delivered by another player and suffered a concussion. He was erroneously cleared to return to play ahead of schedule, diagnosed with sinusitis, before suffering another concussion and being forced to retire. Hankin went on to sue the team-mate who instigated the original concussion, Richard Barrington, the club?s doctor who cleared him, Ademola Adejuwon, and Saracens for ?3.15m. The case was settled out of court, with Barrington and Adejuwon paying damages.

?It was a sad tale about someone?s career. Now, that is one black mark, which isn?t really related to a trip, I would say, because [the issue] was what happened when he got back,? the source adds. ?Yeah, there are times where people might have a fall or stuff like that, but generally no injuries, no issues. The boys appreciate that we?re very lucky to go on these trips. It is what people love doing, it?s really exciting and it?s fun. You do feel really connected.

?[Billy] was a public one, but there are certainly a lot more positives than negatives and players really believe in [the team socials]. It?s very hard to quantify, but they have a huge impact in terms of togetherness, knowing each other better, having fun together, feeling as though you are part of the whole group. Those players who are injured or not involved as much, they feel part of it and train harder, push the team harder, and the whole group moves as one altogether, which is so important.?

After Vunipola?s actions the team socials naturally feel a little tarnished, hence the No 8?s obvious contrition. It?s a feeling which will probably take many incident-free excursions to shift. However the purpose of them, and the ensuing success Saracens have had on the field, despite what happened in Majorca should not be overlooked.
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Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Saracens
« Last post by Shugs on May 07, 2024, 06:39:24 PM »
I?m sure the occasions were only enhanced by his paid non appearance.
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Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Saracens
« Last post by Rossm on May 07, 2024, 11:26:46 AM »
Itoje being paid for in-person appearances and speaking gigs he wasn't expected to do?

And we're supposed to think he didn't realise it was dodgy?

Nah.

And he's supposed to be one of the brighter ones ::)
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Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Saracens
« Last post by Vespula Vulgaris on May 07, 2024, 11:22:07 AM »
Itoje being paid for in-person appearances and speaking gigs he wasn't expected to do?

And we're supposed to think he didn't realise it was dodgy?

Nah.
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Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Interesting statement from Pirates ref RFU.
« Last post by Neils on May 06, 2024, 10:52:22 PM »

RFU given ?wake up call? over second-tier clubs? future amid Cornish Pirates? contracts concern

Pirates life president Dicky Evans calls for fresh approach to funding from HQ and Premiership clubs ?locked in their ivory tower?
Ben Coles, Rugby Reporter 6 May 2024 ? 11:37am




The Rugby Football Union has been handed ?yet another wake-up call? over the future of English rugby?s second tier after Cornish Pirates confirmed they had only issued contracts until the end of next season.

Pirates have demanded clarity from the RFU on both future funding and promotion to the Gallagher Premiership, stressing that potential investors require assurances in order to commit funds.

Funding from the RFU for Championship clubs has continually been cut in recent seasons, reduced from ?600,000 down to ?160,000, while no team has been promoted from the Championship since Saracens after the 2020-21 season.

Dicky Evans, Cornish Pirates? majority shareholder and life president, announced an exit plan back in 2022 due to ill health, giving a final tranche of funding to the club. In a statement last Friday, Evans said contracts have been issued for the 2024-25 season only; deals that include a break clause which can be activated in January 2025.

Evans stressed that funding is in new place for those contracts until that break clause window, with the club expecting ?to generate more funds than envisaged in the current budget, to enable us to meet the outstanding amount required for post new year?, while noting ?we certainly don?t intend to run out of funds with committed contracts in place ? la certain other clubs who went under?, a reference to the recent demises of London Irish, Wasps and Worcester in the Premiership along with Jersey Reds in the Championship.

Regarding the club?s future, Evans added there are two interested ?international consortiums? waiting for decisions from the RFU before committing, calling on the governing body to not only favour Premiership clubs ?locked in their ivory tower?.

He said: ?Understandably new investors need confidence that the RFU backs merit-based promotion and will not carve up the rugby market to favour a handful of Premiership clubs, locked in their ivory tower and allowing no Championship clubs through the door. Those decisions have been delayed again.

?As this season draws to a close, I am determined that, despite needing to vary the terms of their contracts, players and staff have the certainty that they are part of the  Pirates? future, a future in which we remain a proud Cornish employer and an elite top-flight Championship club. One day, in my lifetime, a Premiership Club. So, it?s down to the RFU to provide a solid foundation on which new investors in this very famous rugby club can base their financial decisions.?

Evans? statement received strong backing from Championship Rugby chairman Simon Halliday.

?I massively admire Cornish Pirates for the honesty of their statement. It reflects the supreme frustration on behalf of not only Dicky and the Cornish Pirates board, but the Championship at large,? Halliday told Telegraph Sport.

?This has to be yet another wake-up call for the game ? we have been saying this for months. We do not yet have enough answers to encourage investors, either prospective or current, that the deal on the table for Championship clubs is a positive result for the whole game.?

Telegraph Sport reported on the latest developments on the Professional Game Partnership last month, noting the RFU and Premiership Rugby were yet to resolve their differences with Championship clubs, after a franchise-based ?Premiership 2? model was rejected by teams in the Championship last year.

The RFU declined to comment.
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Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Saracens
« Last post by Shugs on May 06, 2024, 02:27:02 PM »
My understanding was that it was known about not just by Sarries players but by virtually everyone in the game. It was so blindingly obvious that you?d have had to be incredibly naive not to have known. They were all complicit. They were all cheats.
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Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Top 14
« Last post by hookender on May 05, 2024, 06:15:51 PM »
Must admit only got tickets to final ages ago just for fact of not been to new White Hart Lane stadium ( plus it will probably be only silverware seen there) , but looking forward to it with these two teams.
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Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Top 14
« Last post by Rossm on May 05, 2024, 05:49:24 PM »
And Marler shows he's a total eejit - but of course we already knew that.
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