Monday, November 27, 2006

We Have the Technology

Deep in the bowels of Red Hall, the Rugby Football League super computer has finally finished compilling it's 'randomly' drawn fixture list and the The 2007 Super League fixtures have finally been released to the great unwashed.


After two months anticipation, fans can start bombarding the websites of Ryanair, Jet2 and bmiBaby for their sojourn to the Mediterranean.

It's also been confirmed who each side will now play at the 'Millennium Magic' weekend. Not surprisingly, the RFL have kept it to 'derby' fixtures.

For the event to prove the sceptics wrong, the RFL needs to attract a crowd, both from the North and from Wales and so to do that, they've put their flagship games on parade. Leeds will play Bradford, Wigan will play St Helens and the two Hull sides will also meet each other by the River Taff.

And that all seems fine. If you want fans to embark on a 500mile round trip, you've got to make it seem their while. But unfortunately, the RFL have shot themselves in the foot.

For the sides that face each other on that May weekend, it will be just one of four times they'll go toe to toe in the regular Super League season. That's four Leeds vs Bradford games, four Wigan vs St Helens clashes and four Hull derbys.

For a neutral and for Sky Sports, that's like Christmas and Birthday in one. Sky love the big games and so they'll be rubbing their hands with glee.
But for the rest of us, it's overkill.

Three times is enough, after you've factored in possible cup and play-off games but four, with a feasible possibility of seven games between two sides is doing nothing for the credibility of Super League and taking the excitement and anticipation away from what should be the stand-out fixtures in the calendar.
Derby's are more than just two local sides. They have a rivalry and intensity which makes them special. By having two sides play each other so frequently means that grudges don't have time to grow and the whole build-up to the game becomes shorter. They essentially become just like any other game.

And lets look at fairness. Whilst Leeds, Bradford, St Helens and Wigan are all likely to be taking points off each other, Hull FC can sit back, quietly confident of eight points against relegation fodder in Hull KR. Wakefield coach John Kear is fairly happy as well, knowing that whilst he's got four decent looking games against Huddersfield, Hull KR's draw means that they will probably be rooted to the bottom from rounds one to 27.

The game needs to revert back to the simple 'home and away' format. Playing sides three times is excessive, four times is overkill. Forget the arguments about making a free weekend for internationals, just do it for the games credibility.
Unfortunately, it's the small clubs that are the barrier to this, those who fail to realise that match days are not the only day to create revenue. Take a look around the 12 Super League grounds and you'll find a hotel, a University campus, an NHS clinic, an upmarket restaurant, an athletics stadium, a Rugby Union club, three football clubs and a multitude of conference and function facilities. Some clubs make use of them, some don't and instead, wait for a bumper pay day from the visit of one of the 'big four'.
But anyway, that's another argument entirely.

The RFL were onto a winner with the Millennium Stadium weekend but they've let themselves down. Would a supporter who reluctant to make the long journey south at first be tempted now, knowing that they'll have three more opportunities to see the same two sides in the other 26 rounds?

Nothing can be done now, the fixtures computer has spoken. Lets just hope the RFL take head for 2008.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I couldn't agree more with what you've written. I'm a Wigan supporter and love the Saints games as much as anyone, but the possibility of playing them 7 times in a season is just crazy. Let's just make it so that each team plays each other twice so everthing is fair. Otherwise, we should be scrapping relegation and the SL winners will be brought into question, as the draw may have highly influenced their placings. Hull KR have been given virtually no chance of SL survival next year due to the fixtures being racked up against them.

Something has got to change in 2008, or our sport will become more of a subject of ridicule in the media.

As it's the festive season, Merry Christmas, and good luck to you and the Rhinos in 2007 :)