IT IS EASY to mock the PRO14, given how it has changed its name more often than Billy the Kid. Remember when it was just the plain-old Celtic League? Or when it reinvented itself as the Rabo Direct before the Magners League and PRO12 joined ‘work-ons’ and ‘learnings’ in the rugby lexicon?
Well, this evening a new season of PRO14 rugby begins …. albeit with just 12 teams.
That could change after Christmas, depending on the situation with green lists and travel restrictions in and out of South Africa where the Southern Kings and Cheetahs are based. Then again, there is the possibility it may just go to 13, due to the fact the Kings are in administration. In any case, it has been a while since we last had a rebrand and sure enough, we should get another one at some point in 2021 with the launch of the all-singing, all-dancing PRO16.
That particular idea – to facilitate the arrival of South Africa’s leading four franchises from Super Rugby, the Bulls, Sharks, Lions and Stormers, has already had a mixed response. Some, such as Keith Wood, think it is a bad idea; others, including Gordon D’Arcy, consider it a terrible one.
Yet what are the alternatives? Way back in January 2016, the late Munster chief executive, Garrett Fitzgerald, was talking up the possibility of a British and Irish League, something we’ve heard on and off for the guts of 20 years. It still hasn’t happened and at this stage you have to doubt if it ever will.
That leaves one show in town, unless you want to leap into a time machine and go back to the first years of this century when Ireland’s four teams were rationed to inter-pros and the All-Ireland league, leaving Munster to scramble around for a meaningful friendly just before the knock-out stages of the Heineken Cup got under way.
Well they won’t have that worry anymore. The arrival of the Sharks, Bulls, Stormers and Lions will certainly add meaning to a competition that was threatening to become the rugby equivalent of the GAA’s Leinster football championship.
The trouble with that little analogy is that the Dublin Gaelic footballers have had little trouble recently in transforming provincial dominance into All-Ireland title wins whereas Leinster have gradually gone backwards in the Champions Cup, from winning it in 2018, to losing last year’s final and then going down in this year’s quarter-finals.
Accordingly, the much-maligned PRO14 got the blame for Leinster’s narrow defeat to Saracens. Maybe that was the case. Maybe the testing centre in their domestic league wasn’t rigorous enough to prepare Leinster for the questions Saracens would ask. Or maybe Johnny Sexton and Cian Healy aren’t as good as they used to be. And perhaps Andrew Porter isn’t as good as he may yet become.
Quite possibly it was Leo Cullen and Stuart Lancaster’s fault for picking the wrong team or failing to impose their game-plan on Saracens. Or, horror of horrors, maybe too many people have over-analysed one particular result. “Look, when you come up against the best teams, you have to make sure you get a lot right on the day,” said Cullen yesterday. “And if we are being very truthful here, then the fact is that we didn’t do that against a Saracens side who had a number of players who featured in the World Cup final.”
A spin doctor would have advised Cullen to keep quiet, not admit his mistakes and allow someone, or something else to take the blame for that harrowing defeat. Yet he was better off saying it like it is.
The PRO14 is certainly flawed and some of the teams in it do nothing for the competition’s image. You only have to look at the contribution of the Kings – four wins from 55 matches, with a points differential of minus 901 in their three seasons – to realise the league does not have serious depth. Yet being a PRO14 team didn’t do Leinster any harm in 2018 or even last year as they navigated their way to a European final.
Nor has it proven to be inadequate preparation for Ulster or Munster’s European campaigns. The two Irish provinces have each reached the knock-out stages of the Champions Cup on six occasions in the last 10 years – a record bettered just by Leinster, Saracens and Toulon.
History, however, is written by the winners not the beaten quarter-finalists – so when Leinster come up shy against Sarries, and when Ulster got a pummelling in Toulouse 24 hours later – questions, rightly, were asked.
It shouldn’t just be Irish clubs who are answering them, though, because for some time Welsh players have impersonated Superman when they wear a red shirt and Clark Kent when they pull on their club jersey. Once the Ospreys were an ornament on the Pro14’s mantelpiece – last season they won just twice in the league.
“I’d be concerned about the Welsh clubs from the long-term aspect of this competition,” said Michael Swift, the former Connacht stalwart, earlier today. “Given their location, their proximity to Bristol, Bath, Gloucester, you can see why they would find those games a more attractive proposition.”
It’s a fair point. Yet the Premiership is a party they have not been invited to and you have to wonder if the request will ever come. After all, the biggest talking point around Premiership clubs in recent years has revolved around ringfencing the leading 13 clubs in England. So if they are prepared to turn their back on fellow English clubs, then what chance really do Welsh or Irish ones have of getting the VIP treatment?
The open door policy of the PRO14 has been way more accommodating for world rugby’s stragglers, housing Aironi, the Border Reivers and Celtic Warriors when they were looking for a base, long before anyone thought of the notion of bringing in a quartet of South African teams. “While I don’t know the exact specifics of it, the addition of those four teams really beefs up the competition,” said Cullen yesterday. “I mean you are talking about World Cup winning players coming into the league; that will raise the standard of all those teams playing in the PRO14.”
That’s for next year. For now, it is the Dragons who will be focusing Leinster minds, followed by games against Benetton and Zebre. Should they get off to three wins from three then it is highly unlikely to generate impromptu street parties in every village from Ballsbridge to Birr to mark the achievement.
Little wonder then the tournament planners are thinking of trying something new – although they could do everyone a favour by simplifying rather than complicating the structure of their new-look league. Here’s hoping.
Methinks, not treated the best by Potter.
From an Irish perspective first team football is crucial for Duffy. With Ben White being kept at Brighton, seen as they has turned down a 30 million bid you’d think he’ll be above Duffy in the pecking order.
I think the best move for Duffy now to get regular games might be a loan move to Celtic. I wouldnt like to see him in the Scottish league for more than one season though which is why i think a loan move is best.
Next summer then there might be better options for a permanent move.
@Gareth Ward: He’s too good to be playing in the Scottish league in my opinion. Definitely good enough to be playing for some premier league side
@Miguel Sanchez: Agreed but there doesn’t seem to be many decent interested teams in the premier league though
@Gareth Ward: doesn’t have to be a top prem team, even playing every week for one of the new boys would be better prep for Ireland games than playing for Celtic (particularly now they won’t be in champions league).
I’d say/hope he is holding out for an approach from prem knowing Celtic will snap the hand off him if he does go back to them.
(Not trying to have a pop at Celtic here, looking purely at what’s best for Ireland)
@Gareth Ward: West brom would suit
@Gareth Ward: either West Brom or an improving West Ham team would be a good move for him. I agree with the previous poster and he is far too good to play for Celtic. Personally I think he is a better defender than either Dunk or Webster and offers a threat from set pieces. He’s just coming into his prime now. He should definitely be able to stay in the premiership
@Ger: West ham look fairly solid at center back with ogbonna and diop. So its hard to see him breaking in there
@Ger: Well does Graham what ever his name is value your opinion?
Obviously not as he wants to off load Shane Duffy.
So realistically a loan season with Celtic could be good for all parties.
Duffy is a Celtic supporter and reports suggest he wants this loan move.
Shore up a porous Celtic defence by doing the business and who knows like Virgil Van Dijk before him becomes more than a sought after defender again
Meanwhile Brighton will be happy to sell if they get relegated – which is a distinct possibility.
QED.
I hope he join Celtic on loan so that he has a chance to win silverware especially aiming for the 10 in a row SPL titles!
@Mícheál Moran: Would the equivalent of a League One title satisfy a man with almost 100 premier league appearances? He has to be looking at staying in the top league or at the very least a decent championship team. He may as well move back to the Brandywell as traipse up to Glasgow.
@M:
Ah I know but if a Premiership club don’t snap him soon before the transfer window close then he should go to the SPL.
Crystal Palace should snap him up, mad he can’t get a game
Sometimes in football, you’re face does not fit with the manager, then it’s time to go. Duffy is too good not to be playing regularly
He’s a premier league centre half, to good for the championship ,one of the best in the air in the league , only 28 ,good age for a CB very surprised a top 6 club have not came in
Celtic really do need a few signings