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RLIF Showdown could lead to breakaway Tests

roughyedspud

Coach
Messages
12,181
Statement from the RLIF meeting..

http://rlif.com/article/8444/rlif-board-makes-progress-on-international-calendar-and-governance
30th July 2018, 03:00
rlif

RLIF Board makes progress on international calendar and governance

The Rugby League International Federation (RLIF) Board met over the weekend in Singapore to consider a wide range of items reflecting its leadership of rugby league globally.



Heading the agenda was progressing finalisation of a long range calendar of international matches and tournaments that would allow fans and the many other stakeholders of international rugby league to anticipate and plan their future.



The Board received submissions on the calendar from the Australian Rugby League Commission (ARLC), the New Zealand Rugby League (NZRL), the Rugby Football League (RFL), the Asia Pacific Rugby League Confederation (APRLC) and the Rugby League European Federation (RLEF), together with proposals from the RLIF executives.



Aside from locking down matches for the top ranking nations over the long term, the Board also ensured that the international calendar offered a platform for the challenger nations to compete against their more mature counterparts while at the same time paying regard to commercial considerations, player welfare and workload, and global balance.



The calendar centres on a suite of global events in four-year cycles, including Rugby League World Cups, 9s World Cups, European and Asia Pacific Confederation tournaments, Lions, Kangaroos and Kiwi Tours, and opportunities for developing nations.



The Board agreed to undertake consultation with stakeholders to finalise the details for the next two cycles to present to its planned World Rugby League Congress in the UK in November. Key elements of the calendar include:



  • Rugby League World Cup in 2021 and 2025
  • Kangaroos Tour to UK in 2020
  • Kiwi Tour to UK in 2018 and 2022
  • Lions tour to southern hemisphere in 2019 and 2024
  • 9s World Cup in 2019 and 2023
  • 2019 Championships for the Pacific nations in a mid and end of season format
  • 2018 European Championship (and then at two-year intervals)
  • 2018 Australia v New Zealand Test (annually to 2022)
  • 2020 New Zealand fixture(s) in the southern hemisphere


The Board also agreed that World Cup qualifying competitions will expand organically and begin earlier due to the increase in aspiration from the growing membership.



‘There’s clearly still some detail to be finalised, but this is a fantastic announcement that has been a long time coming. It should give great heart and confidence to our international community,’ RLIF Chairman John Grant said.



‘It reflects the broad diversity that exists across our RLIF Member nations and we believe it can provide the certainty our fans, players and commercial stakeholders need to make long term commitments to international rugby league,’ he added.



The Board also dealt with the ongoing work of governance reform and agreed a range of Constitutional changes to be taken forward by the Governance Working Group to be put to Members for a consultation period in September and finally for adoption by Members in General Meeting in the UK in November. The Board indicated the final composition of the board would adopt best practice in independence and diversity and would include an appropriate mix of skills and expertise.



‘The Board had a very robust debate as it should on governance reform. The recommendations from the Working Group hit at the heart of how the Federation needs to govern a global sport in today’s fast changing environment,’ Mr Grant said.



‘The endorsement provided by the Board to the Working Group foreshadows a future that balances the obvious strength and contribution of the major nations and their associated professional leagues with the opportunity to grow the sport in the 65 nations in which it is played across the globe,’ he added.



The Board endorsed a proposal from RLIF CEO Nigel Wood to commence stakeholder engagement to review the process and criteria it applies to sanctioning international matches. This follows a commitment made by RLIF Chairman John Grant in June prior to the Denver Test between New Zealand and England. The review will be led by CEO Nigel Wood and will seek input from a broad range of stakeholders including National Federations, major leagues, professional and semi-professional clubs, players and their association representatives and industry experts. Its scope will include such as the strategic fit of matches within the international calendar, minimum standards, player welfare while on international duty, and insurance, and it will be informed by player data that was accumulated in and around the Denver Test.



‘This is a very significant piece of work that will provide consistency and benchmarks to which our nations must aspire to ensure international rugby league performs at the levels our players, clubs and fans expect,’ Nigel Wood said.



‘The Denver Test exposed all of us alike to this performance standard and has been a positive catalyst for this review,’ he added.



The Board also accepted the resignation of RFL Chairman Mr Brian Barwick. The Board thanked him for his four and a half years of service acknowledging an ongoing relationship with him in his new role as Chairman of Rugby League World Cup 2021.
,

I see the NRL proposal has been rightly ignored and the 4 year cycle everyone agreed on last year has been fleshed out abut more..
 

latingringo101

Juniors
Messages
585
So the main tournaments have been confirmed,
  • Rugby League World Cup in 2021 and 2025 (already common knowledge)
  • Kangaroos Tour to UK in 2020, Kiwi Tour to UK in 2018 and 2022 and Lions tour to southern hemisphere in 2019 and 2024 (Not a fan of tours but what's done is done)
  • 9s World Cup in 2019 and 2023 (awesome news!)
  • 2019 Championships for the Pacific nations in a mid and end of season format (great news)
  • 2018 European Championship (and then at two-year intervals) (great to continue this concept)
  • 2018 Australia v New Zealand Test (annually to 2022) (not bad but NZ vs Oz always generates descent promotion both sides of the Tasman).
  • 2020 New Zealand fixture(s) in the southern hemisphere (hopefully they play Tonga, Samoa etc in round robin tournament).
Overall the schedule looks promising, just not a fan of the tours. Also is the Denver Test happening in 2019?
 

Jim from Oz

Juniors
Messages
724
So the main tournaments have been confirmed,
  • Rugby League World Cup in 2021 and 2025 (already common knowledge)
  • Kangaroos Tour to UK in 2020, Kiwi Tour to UK in 2018 and 2022 and Lions tour to southern hemisphere in 2019 and 2024 (Not a fan of tours but what's done is done)
  • 9s World Cup in 2019 and 2023 (awesome news!)
  • 2019 Championships for the Pacific nations in a mid and end of season format (great news)
  • 2018 European Championship (and then at two-year intervals) (great to continue this concept)
  • 2018 Australia v New Zealand Test (annually to 2022) (not bad but NZ vs Oz always generates descent promotion both sides of the Tasman).
  • 2020 New Zealand fixture(s) in the southern hemisphere (hopefully they play Tonga, Samoa etc in round robin tournament).
Overall the schedule looks promising, just not a fan of the tours. Also is the Denver Test happening in 2019?
Wow … I can't believe it … that actually looks half-decent !

And I'm LOVING they way the RLIF ignored Beattie's moronic suggestions …
 

Jim from Oz

Juniors
Messages
724
The one downer I can see is that there is no RLIF tournament in the middle of the RLWC cycle (i.e., 2023, 2027 etc), apart from the 9s WC, which is a pretty minor event …
 

Burns

First Grade
Messages
6,039
2 lions tours? Oh f**k off.
So which essentially means that ‘England’ could potentially not play a test match in two years after this coming NZ Tour.

GB plays in 2019, 2020.

England and the other Home Nations reappear in 2021 for the World Cup.

Incredible.

Australia and England may potentially not play for years and years.
 

Last Week

Bench
Messages
3,646
So;

2018 —
Australia VS NZ
England (or is it GB) hosts NZ
European championship

2019 —
NZ vs Australia
Southern hemisphere hosts GB
9's World Cup
Pacific Championship (mid and end season format. So a round robin format, starting mid year.)

2020 -
Australia vs NZ
Australia tour UK. (I assume this will be just 3 tests against England/GB. Maybe a token match against France. If they play games against Wales and Ireland, I'll be impressed.)
European championship

NZ fixture(s) in southern hemisphere. Hopefully a Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, PNG, Cook Islands can come up with something where they can all get a good series of matches against each other.

2021 -
World Cup

2022 -
NZ vs Australia
UK hosts NZ. Again, please play other nations..
European championship

2023 -
9's World Cup

2024 -
GB tour southern hemisphere.
European championship

2025 -
World Cup

I don't like it. It's very bare at the end of the 'calendar'. The whole 'tour to UK' and 'tour of southern hemisphere' is very open to interpretation. It could literally mean 3 tests against England/GB and that'd be it. Which would be pathetic.

A 9's World cup is something that should be happening every year. Every freaking year. It's promotional.

This is just a puff piece. If you're going to tour either hemisphere, be clear about it. With matches against etc etc.
 
Last edited:

Last Week

Bench
Messages
3,646
In saying that, Australia and England/GB have arranged to play 9 test matches(minimum) between now and the next world cup.

NZ is a bit hard to work out with their 'NZ fixture'. But hopefully that means a series of matches.

So long as these stupid tours are actual tours. Not just 3 matches against the same opponent. These touring teams need to be playing 6 matches in total at least.
 

Jim from Oz

Juniors
Messages
724
"Pacific Championship (mid and end season format. So a round robin format, starting mid year.)"

Will that now occur every year ????
 

Burns

First Grade
Messages
6,039
"Pacific Championship (mid and end season format. So a round robin format, starting mid year.)"

Will that now occur every year ????
Given the wording, it looks like next year only as the Europeans Championship is explicit that it is every two years.
 

Pommy

Coach
Messages
14,657
So which essentially means that ‘England’ could potentially not play a test match in two years after this coming NZ Tour.

GB plays in 2019, 2020.

England and the other Home Nations reappear in 2021 for the World Cup.

Incredible.

Australia and England may potentially not play for years and years.

Corrected 3 lions series?!?! Oh f**k off.
 

Springs09

Juniors
Messages
1,903
Is there anything that says Great Britain would be playing in 2020? I understand if they want to bring back the old Lions Tours, but is there any point at all at having GB play at home?

Surely this Pacific Championship will include NZ, and the Lions Tour will include 3x Australia, 1x NZ, 1x PNG, 1x Tonga, 1x Samoa/Fiji and no games against club sides or regional rep sides. Similarly the Kangaroo Tour should be 3x England, 1x France, 1x Wales, 1x Ireland/Scotland, but that seems doubtful considering the NRL proposal had 3 test matches and 3 midweek games, which seems like there would only be the Ashes series and 3 emus games against club sides in a complete waste of the jersey.

It also looks like that other than token Aus v NZ games, 2019 will be the last time Australia hosts international series/tournaments until 2023.
 

roughyedspud

Coach
Messages
12,181
So which essentially means that ‘England’ could potentially not play a test match in two years after this coming NZ Tour.

GB plays in 2019, 2020.

England and the other Home Nations reappear in 2021 for the World Cup.

Incredible.

Australia and England may potentially not play for years and years.

Correction
Nz play England in 2018
GB play Australia in 2019
Australia play England in 2020

Don't muddy the waters
 

roughyedspud

Coach
Messages
12,181
In saying that, Australia and England/GB have arranged to play 9 test matches(minimum) between now and the next world cup.

NZ is a bit hard to work out with their 'NZ fixture'. But hopefully that means a series of matches.

So long as these stupid tours are actual tours. Not just 3 matches against the same opponent. These touring teams need to be playing 6 matches in total at least.

Dude...it's really simple..when nz or of "tour the UK/Europe" it's not to play GB! It'll be games against ENGLAND and other nations..

The statement is very clear that GB will tour the southern hemisphere in 2019 & 2024.
 
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