adamkungl
Immortal
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Currently the tiers are defined as:
1: Australia, New Zealand, England
2: RLIF Full member nations
3: All others eligible to play in RLIF ratified tests
--
Could this ever change? Will Tonga become a tier 1 nation?
Yes... and no.
There are 2 important questions:
First, you have to ask why Tier 1 nations are defined as they are. Simply being the best isn't really an answer that holds to any criteria (why 3? why not 2 or 6?). There might not be a criteria strictly defined now, but there should and eventually will be.
We can apply a criteria which Australia, New Zealand, and England all fulfill and no other nations do.
1. Has a fully professional club competition or club team(s).
2. Are ALWAYS capable of filling a national team with players that are fully professional/first grade.
(maybe) 3. Are capable of funding a national team for regular matches and tours.
The second question - is simply being tier 1 an advantage?
Many argue that tier 1 nations get special treatment and advantages.. but that is not the case.
Under the new rules Tier 1 nations have *more* restrictions on dual-eligibility. Any Pacific nation that moves from 2 to 1 would have more difficulty keeping players due to no longer being able to 'share' with Aus and NZ.
The opportunities and advantages of tier 1 nations (more games, money) are earned from within their national bodies, not handed to them by the RLIF due to some mythical tier status.
--
So, back to Tonga... are they, or should they become a tier 1 nation???
The answer is NO.
They currently have a good squad but that is not enough to put them on the same level as the T1s, EVEN IF they manage to beat them (well, NZ) again.
They fail on all 3 above criteria currently,
they will almost certainly never have fully professional club team,
and the size of their population and economy makes it difficult (but not impossible) for them to fund matches and tours without NRL assistance.
Becoming a tier 1 nation would make their ability to recruit players far more difficult, with the vast majority of them born and raised in NZ and Aus, and they would be forced to drop back pretty shortly.
The other 3 major Pacific nations are similar... with the exception of PNG.
1. Could MAYBE raise the local competition to a decent standard and there's always discussion about the viability of an NRL side.
2. It wouldn't surprise me if their national team at least was fully first grade/professional within the next decade.
3. If the above 2 happened they could get some strong financial support.
Due to little eligibility-overlap with the current big 3 or any other nations, they would be at no disadvantage from jumping up a tier.
France is the obvious nation with the most potential.
1. Have likely the 3rd strongest national league, though it is below Australian and English 2nd divisions in standard. A financial boost could raise this to professional levels. If Toulouse get promoted to SL they will have 2 first grade club sides.
2. Again, if Toulouse get promoted, their ability to consistently field a fully-pro national team is improved. This is their current weakness.
3. Off the back of 1 and 2 they could fuel their financial growth and return to touring.
1: Australia, New Zealand, England
2: RLIF Full member nations
3: All others eligible to play in RLIF ratified tests
--
Could this ever change? Will Tonga become a tier 1 nation?
Yes... and no.
There are 2 important questions:
First, you have to ask why Tier 1 nations are defined as they are. Simply being the best isn't really an answer that holds to any criteria (why 3? why not 2 or 6?). There might not be a criteria strictly defined now, but there should and eventually will be.
We can apply a criteria which Australia, New Zealand, and England all fulfill and no other nations do.
1. Has a fully professional club competition or club team(s).
2. Are ALWAYS capable of filling a national team with players that are fully professional/first grade.
(maybe) 3. Are capable of funding a national team for regular matches and tours.
The second question - is simply being tier 1 an advantage?
Many argue that tier 1 nations get special treatment and advantages.. but that is not the case.
Under the new rules Tier 1 nations have *more* restrictions on dual-eligibility. Any Pacific nation that moves from 2 to 1 would have more difficulty keeping players due to no longer being able to 'share' with Aus and NZ.
The opportunities and advantages of tier 1 nations (more games, money) are earned from within their national bodies, not handed to them by the RLIF due to some mythical tier status.
--
So, back to Tonga... are they, or should they become a tier 1 nation???
The answer is NO.
They currently have a good squad but that is not enough to put them on the same level as the T1s, EVEN IF they manage to beat them (well, NZ) again.
They fail on all 3 above criteria currently,
they will almost certainly never have fully professional club team,
and the size of their population and economy makes it difficult (but not impossible) for them to fund matches and tours without NRL assistance.
Becoming a tier 1 nation would make their ability to recruit players far more difficult, with the vast majority of them born and raised in NZ and Aus, and they would be forced to drop back pretty shortly.
The other 3 major Pacific nations are similar... with the exception of PNG.
1. Could MAYBE raise the local competition to a decent standard and there's always discussion about the viability of an NRL side.
2. It wouldn't surprise me if their national team at least was fully first grade/professional within the next decade.
3. If the above 2 happened they could get some strong financial support.
Due to little eligibility-overlap with the current big 3 or any other nations, they would be at no disadvantage from jumping up a tier.
France is the obvious nation with the most potential.
1. Have likely the 3rd strongest national league, though it is below Australian and English 2nd divisions in standard. A financial boost could raise this to professional levels. If Toulouse get promoted to SL they will have 2 first grade club sides.
2. Again, if Toulouse get promoted, their ability to consistently field a fully-pro national team is improved. This is their current weakness.
3. Off the back of 1 and 2 they could fuel their financial growth and return to touring.