East Coast Tiger said:
But even if they can synchronise the NRL and SL seasons, which they don't seem to be too keen to do, a WCC two weeks after the grand final, plus a seven week international schedule, the season will run into December.
All assuming the GF remains on the first weekend of October. It hasn't aways been on that weekend and doesn't have to be in the future. But this isn't the real problem.
The Kangaroos complained the 2004 Tri-Nations was too long because it started two weeks after the grand final and went for seven weeks plus the trip to New York. Slotting the WCC in would be exactly the same, especially for the players playing in the WCC and the Tri-Nations. Plus the Tri-Nations players who aren't involved would be waiting three weeks after the grand final to play a game. Plus what if the international series isn't played in the same hemisphere as the WCC?
So always play it in the same hemisphere as the first Tri-Nations match and rotate it each year along with the Tri-Nations. Again not a problem. The only real problem is the length of the season. The number of weeks/matches played between the first weekend of competitive matches and the last. Whether the WCC is played pre club season or post club season makes not the slightest difference. If it's played at all then it pushes the season out a week somewhere. Neither does it matter whether the first match is played on a warmer February weekend and the last on a slightly cooler November one, or whether the first match is on a slightly cooler March weekend and the last on a slightly warmer December one (or vice versa in the northern hemisphere). Either way the weather is going to be a complaint at one end of the season or the other. The only thing that will help that is shortening the season - ie. lose matches from the season completely. IMHO rounds 23 and up of the respective premierships, which add to the collective workload of all 28 professional first division RL clubs worldwide, should be in the firing line before the WCC which adds to the workload of just two clubs.
There's nothing wrong with playing the WCC in the pre-season as long as the clubs take it seriously and it is well promoted.
But there is plenty wrong with it in the pre-season as I've explained in the last three posts. Club's can take it as seriously as a GF but that won't change the fact that in the pre-season the match is played between two teams with limited match fitness, two teams well past the form that won them their respective premierships, and where one or both teams may have significantly different (ie. weaker) squads from which to select. Not to mention the fact the premiership winning buzz has long since subsided among the respective fanbases. You can market the concept as much as you like but those inherent problems will always undermine it as a pre-season concept. So yes, there is something wrong with the WCC in the pre-season.
The WCC used to be played post season and that brought problems too, like half drunk players in no condition to play football after celebrating their grand final win for two weeks.
To be strictly accurate it has *never* been played as a true post season event. It has been played as an Australian post season and English mid-season event (and vice versa). The two teams always had dramatically different preparations. One team was coming off a GF, the other was mid campaign with the following season's squad. Since England moved to a summer season it has only been played pre-season (excluding the SL joke of '97). It certainly has never been played in the host team's post season in front of a crowd celebrating the home coming a GF winning heroes.
Even after the grand final it's an after-thought, not something the players and coaches really think about until after winning the premiership, which is their main goal.
To be sure, but it doesn't help if the match is organized at two minutes notice and you don't know exactly when or even if it's coming. The biggest farce was sending Penrith to play the weekend straight after the GF. They were on a hiding to nothing. But that doesn't make the post season unworkable. The '92 WCC was played more than four weeks after the GF, the weekend after the '92 World Cup final at Wembley. The Broncos had their usual 7-8 Kangaroos fly out, play two (?) warm up tour matches prior to the World Cup final, the remaining Broncos flew out in time to be spectators at the World Cup and then the next weekend they played Wigan at Central Park. And the Broncos won a hard fought contest filled with passion.
So why did that match work post season? Because it wasn't played too soon after the GF, every one had time to get over their hang overs. And being part of a tour with the other non premiership celebrating Kangaroos focused their minds back on football. We can debate whether two weeks after or five weeks after on a rest weekend between round 1 and round 2 of the Tri-Nations is better, but the point is that the post season can work. It's been proved. And that's without the marketing advantage of playing it as a premiership homecoming for the host team. Wigan were more than six months past their premiership win and well into their next season.
To me I think the club season should finish with the grand final and then it's time for internationals.
What's the WCC if not an international? It's hardly a domestic clash. To me if you're going to play a meeting of champions then you do so while you've still got the two championship winning squads to choose teams from. Pushing it to the following pre-season forever relegates it to a glorified trial and pushing to the next year at all ensures it is a meeting of champions in name only. And it means you can't market it on the back of the GF winning buzz. No matter how you look at it you're stealing half the concept's thunder before you even sell a ticket.
Leigh.