Melhor Time
Bench Player
- Joined
- May 5, 2007
- Messages
- 801
- Reaction score
- 0
The existing format of the Six Nations is great for those who play in it. A great tournament which makes huge revenues for the six unions and sees full houses in the capitals of the six members for virtually all home matches. The problem is Georgia should be added but won´t. Its very similar to the Pacific Islands trying to get into a Tier One competition but the difference being that they can all win and all lose against each other as proven year in, year out in the Pacific Nations Cup. Japan in there helps greatly in making the event bigger. The same cannot be said of the Lelos who are clearly the best European team outside of the 6N but have no way of getting in.
There is no way that any of the Six member unions will vote in a promotion / relegation system for a simple fear of being relegated. So are there any real solutions or will Georgia continue to win by big margins in the ENC and At least the IRB has woken up to the problem in having Georgia play away to Tier Two opposition in June and host the same callibre of opponents in November. Its viable for the next five years but the ENC is not. I would say that for 2015 it is paramount that Scotland and Italy both play in Georgia during the Lions Tour to Australia. It would be a genuine examination of Georgian rugby on and off the field.
Unfortunately for Georgia there is no chance of replacing the Six Nations with a European Cup, similar to that used in soccer. The Tier One orientation of global rugby severly advantages the historical sides while holding back emerging teams to the extent that many don´t know how good others really are. Argentina defeating France in Paris to open RWC 2007 was not a big surprize at all. Argentina had won four of the past five games and the loss was by just a single point. Tell this to the international media though who all responded in shock to Argentina´s win on September 7 2007. The lesson is that only World Cup´s matter. It is only in these matches that the Tier One pay attention and respect. It is no coincidence that Tonga struggled to get any November tests from 2008-2010 despite giving both England and South Africa great games in France 2007. The fact is Tonga were good but didn´t win against Tier one sides at the World Cup. Four years on the same team nocked over France in Wellington in a World Cup match and now has a decent tour lined up this November including tests vs Scotland and Italy. Ideal I would say. Georgia did well vs Scotland in Invercargill but didn´t win and here lies the problem. First Tier sides only do anything for Second Tier sides when they lose.
Making a name for oneself is hard when opportunities are limited. This will only change when the IRB becomes democratic instead of having a system in which the majority have no vote, the old 3N + old 5N all have two votes each but, oddly, Ita + Arg have only one each.
There is no way that any of the Six member unions will vote in a promotion / relegation system for a simple fear of being relegated. So are there any real solutions or will Georgia continue to win by big margins in the ENC and At least the IRB has woken up to the problem in having Georgia play away to Tier Two opposition in June and host the same callibre of opponents in November. Its viable for the next five years but the ENC is not. I would say that for 2015 it is paramount that Scotland and Italy both play in Georgia during the Lions Tour to Australia. It would be a genuine examination of Georgian rugby on and off the field.
Unfortunately for Georgia there is no chance of replacing the Six Nations with a European Cup, similar to that used in soccer. The Tier One orientation of global rugby severly advantages the historical sides while holding back emerging teams to the extent that many don´t know how good others really are. Argentina defeating France in Paris to open RWC 2007 was not a big surprize at all. Argentina had won four of the past five games and the loss was by just a single point. Tell this to the international media though who all responded in shock to Argentina´s win on September 7 2007. The lesson is that only World Cup´s matter. It is only in these matches that the Tier One pay attention and respect. It is no coincidence that Tonga struggled to get any November tests from 2008-2010 despite giving both England and South Africa great games in France 2007. The fact is Tonga were good but didn´t win against Tier one sides at the World Cup. Four years on the same team nocked over France in Wellington in a World Cup match and now has a decent tour lined up this November including tests vs Scotland and Italy. Ideal I would say. Georgia did well vs Scotland in Invercargill but didn´t win and here lies the problem. First Tier sides only do anything for Second Tier sides when they lose.
Making a name for oneself is hard when opportunities are limited. This will only change when the IRB becomes democratic instead of having a system in which the majority have no vote, the old 3N + old 5N all have two votes each but, oddly, Ita + Arg have only one each.