The sabbatical as a retention software for maintaining high All Blacks round has been broadly criticised however is extra enticing than the choice.
If Jordie Barrett determined to hyperlink with Toyota Verblitz for 3 years and disappear, how does that assist the All Blacks and Tremendous Rugby Pacific?
The brief reply is it doesn’t. Which is why NZR has to return to the desk and accomodate such a transfer. It’s a wise enterprise resolution.
New Zealand Rugby losing a player like Richie Mo’unga again at 29-years-old is a situation to avoid as long as the current eligibility rules are in place.
If all avenues were explored with Mo’unga and they couldn’t come to an agreement, so be it.
But to play hard ball in negotiations, roll back sabbatical offers, doesn’t serve NZR’s own interests.
The sunk cost investment in Mo’unga for New Zealand Rugby is huge. He’s been the starting No. 10 for the All Blacks at two Rugby World Cups. He’s been Super Rugby’s best player every year for over half a decade.
He holds experience that could prove invaluable in 2027. Even if he was given two sabbaticals back-to-back, it would be better than none at all.
Barrett will miss one Super Rugby season and play the next two after his stint with Leinster.
This is the club that turned Jamison Gibson-Park into a world class No. 9 and James Lowe into an international calibre winger. It isn’t going to be a walk in the park and will likely do Barrett’s game good.
Super Rugby Pacific’s ills go deeper than the pulling power of one exceptional All Black. Simple fixes can make this product more interesting.
Rolling back the playoffs-for-everybody structure that makes the regular season redundant is first on the list.
Just four playoff spots would make this current season’s race real, with pressure on all sides every week. The lack of consequences currently allows for less intensity, huge player rotations, and of course, less incentive to watch.
The undefeated Hurricanes at 8-0 would not yet be assured of a finals berth, let alone the top seed. The Blues too, would have to maintain a winning pace.
The Crusaders should be mathematically ruled out already but unfortunately they still could make it despite holding a 1-7 record.
The competition’s integrity would be raised if they were denied a sniff at the title, or any other team that sports a losing record for that matter.
The second easy fix is the length. With eight out of 12 teams guaranteed to make the playoffs, there is absolutely no need for 15 rounds of regular season action.
We could cut this competition down to 12 weeks, with each team playing everyone just once with one bye week. Then two more rounds for semi-finals and a final.
This would cut four weeks of meaningless Super Rugby fat out of the calendar, meanwhile strengthening the entire competition as a product. We could start in mid-March and not go head-to-head with cricket in the height of summer.
With an extra month off, there would be no reason to rest stars, and they wouldn’t want to either. Every regular season game matters when you are fighting for just four playoff spots.
That brings back some intensity to the competition and moves it a step away from just being a development playground.
The first counter-argument to cutting down the length of the season will be the loss of TV revenue to support the current cost base. Maybe the TV revenue can stay the same with guarantees the on-field product will be stronger.
That extra month in the calendar could support pre-season tours overseas if needed, to Japan and Europe as was seen in 2024.
However, improved competition integrity would offset the loss of any star All Black on a sabbatical.