Sport is all about bouncing back from defeat and keeping your eye on the long term development of what you are involved in.
That is something which the team at the Guinness PRO14 tournament will cling to over the coming weeks as the news was confirmed yesterday that with no formal approvals in place to allow the South African teams to enter the UK and Ireland for their Guinness PRO14 Rainbow Cup fixtures, PRO14 Rugby and SA Rugby will operate dual tournaments with no cross-hemisphere fixtures.
A statement revealed that “Despite a colossal effort, the South African teams were not granted permission to travel in time to allow the Guinness PRO14 Rainbow Cup to be played as originally planned. Such challenges are not unique to rugby as many international sports have found the Covid-19 pandemic a difficult landscape to plan for.”
“All options for the South African teams to travel to Europe safely were explored and exhausted by the league, this is due to the heightened restrictions caused by South Africa’s presence on the red list of the territories involved.”
Dual Tournaments
The ‘northern’ Guinness PRO14 Rainbow Cup will still take place on the dates previously published as teams from across Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales line out once more. The fixtures for Rounds 4, 5 and 6 had already been scheduled and provided to clubs, but will now have the South African teams removed and kick-off times may be modified ahead of publishing.
The ‘southern’ tournament will be called Rainbow Cup SA and will include Cell C Sharks, DHL Stormers, Emirates Lions and Vodacom Bulls.
These games will be available in the UK and Ireland with PRO14 Rugby’s current TV partners, eir sport and TG4 in Ireland and Premier Sport and others in the UK.
Full details of this competition will be confirmed by SA Rugby shortly
In total, 12 venues across the UK, Ireland and Europe were considered as base camps for the South African teams to operate out of or to use as a quarantine destination before entering the UK and Ireland. SA Rugby also explored another four locations separate from this. Further destinations in the Middle East were also explored as potential hosts for fixtures involving South African teams.
This process produced project plans for each venue to include suitable training and accommodation facilities and charter travel schedules under the constant guidance of a Medical Management Committee, consisting of the PRO14 medical consultant, tournament staff and union Chief Medical Officers. This group tracked the status of Covid-19 in the various territories and advised on the strategic approach to governments at all times.
Harsh Critics
What has been left is clearly not what was originally hoped for but some commentary on what is seen as having been a futile exercise is harsh, taking 2020 hindsight to a situation that was always moving fast and which was fraught with dangers.
A disrupted season needed something and with the South African presence in an expanded Pro 16 from next Autumn we believe it was worth taking the chance.
PRO14 rugby confirmed in the statement that “This decision will have no impact on the long-term partnership between PRO14 Rugby and SA Rugby and more details about those plans and league structure for the ground-breaking 2021/22 season onwards will be made public shortly.”
“A staggering volume of work has been undertaken to provide a number of proposals and options to accommodate this – all as we navigated the challenges of the second and third waves of Covid-19 as well as the South African variant which constantly changed the landscape we were operating in,” said Pro14 CEO Martin Anayi.
“Among our unions, our own staff and SA Rugby there is no more that could have been asked in terms of designing plans that were medically sound, however, there has been no perfect solution found in time to allow for South African teams’ entry into our territories.”
“Whilst the outcome is clearly different from what we had intended, our relationship and partnership with SA Rugby has been greatly strengthened and enhanced by this experience. We are looking forward to the two Rainbow Cup competitions and in due course sharing our intentions about our future partnership that will be boosted by the experiences and project planning involved to this point ahead of the 2021/22 season.”
“This is a huge disappointment, but time had simply run out,” added Jurie Roux, CEO of SA Rugby.
“No stone was left unturned to try and find a solution to the challenges – including basing our teams for 10 days in locations in the Middle East or Europe. But the pieces of the jigsaw would not fall into place in time to allow us to put those plans into action.”
Time is a healer and it was worth taking the chance.
PRO14 Rugby and Guinness are members of the Sport for Business network of sporting and business organisations working together across a number of key areas.
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