Saturday, 23 January 2010 23:16

A bad call by the NZRU

By Alison Donnelly.

The news this week that the New Zealand Rugby Union has culled the women’s NPC for 2010 is a massive blow to the World Cup preparations of the Black Ferns.

I understand that the NZRU, along with many rugby unions around the world, are cash-strapped and they need to make cost savings but to make that decision in a World Cup season smacks of disregard for their women’s game.

New Zealand, unlike their main World Cup rivals England, do not have the benefit of regular international competitions and the NPC serves as the main source of selection for all Black Ferns squads and offers the only real outlet for the country’s best players to play with and against each other.

If the NZRU were contemplating this decision last year – and they must have been – then surely they should have reassessed the Black Ferns trip to England in November where they played three test game.

Sure, those test games were shop window for the women’s international game ahead of the World Cup in London this year, but savings could have been made by sending the New Zealanders on a cheaper tour, perhaps to Australia, in a bid to keeping the NPC competition intact.

That’s one option but there are many others that should surely have been explored after lengthy consultation with the country’s senior players – which to my knowledge, (and I may stand corrected) – has not happened.

The main issue here is that this has happened in a World Cup year. If it were last year and it was a one-year postponement then this might be something that New Zealand's best players could swallow and get on with, but to hamper their preparations so much with just months to go to the World Cup is downright poor planning.

It’s also hugely disappointing that the call has come so late in the day given that the Black Ferns head coach Brian Evans will have been planning his selection and camps in and around performances in the NPC this year – he now has a small window in which to rearrange those plans.

In my view, interestingly, the team that probably stands to benefit most from the call is England. It’s not being unfair on other teams to say that England and New Zealand are the likely World Cup finalists at this stage. Plenty of international teams have been improving steadily in recent years – think Wales, Ireland, Canada etc - but those two sides continue to stand head and shoulders above the rest.

England’s build-up to the World Cup will have already been carefully planned by Gary Street and his management and it can only be a good thing for his charges that their main rivals will be going into the competition minus the experience of a tough high-level club competition.

The NZRU say that two planned test games against Canada in the coming months as well as a number of international camps will suffice as preparation for their women’s best players ahead of the defence of their World Cup crown.

If they are right, it will be despite, not because of that sentiment.

 

 

E-mail    
  • Add new comment
  • Comments
  • Redandblack
    England most certainly will benefit form the cancellation of the NPC. It will be an underdone Black Ferns team competing at the WC.
    From what I have been told, last years test series against England was paid for by the ERU, hence the atrocious accomodation. It was mentioned by a couple of leading Black Ferns last year that if 7's gets included in the Olympics then the NZRU will cut fundig to the womens 15's game as they won't fund both, which is ringing true now.
  • Richard - Winners and Loser
    Beware the wounded Kiwi ~ NZ are the defending World Champions and will be all out to justify that title despite the harm their RU have done to them.

    How many of this years World Cup teams would have smiled at this news, but given that NZ has set the benchmark in Womens rugby, in the long term the real loser is the game of Rugby.
  • Simon - Poor Leadership from the NZRFU
    It has been unfortunate that under the current NZRFU leadership, compared to that of the late nineties of Rob Fisher and David Moffat, the union`s attitude to womens rugby in NZ has been ambivalent at best. The fact that they haven`t even applied to host the womens RWC and give the team the hance to win on home soil despite the team 3-peating as World Champs is a real insult to this team.

    As far as the WRWC is concerned, the Ferns struggled to beat Australia in the second test and Australia seem to be the one with momentum down south. I`m sure the Kiwis will fight hard but they may not even make the final this time.
  • Redandblack
    I wouldnt go as far as to say that Australuia will beat the Black Ferns anytime in the near future but the lack of fund will mean that the strength and conditioning will be lacking compared to the UK team, which showed in the tests last year. The Black Ferns are still the most skillfull womens team by a longshot, but unfortunately skill isnt the be all and end all.
+/-
Your contact details
 
Comment
[b] [i] [u] [url] [quote] [code] [img] 
 


Security
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.


!joomlacomment 4.0 Copyright (C) 2009 Compojoom.com . All rights reserved."

 

Keep up to date with all the international womens rugby news!

find us on facebook
find us on twitter
Make It Digital - In touch with technology