T
Train Without a Station
Guest
I'm saying that with zero change to 75% of the senior rugby playing population in Sydney, that rugby would survive.
As for rugby not surviving in Sydney without Shute Shield clubs. You do realize of the approximately 10,000 registered senior players in Sydney, only around a quarter are with Shute Shield Clubs, right?
Copy and paste -
Stupid argument Phil Waugh has been asked to write an article on U20's rugby what else is he going to say it's a waste of time and shouldn't exist?
Aussie Dominance, it's typical of those who seek to constantly run down the Shute Shield that they set up straw man arguments, which they can knock down. It shows that they don't really appreciate the point (or through some ingrained prejudice don't want to understand).
And how many super or test players have the 75% produced?
For the record these two posts were my favourite amongst the whole thing and if they had been written by other people I would have totally assumed them to be satirical.
Amazing.
The assertion that without it the players would have nowhere to play is not true though.
Shute Shield opposition fighting strawmen?
Hehehehe
I could say the same thing about the majority of your posts. Unfortunately I'm convinced that you really believe most of the stuff you post about club rugby and you're not just trying to be overly provocative.
Nice to see all the usual suspects turned out for the hate-a-thon though.
But if all the players went to play for these vastly inferior clubs in vastly inferior competitions, wouldn't they come close to the same quality that the Shute Shield was? As BH has noted, the quality of it is based on those that play it.
Which I have never said at any point on any thread. They would have to play for vastly inferior clubs in vastly inferior competitions.
No, if all the SS disappeared, they could not be replaced by what are currently weaker clubs.Well not really, if all the SS clubs disappeared tomorrow the infux of players into those "vastly inferior clubs" would make those "vastly inferior clubs" vastly improved
I love the SS, but it isn't irreplaceable, everything is.
The challenge with the SS is that it can't be a fully or a semi-professional comp in a now fully professional sport at the elite level and it hasn't come to accept it's lessor place in that different world as a amateur feeder to the pro level.
No, if all the SS disappeared, they could not be replaced by what are currently weaker clubs.
It would mean that the current structure was no longer viable.
I deliberately not commented on this one until that comment. It's a discussion in the club rugby threads, NRC threads and heck, specific threads on the general discussion forum. You were rightfully celebrating a qualitaty product of the state/city/system, particularly how it did give him an avenue towards success despite missing out on traditional pathways, both because of circumstances around schooling and injury. I have a specific view, based on a number of things.
Both sides appear to be arguing slightly different things.
Supporters seem to be arguing that, for reasons detailed elsewhere by others, that the Shute Shield is the best developmental pathway and self contained "non - professional" competition in Australia.
Detractors by contrast, again for reason better detailed elsewhere by others, that the Shield is insufficient in being a developmental pathway, particularly over the long term.
Neither of these seems objectively, or subjectively incorrect. But they overlap to enough of an extent that people will debate vigorously over the subject (as we've so clearly seen on this forum), and, particularly if people enter with strong positive or negative views on the subject it devolves into shit shows.
For my own viewpoint, it is clearly the best club competition in Australia, both from a cultural POV, an establishment point of view and a level of competition. The number of players that go there, from both country areas and nontraditional states is a clear testament to that, as is the number of players currently in Super Rugby and overseas that have played between some, and significant amounts of time in the Shield.
But I think both it, and Australian Rugby in general can be better than it currently is. The NRC is an important step towards this because of the National aspect, but more importantly, the smaller number of sides means a concentration of talent. Independently of that I believe that a smaller Shute Shield (say 2-3 grades and 1 or 2 colts) would serve to provide a more elite closed competition, with the remaining grades being well served to play within the Suburban competition pyramid under the same identity, but as different organisations.
Regardless, Hodge is worth celebrating as a victory for club rugby, and Matthew 7:3
Not an accurate analogy at all.They said the same after Australian Rugby Championship died and then we find National Rugby Championship grew out of the land salted by the SS clubs