Labouriously reading through the pages of posts reveals a disturbing number of our members who are dissatisfied with the ARU's performance, in relation to the Super Rugby "mess".
Laboriously reading through this place will also convince you that its all a NSW plot!
Now, I'm as pissed off as anyone in Australian Rugby right now about the situation, but I take Braveheart's point this way: who else is going to run it?
The sad truth, which I'm just coming to realise, is that asking the ARU to "put a broom through the place" is like asking Federal Politicians to vote for a pay cut.
- The people at the top layers of are all of this ilk.
- They're all going to fit these profiles.
- They're all there because they know the right people, or went to the right school, or
- They worked for the right company under the right boss at some point.
None of them are really going to appreciate the struggles of a small club, or a large club in a small rugby state, or the weekly/monthly/yearly struggle to put something together and try and turn a small profit each year.
They don't see the encroachment of soccer, league, and AFL as anything but missed sponsor dollars, because their old
alma mater is doing just fine thanks, having beaten [Business Rival]'s school/club this year and last.
Therefore things are quite healthy.
Go read the Schoolboy rugby thread - its the same pissing contest and blame game, over and over again. Who's stealing what talent. Who has undue influence over selection. Who at which school is doing the dirty behind closed doors.
As a Club President (did I mention that?
) I'm trying to build a very positive relationship with Subbies, the refs, and other clubs first and foremost, because I have enough battles just getting a team on the park.
If there was less of the political shite we'd have a much happier game.
But the problem is, during times of crisis, there is a lot of finger-pointing, and not much innovation or appetite for real change.
Why? Because the culture at this point is to make yourself as comfortable as possible, while implementing an idea that is just a watered-down version of what you promised. Change is hard, and you don't want to upset the apple cart that is paying you handsomely.
After all, it worked for the previous five monkeys in the cage...