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Sydney Subbies 2025

Pfitzy

Phil Waugh (73)
So this is what you get an ever growing gap between the top end of town and the rest. As more clubs falter like Pats the harder it will be. But let’s keep pretending the current system works

For me it is partly to do with the way the competition is structured - or at least the way in which it has been structured traditionally.

I've been on the Board and I've seen the juggling act up close. The news, views, rumours, and half-truths that somehow have to get slapped into viable competitions by somewhere between February and May. Then injury tolls, absences, breakdowns in communication.... none of it makes for easy reading when you're trying to decide whether a club should go up or down. Or even if they're treading water or about to implode.

In certain cases like Lindfield and then Newport, the push for First Division was undeniable. So who makes room at that point?
Do we just keep pushing up successful clubs until we have a First Division made up of ~14 clubs and then a cliff-edge to the rest of Subbies?

That is a sure fire way to create a three tiered system in senior rugby:

1) Premier Rugby
2) Big Subbies Clubs
3) Everyone else stumbling around a wasteland of what's left, waiting for the axe to fall either through lack of players but more likely through lack of volunteers.
 

Pfitzy

Phil Waugh (73)
It's a Rugby wide problem not just Subbies. Something wrong with the thing I like and effects ME. It must be someone else fault. Fix it for ME.

Subbies Clubs struggling = Boards fault
Junior Clubs struggling = Darn private schools
Western Force stink = Waratahs fault somehow
Wallabies suck = Evil Sydney Eastern Suburbs types

Don't forget - crucially - that refs are also seriously struggling for numbers.
 

parkfootyenthusiast2

Fred Wood (13)
Side note, was out at Blacktown on the weekend, think I've managed to identify the root cause of their issue. Their captain is the biggest loudmouth on their whole team, sets a really poor example for his chargers. Was heard calling the opposing team every slur under the sun for opting to scrum 5 out instead of taking a quick tap early in the game, and then never let up from there. 80 minutes of straight dribble out of his mouth.

If your captain is the first to lose his head when a decision doesn't go your way, I don't know how you can expect the rest of the team to remain calm. Plenty of candidates that could have the gig instead, their hooker, fly half and tall second rower were all excellent.

For comparison, Merrylands last year had a similar play style... big units who love a back fence run and love to put shots on. Their captain was levelheaded, kept them in line and spoke to the ref with genuine respect, and they had next to no issues as a side. Just some food for thought.

For what it's worth, their Ladies Day was great, their new kit for the week was fantastic and their post-game sportsmanship was great. Really enjoyed their (presumably Fijian?) post-game hymn they sang together also. Plenty of upside for them and I hope they continue to grow and develop for the sake of the game and the people involved in the administration of the club.
 

Here To Do

Sydney Middleton (9)
That is a sure fire way to create a three tiered system in senior rugby:

1) Premier Rugby
2) Big Subbies Clubs
3) Everyone else stumbling around a wasteland of what's left, waiting for the axe to fall either through lack of players but more likely through lack of volunteers.
Are we already not there, though, and is that a bad thing?

Premier/Shute/SRU serves an important purpose - it is the top level of club rugby and was traditionally, and will be again next season apparently, the top level of club rugby you could watch on FTA. Essentially, they fly the flag for the game below Super and Test level.

The big Subbies clubs are the next level - traditionally, many of these clubs would be lower division SRU clubs aiming to break into Shute competition but now serve as the "elite" amateur clubs below the semi-pro Premier clubs. For those who want strong competition without competing for pro contracts - just good, tough rugby.

Then we have the lower Div clubs - one for the weekend warriors who just want a game locally. Rugby for the sake of rugby without the cut-throat nature of the top divisions.

Now, where are the problems with this system? At the moment, the glass ceiling between SRU and Subbies means there are clubs who have bigger aspirations that are trapped in a system where they cannot operate as an elite club. Think your Drummoynes who want to operate at a level above amateur community rugby. Then you have the other, traditionally "Subbies" clubs who want top level competition but are more than comfortable operating as a community club.

This pushes down the line as well, with blurred lines between Div One and Div Two clubs like Petersham, Forest and Newport who teeter between the two and haven't been able to establish themselves like the Colleagues and Mosmans of the union. As you go further down, the gulfs continue to grow and you end up with logjams along divisional lines.

Subbies and the SRU have fundamentally not significantly changed in scope in the last 4 decades as far as I can tell - amateur policies and player points policies, of course, but Shute operates in a form of purgatory where it's a Sydney comp, then a NSW comp, and back again. Subbies gets the rejects from the SRU, like Penrith, Drummoyne, Hornsby, UNSW, etc.

We need better alignment between all levels of rugby - things like the Tooheys New Cup and the ARC/NRC were supposed to help with this but had their deficiencies and have gone by the wayside. If the SRU can't get it done then what chance do we have?

IMO there needs to be a strong and thorough look of what Subbies competition will be into the future - if the aim is to become a social union, then you risk alienating the top clubs, but if you aim to be a fully competitive system, you will lose the lower end of town. The solution, in my view, is there needs to be either a middle ground or a split system to accommodate that.

A two-tier Subbies system, with a "Premiership" tier and a "Championship" tier, split into sub-divisions based on performance, is where I'd be looking. The logical split is along the lines of clubs with and without Colts but this doesn't fundamentally solve the current issues we have. Things like scheduling and divisional structures could be more rigid in the "Premiership" where competition is king but more relaxed in the "Championship" where just getting games on the park is focus. Teams can nominate which tier they would like to be considered for and, along with performance, facilities, numbers, etc. could be graded into one of those tiers.

What does this achieve? It means that clubs within tiers and divisions are closer in culture and aspiration to each other. You can tailor the more relaxed competitions to have less stringent schedules, less teams in a competition to ease travel while building inter-club connections. At the top end, you have the same alignment of "we want to compete with you" where you can really test which clubs are the best, without some of the mismatches we see where a highly ambitious club ends up getting mauled by the incumbent strong clubs.
 

Pfitzy

Phil Waugh (73)
You make some good points, particularly the opening line:

Are we already not there, though, and is that a bad thing?

We probably are there. Is it a bad thing? It depends what rugby wants to be.

I don't think the Premier model of 4 + 3 is sustainable, and we're already seeing that with certain clubs unable to field a full complement. They probably need to look at a 3+2 model with their Colts sides being codified into U20 and U19 respectively.

Maybe we just accept that there are 14 clubs in Subbies who can turn out 3 Grades + Womens + U21 Colts and make that competition what it is - 8-14 clubs who can meet the criteria.

I look at the resources required to even add Colts to my existing 2 Grades and am left to think that 2nd Division is basically another universe.

In lower levels it might be clubs are limited to 2 Grades + U21 (and maybe even also an U19 if they can manage it) like parts of the UK system, which helps keep continuity between juniors and seniors for those with the fortune of an aligned junior club. Promotion and relegation in this tier and consideration given to those with Womens rugby in order to make it desirable.

The elephant in the room of course is schools. So valued a part of the landscape by many, yet disruptive to continuity in a way league haven't countenanced (but may, soon)
 
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