Showing posts with label Six Nations Rugby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Six Nations Rugby. Show all posts

Thursday, 10 February 2011

What a week!!

This has, without doubt, been an incredible few days for sport. A record breaking day and weekend in the Premier League, three fantastically competitive six nations rugby encounters, a classic superbowl and the start of the new Nations Cup in international football. There have been so many talking points that it can only be described as a sports blogger's dream - that is unless you are a sports blogger who decided to take a few days off!

In my defense, it wasn't billed as an amazing weekend of sport. Busy, yes. Amazing, no. With the exception of the superbowl, all of last weekend's sporting action should have been no more than a run of the mill weekend. An ordinary round of Premier League matches, the opening salvos of the six nations - with only the Wales v England game expected to be anywhere near competitive - and the usual mix of other sports making up a normal sporting weekend. I didn't see this one coming. I don't think anybody did. And that is what made it such an epic.

There are certain weekends in the sporting calendar that we all expect to be special. The F.A. Cup Final, the US Masters, the British Grand Prix, the Grand National and the finals of Wimbledon are all billed to fill us with excitement and to be sporting spectaculars. Sadly, the build up is not always matched by the outcome. For all of the hype, the anticipation and the endless opinions and forecasts in the run up to these events, often they turn out to be very ordinary.

It is not that last weekend was without its hype. The debut of Fernando Torres, for Chelsea against Liverpool, certainly kept the sports pundits busy in the days leading up to it. The Superbowl, even on this side of the Atlantic, can always be relied upon to be hyped up - especially by whichever TV channel has managed to secure the broadcasting rights. But apart from those two, nothing else was getting a great deal of press or airtime. So safe in the knowledge that nothing overly exciting was going to take place, I took myself off to Worcester for the weekend to celebrate a friend's birthday, and to sample the delights of the Worcester nightlife.

Oh how wrong I was. This weekend was a sporting classic. It is difficult to know where to begin summing the action up, or even knowing if it can be summed up adequately. In the same way as Match Of The Day struggled to fit anything but goals into its airtime, any attempt at a summary of this weekend's action would fail spectacularly in capturing all of the significant moments. Best to stick to the scattergun approach and not dress it up as anything else.

The only title or silverware at stake last weekend went to the Green Bay Packers in the Superbowl, as the underdogs overcame the predictions on Sunday night. All of the action that preceded the Superbowl would see no titles decided, nobody gaining an unassailable lead in any championship, and nobody losing out to such an extent that there would be no way back. Nobody that is except Roberto Di Matteo. In a weekend of shocks and surprises, the transition of Di Matteo from West Brom manager to the ranks of the mass unemployed was up there with the best of them. Not many people saw his sacking coming. Perhaps it was down to the good start that the club enjoyed to the season, or perhaps just the way that West Brom were outperforming their previous visits to the Premier League, but their slide down the table had gone relatively unnoticed outside of the Hawthorns. However, in the cut and thrust of modern football it is results that count and Di Matteo becomes the latest managerial casualty.

The only other big losers of the weekend were the Fulham fans. Fulham? Yes, Fulham. Fans of all football clubs, outside of the big four or five, bemoan the number of times that their team appears last on Match Of The Day. Spare a thought for the Fulham fans. Fulham have appeared last on MOTD more than any other team this season, and going into this weekend's fixtures a run of three weeks in a row appearing last on the program had taken their tally this season to nine. At least as their fans left Villa Park on Saturday they could take comfort that four goals in an exciting 2-2 draw would see them safely further forward in the scheduling. That did not take account of the record 41 goals scored in Saturday's eight matches. The last game on MOTD this week? Aston Villa verses Fulham. At least they had no boring games to sit through as they waited.

The record audience for Match Of The Day were treated to highlights of Manchester United losing their unbeaten run at bottom club Wolves and Arsenal throwing away a four goal lead at Newcastle in a game that will go down, not only as the record comeback in Premier League history but, possibly also as the greatest ever game in Premier League history. If nothing else, at least it should lead to less viewings of Kevin Keegan slumped over the advertising hoardings at Anfield in what was regarded as the previous best ever game. We also saw a record number of penalties awarded (eight) and scored (seven). Goals, penalties, sendings off and controversies. It was a treat to watch.

It was not just the football though. In the rugby Scotland gave France far more of a game than they were expecting, scoring three tries in the Stade de France. In many other years three tries would secure a win.

Italy played their part too. The perennial wooden spoon contenders gave Ireland a real fright, and only a last gasp drop goal from Ronan O' Gara saw the Irish prevail. The first round of games in the Six Nations certainly indicate an exciting and competitive tournament ahead.

One final note. On the day of great comebacks in the North-East, it was not just Newcastle United who overcame unlikely odds to redeem a desperate situation. The Newcastle Ice Hockey team, The Vipers, went one better than their footballing counterparts. Trailing 4-1 with only fifteen minutes remaining, they scored five goals to beat the Nottingham Panthers 6-5 in a truly exciting finale. They may not have received as much coverage as the events at St James' Park, but their efforts highlight that it is not only the sports receiving good coverage that can summon up excitement and entertainment.

I have learned two big lessons this week. The first is that sport is alive and kicking in this country. It serves up excitement, thrills and heartache at levels that few other pastimes can match. The second is to take my computer with me when I go away, as you never know when sport will decide to remind us all just how exciting it really is.

Wednesday, 2 February 2011

Should The Six Nations Involve Relegation And Promotion?

This weekend sees the start of the 2011 Six Nations Championship. As usual the championship will be played out between England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales. Is it now time to become more inclusive though?

Rugby is a game that is expanding throughout Europe and throughout the world. Once only played by a handful of nations, there are now twelve European nations ranked in the world's top 25 teams. A further 25 European teams hold an international ranking (if you include Israel who play in European competitions).

All European teams, with the exception of the six nation teams, currently play in the European Nations Cup. There are 35 teams playing in this competition. Four of the competing teams do not hold an international ranking, which is why there is a discrepancy between the two sets of figures. The tournament is made up of seven leagues, and divided into three levels. The different levels compete in slightly different formats to take account of travelling constraints for lower level teams, who are more likely to be comprised of working amateurs.

Currently there is a promotion and relegation system in place between all seven of these leagues to allow nations to improve and rise through the ranks. However, once they reach the top of the European Nations Cup, which is effectively top of the second tier of European rugby, they hit a brick wall. There is no possibility of competing with the elite teams of European rugby in the Six Nations Championship.

Can this situation be right for a sport that is serious about expansion? In this modern world is it right that the top table of an international sport is not made available to any team that competes in that sport?

Surely the time has come to truly throw open the doors of European rugby and welcome all-comers? There may well be obstacles to overcome and teething problems at the beginning, but this will always be the case. They should not be used as an excuse to maintain the status quo of rugby elitism. Many of the same excuses were used by those who objected to Italy's inclusion in the Six Nations. Italy now compete very impressively within the championship, not only holding their own, but achieving wins along the way. There is no doubt that inclusion in the championship has benefited Italian rugby.

Some of the reasons that are put forward in the argument against including other European teams are nothing more than excuses. The most common one is that there is too great a disparity between the Six Nations teams and the teams below them. Playing them in the Six Nations would only lead to heavy defeats and demoralising the lower teams. It would also reduce the competitive nature and spectacle of the championship with such a weak team involved. This is a red herring. Not that these heavy defeats may not take place. However, this is how teams develop. They learn from playing stronger teams on a regular basis. They are welcomed into the World Cup, so why not proper European competition? With relegation and promotion in place they would not be exposed to prolonged heavy defeats as any weak team would face relegation and thus be back amongst teams they could beat a year later.

It is far more likely that the real reason behind these excuses is not about allowing the lower teams in as much as it is about the team that would need to make way to allow them to compete. The thought of an established international team playing at a lower level, even just for one year, is unpalatable to the current powers of rugby.

The worry of adding 35 new international teams to the structure is also a false argument. The current structure of the European Nations Cup already allows for promotion and relegation. All that would be involved is allowing for one team to be promoted and one relegated from the Six Nations.

There are however, some genuine obstacles that need to be faced up to. Perhaps the biggest in logistical terms is that the Six Nations is an annual competition while the European Nations Cup is played over two years to allow each team to play each other home and away.

Playing home and away is certainly a fairer system when relegation is at stake. A team that is in a year of playing three away games may well feel a little hard done by if that year also saw a relegation ensue. However, they accept that the Championship winners are genuine champions even if they have played three home games, so why not accept that the bottom team are genuinely relegated even if they have played three away games? You cannot claim that one is not valid if you accept that the other is valid.

As far as the European Nations Cup teams are concerned, would they accept changing their format to a one year system? Once the transition period had passed and the system was set up, then I am sure that they would accept that the benefits of development and increased revenues would far outweigh any negatives.

Then there is the issue of the annual competitions that take place within the Six Nations. What would happen to the possibilities of a Triple Crown if one of the home nations were relegated? What would happen to the Calcutta Cup if England or Scotland were relegated? Would a Grand Slam won in a year without one of the established Six Nation teams competing be viewed as less valuable?

The Triple Crown is not won annually. If one of the home nations were missing then we would just need to accept that it could not be won that year. The Calcutta Cup, or any of the other trophies competed for between individual nations, would just have to go down as not contested in that particular year. Surely that is a price worth paying for the greater good of the game? And a Grand Slam is a Grand Slam in any year. The name may change, but there is often a very weak team in a Six Nations Championship.

The real issue is whether the existing nations would be willing, or able, to forfeit a year without the revenues of competing in the Six Nations. Would a loss of that revenue hinder progression? I doubt it. In reality, the current Six Nations teams should be more than capable of bouncing back from any relegation for the immediate future. If, or when, the time came that they were not guaranteed bouncing back, we should celebrate the progression of the game rather than mourn the loss of guaranteed elitism. Competition drives progression.

And therein lies the real issue. Does the Six Nations championship serve rugby or the nations that currently monopolise it? For the good of the game we should welcome the day that the former becomes true rather than the latter.

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