Rugby playoffs: are they fair?

23 05 2013

Thanks to sporting play-offs, it’s been an exciting couple of weeks in my adopted county of Northamptonshire.

Last Saturday, Northampton Town FC made their first trip to Wembley for 15 years for the League Two play-off final. Thousands of fans descended on the capital – although it’s probably best to gloss over the result.

This Saturday, it will be a similar story, as the Northampton Saints face East Midlands rivals the Leicester Tigers in the Premiership final at Twickenham. The match is a sell-out.

Both the football and rugby teams can be grateful the play-off systems in their respective leagues allowed them a day in the sun: Town finished sixth in League Two, while Saints ended the season fourth in the Aviva Premiership.

Leicester Tigers defeated Harlequins 33-16 at Welford Road in the Premiership semi-final

Leicester Tigers defeated Harlequins 33-16 at Welford Road in the Premiership semi-final

And let’s not forget London Welsh only earned their place at English rugby’s top table after taking advantage of last season’s Championship play-offs.

So I suppose I shouldn’t be complaining too much about the play-offs. I was at Welford Road for the Tigers’ victory over Harlequns and I’m off to Twickenham on Saturday, where I will be able to cheer on my local team.

But how can it be fair that Northampton, who finished three places and 12 points adrift of table-toppers Saracens, should be able to wipe out that advantage over the course of an 80-minute semi-final?

Six times since the introduction of the play-off system to choose the English champions was introduced in 2002-03 the table toppers have not lifted the Premiership trophy. Six times the team which proved to be consistently the best squad over the course of the best part of nine months had their glory snatched away over the course of a couple of late-season games. And six will become seven on Saturday as either Richard Cockerill or Jim Mallinder’s men are crowned “champions”.

Of course, supporters of the system would argue the mark of a true champion is one who can perform when the pressure is on. However, isn’t that the point of a cup competition, rather than a league? Does it sort the men from the boys? Does it weed out the chokers – Gloucester have topped the table three times without winning the league – and reward those, Wasps most prominently, who peak at the right time?

The play-offs certainly add extra interest to the final stages of the season in both football and rugby, and in football, it is surely more acceptable that the league winners should not have to face the play-offs.

You can see why the Premiership favours their system of bringing the curtain down on the season in front of a sell-out Twickenham, especially as the cup competition no longer runs. Arguably, it also helps even up the season for those teams which lose players during the Six Nations and the autumn internations (though shouldn’t the same arguments therefore apply to relegation?).

But a major part of the problem, too, is the fact that, unlike the equivalent top flight in football, there could otherwise be very little to play for at the top of the table by the end of the season. With half the league qualifying for the Heineken Cup, teams in third, fourth and fifth could have almost nothing to play for in the season’s final weeks without a knockout phase to come.

So are there any solutions? It’s difficult: teams which finished top used to get a bye straight to the final, but it often meant their momentum stalled and they suffered for that.

Could you give the higher-ranked teams a points advantage in the semi-finals? No, ridiculous idea – it would be both arbitrary and encourage negative, defensive play.

So maybe, to misquote Winston Churchill particularly badly: the play-offs are the worst form of deciding the champions except all the others – at least until we get some reform of European competitions (the subject of another future rant).

Still, if the Saints go marching into Twickenham on Saturday and defeat the Tigers, I doubt the merits of the play-off system will be at the forefront of my mind.

**Disclaimer: I realise the Premiership is not the only league which uses play-offs!





Leicester Tigers 9-5 Toulouse

20 01 2013

Now the risk of hypothermia has passed, I can fully appreciate what an epic of a match it was. Not a try-fest, not filled with thrills, spills and skills, but an intriguing, old-fashioned encounter.

tigers in the snow

Tigers officials clear snow from the Welford Road pitch before Leicester’s 9-5 Heineken Cup pool 2 win over Toulouse on Sunday, January 20, 2013

You couldn’t ask for any more: a clash between two of club rugby’s biggest names – the two sides have won the Heineken Cup six times between them (out of 18) – with a place in the quarter-finals at stake. A game which was in the balance until the very last play. A sell-out crowd at Welford Road.

And more than a dusting of snow, which meant the game was littered with mistakes.

In all honesty, Toulouse, who scored the game’s only try through Yoann Huget, should have won. They would have done so easily if Lionel Beauxis and Luke McAllister hadn’t conspired to miss all five of their side’s efforts at goal. By contrast, Toby Flood converted three of his four place kicks.

But Leicester’s defensive effort meant there could be no complaints at the home win, which was met with delirium at the final whistle – although that might have been mainly because it meant the crowd could, at last, find shelter from the snow.





What is football coming to?

17 01 2013

It’s not as if I am the first person to ask this, but what is happening to football? Why does it insist on shooting itself in the foot every week?

John Brooks, the linesman who told Manchester City players to go and applaud fans who had forked out the preposterous sum of ÂŁ62 for a single ticket to the Emirates Stadium as City visited Arsenal on Sunday, was dropped from yesterday’s FA Cup replay he had been due to officiate in.

The incident has highlighted football’s abysmal efforts at public relations. It is a sport still reeling from a whole series of unsavoury episodes which have put a whole host of fans off it (well, me, at least).

It has also brought the issue of ticket prices to further prominence. Is there a football league ground which an adult can attend for less than ÂŁ20? Not that it’s just football. Try and get tickets for the Millennium Stadium or Twickenham if you’re not made of money. Even my ticket for the terraces at Welford Road to watch the Leicester Tigers take on Toulouse in the Heineken Cup costs ÂŁ22.

I’m planning two trips abroad to watch sport in the coming months. One is to the Stade de France in Paris for Wales’s Six Nations game. The face value of my ticket is ÂŁ30 – not dirt cheap, but much less than the equivalent over here.

The Stade de France's ticket prices are much cheaper than the Millennium Stadium or Twickenham

The Stade de France’s ticket prices are much cheaper than the Millennium Stadium or Twickenham

The other trip is to this summer’s World Athletics Championships in Moscow’s Luzhniki Stadium. For a weekend pass, prices start at 450 rubles (ÂŁ9.27).

Bayern Munich, and the Bundesliga more generally, is often held up as an example of what English football should strive to be like. FC Bayern has sold out all home tickets until mid-March, and even with authorised ticket re-sellers – whose prices are almost always inflated – prices start at just ÂŁ12.





Rugby World Cup needs to embrace its roots

9 12 2012

Not having blogged for a couple of months, I’m a bit late to this story. But the last week has really solidified my opposition to the shortlist of stadiums drawn up by Rugby World Cup 2015 organisers.

Only three rugby-first stadiums are on the list for the first RWC to be hosted by England since 1991: Twickenham, Kingsholm (Gloucester) and the Millennium Stadium.

This rugby ground will not be hosting the Rugby World Cup

This rugby ground will not be hosting the Rugby World Cup

In the last seven days I have been fortunate enough to go to Heineken Cup matches at Franklin’s Gardens, Northampton, and Welford Road, Leicester. Both, and particularly the latter, were pretty miffed at having not made the shortlist of 17 (from which 12 will be chosen in the new year).

Stadium MK, Milton Keynes

This football ground (Stadium MK) could host the Rugby World Cup

Franklin's Gardens, Northampton

This rugby ground (Franklin’s Gardens) will not be hosting the Rugby World Cup

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