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Jong Leeu Joined: 30-Mar-2016 Location: Brits Status: Offline Points: 212 |
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Posted: 12-Jul-2019 at 10:18am |
'Guys are out of jobs' - Rugby agent details the brutal decisions facing players as the market implodes 08 July, 5:40pm There is a World Cup thundering down the tracks and rugby
has never been more box-office, yet seldom has the life of the rugby agent been
so brutal. Clubs leaking money, no longer prepared to pay what once
they were. Incentives in England and
regulations in France governing
the selection of foreign players. More accomplished operators competing for
fewer vacancies and toiling to find new clubs. To the agents scrambling to shift their players, you might
say dry your eyes. Agents have levered up the salaries and profited handsomely
from the lavish riches on offer, so how dare they moan when the gravy train
falters. Though the market’s stinginess has made his job
significantly harder, Tom Beattie takes a more pensive view. His company, TDB
Sports, represents a small but prominent cohort of players, including Don
Armand, Nick
Grigg, Sione
Kalamafoni and Demetri Catrakilis. “For the long-term vision of rugby, the salaries need to
have a period of stability,” he says. “That’s the main reason guys are out of
jobs. Clubs are being very strict on the salary caps, and that’s meant that
unfortunately some guys are left in a position where there isn’t that contract
that there was a couple of years ago. “It’s certainly a buyers’ market this year, because of the
number of players without a contract. A lot of clubs can wait a bit longer and
perhaps a player has to take a reduction in salary to get that contract. “What’s happening now is that realism is coming back and I
don’t think it’s a bad thing. I want rugby to grow, and have a period of
sustainability and stability, so it can grow.” In England, clubs are financially incentivised by the RFU to
field more English-qualified players. Relinquishing your EQP status can mean
severely hindering your chances of a Premiership contract. France was once the land of great opportunity for
foreigners, but the situation there is more labyrinthine thanks to the nuanced
JIFF (Joueurs Issus des Filières de Formation) quota system. To meet the JIFF
criteria, as French rugby expert James Harrington explains, “a player must have
spent at least three seasons in a French club’s academy before they had turned
21, or had been licensed to play in France for five seasons before the age of
23”. Next season, Top 14 clubs must have 19 JIFF players in their 35-strong
squads, and must select at least 14 on their match-day. These numbers have gone up this summer, and so have the
punishments for breaking the rules. Failure to hit the JIFF target will now
result in points deductions – increasingly stringent attempts to restore the
beleaguered national team to its former glory. Ireland’s provinces and Scotland’s pro-teams are controlled
by their unions, who quite sensibly prioritise the fostering of talent that can
represent them on the Test stage. And “Project Reset” is supposed to deliver,
among many things, financial sustainability to the Welsh regions, although the
venture so far has largely brought rancour and confusion. The rub of all this is that some players – not the real
galacticos, but those with a handful of caps or a fledgling Test career
beckoning – are forced to be increasingly calculating about their international
prospects. “A player can go to the World Cup this year and be
absolutely fantastic, one of the stars of the show – it doesn’t mean they’ll
come back and get a contract,” Beattie says. “That is the market we’re in at the moment. There are no
guarantees. You can be absolutely fantastic and have no job. What’s best for
the player’s family?” It shouldn’t be this way, but often it is. International
rugby ought to be the shimmering pinnacle of the game, with the World Cup the
jewel in its crown, but often it is not. In some cases, the pragmatism trumps
the romance. Sam Hidalgo-Clyne, the Scotland scrum-half
and one of Beattie’s clients, wasn’t called up to Gregor Townsend’s training
squad. Just as well, for if he had been, Hidalgo-Clyne would have had to
decline. Not because he didn’t long to be there, but because he was hopelessly
out of the picture at Scarlets and
wanted to leave, because his chances of making the plane to Japan, let alone
seeing any action, would be slim, and mostly because it would have meant
spending the summer training with Scotland, rather than joining a new club for
pre-season. “Sammy’s a perfect example,” says Beattie. “I had so many
conversations with clubs who like him. Why wouldn’t you like him? He’s a good
player, but as a Scottish international, he’s non-French or English-qualified,
so he doesn’t make their quotas.” Hidalgo-Clyne has taken up a short-term contract at Racing
92, providing cover during the World Cup. His future beyond November remains
murky, but in this fiendishly tough market, at least he’ll have the chance to
play at a behemoth club and put himself in the shop window. “Two or three years ago, a Top 14 or ProD2 squad make-up was
generally 60:40 foreign:French, now it’s generally flipped,” says Beattie. “For a foreign player, even if you’re an English
international, it’s that much tougher to go to France. The regulations often
mean they can’t go –not because they’re not good enough, just because there
isn’t space within the quota. “Some agents are struggling because they’ve got a lot of
players on their roster and they can’t get clubs for them all.” There are horror stories emanating from the Top 14 alleging
teams are pressuring their particularly vulnerable Pacific Islanders to shun
the World Cup. “A lot of the time, the French clubs want the guy that’s
uncapped or basically saying, ‘I’m not going to play international rugby’,”
says Beattie. “And if you’re a foreign player, you kind of have to add
something different in your contract, which could be, ‘right, I’m prepared to
give up international rugby because I need this contract to look after my
family’. “I’ve had those conversations with players. They’re
passionate about their countries, but they need a job. It’s a short career; if
you get ten good years in rugby you’ve had a great career. You’ve got bills to
pay, a roof to keep over your head, a family to feed. “And it’s becoming a buyers’ market, because supply of
players exceeds demand.” Another of Beattie’s clients, the Canada prop
Jake Ilnicki, has just helped Seattle Seawolves retain the Major League Rugby
title. The competition is only in its second year, but the hope is that it can
help chisel rugby into the American sporting psyche. “For rugby to work, I absolutely believe it needs a strong
America,” Beattie says. “That could make the global game a completely different
landscape in terms of sponsors, TV monies, interest, and it could really
benefit us over here as well. “If they can get a part of the core sports market, even a
small part, we will see a massive effect on the whole of world rugby.” For now, though, Beattie fears there is a danger that the
prestige of international rugby will be eroded, players swayed towards forgoing
caps or reluctant to tie themselves to a country because of the damage it may
do to their bread-and-butter club career. “I want my players who want to play international rugby to
play international rugby, because it’s an amazing thing to achieve,” he says. “The factors around that in terms of protecting their
livelihood unfortunately need to be discussed. The sad thing is that you don’t
want to have this club v country. No-one wants that, but it’s case by case, and
all I can do is to give the player the options. “I’ve had to put some offers to players before along those
lines. I’ve given them the menu of different options to consider, and we’ve had
to have those discussions, and not nice discussions. I really hope it can be
solved.” |
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