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Time to pack more playoff punch
By MARC HINTON - RugbyHeaven | Friday, 18 January 2008
Time to pack more playoff punch - Opinion - RugbyHeaven
Enough is enough with this Super 14 of ours. It is time for some tinkering and to my way of thinking there’s no place more in need of attention than the playoffs format.
As the 13th edition of the tri-nations franchise rugby competition gets set to kick off in less than a month’s time, it’s hardly going out on a limb to say that the competition is in serious need of a makeover.
Since its inception back in 1996, when it was a wonderful, breezy new flagship of the professional game, the Super 14 (or Super 12 as it was back then) has proven a fairly reliable vehicle for our national game, as well as that of Australia and South Africa.
Back in 2006 the competition was expanded by two teams, but other than that the format has been pretty much unaltered, give or take the odd name change over in the republic.
There has been no doubting the level of the football, with the exception of a few South African teams that have struggled to take the whole thing seriously, and the fact that not only has it produced a compelling event in its own right, but that it’s been an ideal preparation ground for test match rugby.
Some northern critics would have you believe otherwise, but last time I checked Tri-Nations sides had won the World Cup five times and northern hemisphere teams just the once. The Super 14 must be doing something right.
Anyway, moving right along. Even the best of competitions need a lick of paint every now and then and to my way of thinking the Super 14 cries out for an obvious one.
The finals format, stuck in a tired, two-week, four team, semifinal-final setup, has stayed exactly the way it is since 1996.
And that just doesn’t make any sense.
Firstly, the cutoff point for success or failure is just too damn high. Fourteen teams line up in this competition, and just four coaches meet their minimum targets by qualifying for post-season football. That’s a brutally tough margin for error.
Plus, it just doesn’t add up commercially or in a pure fan sense to have a 13-week regular season and then just two weeks of cutting-edge, high-drama finals football. It’s all over barely after it’s just started.
Everywhere you look around the world, professional competitions have grown the post-season portion of their competitions to be a significant part of the season. The American sports, the NRL, even the Champions League all have significant finals formats that not only go on for some time, but produce huge revenue streams.
It’s what the fans want, it’s what the broadcasters and sponsors want and, truth be told, it’s what the players want. There is simply nothing like sudden-death sport, and the more of it you can squeeze into your season the better.
It’s time Sanzar’s administrators woke up and smelt the coffee on this one.
The game’s administrators will argue that there’s not room in the calendar to add to this competition.
That’s nothing but a copout, I reckon.
It didn’t stop them adding two more teams (a questionable call) back in ‘06. They just have to find room to add at least another week to the post-season.
A simple way to expand the playoffs without sacrificing too much in the way of extra time would be to have six teams qualify for the finals which would take place over three weekends. It’s a bare minimum, I believe.
The first post-season round the teams that finished one and two would have a bye and prepare to host the major semifinals in week two. The third and fourth finishers would then host the minor semifinals against the fifth and sixth-placed sides. These would be compelling matchups between outfits desperate to keep their hopes alive.
Simple enough, and it takes just one more week. The pre-season could simply be shortened by seven days to fit this in.
And this way we would have six teams having a chance at the title, a lot more interest in the regular season because more teams would have a shot at the playoffs right up to the final few rounds and the top two sides would still gain a deserved edge by having a week to shake off their injuries and prepare to host the major semis.
I know Chiefs coach Ian Foster is in favour of a move along these lines and when a guy as highly respected and knowledgeable as this guy feels that it’s time to raise the threshold for failure, I reckon it’s time someone started listening.
Sanzar has some much-needed ground to make up with its broadcaster (and major funder) News Limited. Taking an expanded finals format to them with an extra round of high-rating knockout football would seem to be an ideal place to start.
Let’s just hope it happens sooner rather than later. Super rugby needs some tinkering lest it become not so super any more. The finals format is the obvious place to start.