Paul Rees 

Welsh regions dispute with union heads for high court with players in limbo

The four Welsh regions have made it clear they will not meet next week's deadline to continue their participation agreement with the Welsh Rugby Union
  
  

Rhys Priestland of Scarlets says it is hard to make career decisions while the row rumbles on.
Rhys Priestland of Scarlets says it is hard to make career decisions while the row rumbles on. Photograph: Michael Whitefoot/Focus Images Photograph: Michael Whitefoot/Michael Whitefoot/Focus Images

The four Welsh regions will not meet next week's deadline to continue their participation agreement with the Welsh Rugby Union as the dispute over the funding and control of the professional game in the country heads to the high court.

the WRU's board discussed the issue after Friday's meeting in Dublin between the Six Nations involved in the Heineken Cup succeeded only in aborting the five-country tournament, excluding England, that had been agreed last month.

The president of the French Rugby Federation, Pierre Camou, had said that French participation hinged on the tournament being run by Fira, the organisation made up of the smaller unions, as a precursor to a major shake-up of the way the game in Europe is organised.

When the RaboDirect Pro 12 unions, together with England, thwarted Camou he was so angry he stormed out of the meeting, leaving French participation in Europe in doubt, even if the English clubs are persuaded to renegotiate on the basis that the Heineken Cup will be run from next season by the Six Nations committee.

The Welsh regions met on Monday and agreed they could not sign the participation agreement given the uncertainty over Europe, which is worth some £1.2m to each of them a year. They have not asked the WRU to extend the deadline on 31 December but, if the union, which is arranging a board meeting on 2 January, announces alternative plans, such as central contracts and alternative regional teams, they will ask a judge for an injunction.

They will argue that until the future of the Heineken Cup is resolved – and although talks are expected to resume next month there is at this point no tournament next season – they cannot reasonably be expected to commit to an agreement that could lead to their funding being drastically cut.

The union's offer to centrally contract players has been refused by the regions because it would eat into their funding. The money would come from the £6m they receive from central funds under the participation agreement and their proposal to increase that to £9m was turned down by the WRU.

Six Wales squad players are out of contract at the end of the season, including the Scarlets' fly-half Rhys Priestland. "It is very hard to make a decision when you do not know what is going on," he said. "Players cannot be expected to commit themselves to something when no one has a clue what is going on. A number of players are feeling frustrated."

 

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