Friday, 17 August 2012

Olympic Lessons


Team GB’s historic performance in the London Olympics has led many to ask what can Rugby learn from Team GB?  There has been the fawning over cycling’s “aggregation of marginal gains”, something England Rugby pioneered, and much admiring in some quarters of the aggressive centralisation of many sports. 

But the most important idea Rugby can take from the Olympics is the no excuse attitude that UK Sport and the British Olympic Association takes over results.  The best sports get more funding and the losing sports have their funding cut.  A prime case for the RFU to consider is the delivery of their Academy programme and the delivery of their outreach work.  Is every pound working as hard as possible? 

Currently all 14 RFU Regional Academies receive the same central funding from the RFU despite producing wildly differing results, in fact there have been murmurings that the underperforming Northern Academies getting more resources despite failing on their current budgets.  This would be the equivalent of the giving swimming a funding boost because it failed.  The logic is nice and friendly: give the failures a leg up so they can compete with the successful.  But that ignores the underlying reasons why those Academies have been failing and encourages other clubs to fail as there is no incentive to have a well run Academy.

There is no auditing of Academies, those that are there are there and aren’t going anywhere and any other club that wants an academy, well tough luck you’ve got to fund it yourself.  This is no way to run an elite performance plan.  The RFU should start straightaway an audit of all 14 academies, how many internationals have they produced?  How many premiership players?  How many hours a week do they train?  How many coaches do they have?  They should then accept bids from other clubs to have their facilities audited, such as Bedford, and grade the Academies.  The best Academies would receive more central funding providing the kept producing the results and the worst performing academies would have their funding cut until started turning things around. 

A similar system could be used to audit provision of community work with the best community projects receiving more funding and growing.  This would also make community funding independent of league position, currently the RFU outsource parts of the community work to the Premiership clubs which means that when Leeds get relegated on top of losing the £3.26m PRL centrally generated revenue they also lose £50k that was funding their community work in schools (even if that £50k only helped them reach 12 secondary schools).  Then if the Cornish Pirates were doing better community work than Sale they would be able to grow and improve even more.

Currently money is wasted on bad academies and bad community work by the lucky 14 clubs that the RFU have given the permanent Golden Ticket to, the B.O.A. or UK Sport wouldn’t stand for the waste and the RFU shouldn’t either.

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