Pacific Super rugby team could crack US, says report

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WELLINGTON, June 27, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – A New Zealand government study
released Wednesday backs a Pacific island team in the Super Rugby
competition, believing it could provide a gateway to the potentially
lucrative United States market.

An edited version of the study suggests a game could be played each year in
Honolulu, San Francisco, Los Angeles or Salt Lake City, which all have large
Pacific populations.

A Pacific island franchise missed the cut when Super Rugby last expanded in
2016, with new teams from Japan, Argentina and South Africa preferred.

But the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade report said Super Rugby’s
governing body, SANZAAR, appears likely to support a Pacific team from 2021
as they look to move into North America.

A Pacific team competing in New Zealand’s domestic competition would be a
primary feeder to a Super Rugby side which could draw on New Zealand and
Australian-based Pacific players, as well as Europe-based players wanting to
return home.

Financial information was redacted from the released sections of the
report, but it did show a desire to tap into the more than 250,000 expats
from Fiji, Samoa and Tonga living in the United States.

The report said the team should be based in the Pacific islands to ensure
stable home support, but “it will be essential that at least one home game is
sold to a non-Pacific host, such as Auckland, West Coast of USA, (or) Asia.

“It is our view that the team should be based in the Pacific islands.
Playing the majority of home games in Auckland or Sydney would not have the
same impact or attraction as playing home games in Suva, Apia or Nuku’alofa,”
the report said, referring to the capitals of Fiji, Samoa and Tonga.

Although details about the proposed ownership of a Pacific team were not
released, the report said the three main rugby-playing island nations should
be shareholders under an arrangement that ensured money went back to the
respective unions to pay staff and players.

The Samoa Rugby Union claimed late last year it was bankrupt and could not
pay players. When players threatened to strike before the 2015 World Cup,
lock Dan Leo said it was because money was “not being best spent or even
properly accounted for”.

Tongan players are currently up in arms, claiming they were not paid while
competing in the recent Pacific Nations Cup tournament.

Pacific rugby players association spokesman Hale T-Pole said it was “sad to
see”.

“They haven’t been paid for the time away from home and in camp,” T-Pole
said Wednesday. “Some guys are still working and they gotta leave their job,
and some guys are in Tonga who don’t have a job still trying to play rugby
and they don’t get anything.”