Quote Hear Ye!="Hear Ye!"I've scanned the basic details of the league restructure proposals but still have a query... How do the RFL plan to give teams a chance to compete for the title? Very simple question that people will probably think I'm stupid for asking, but think about it...
At present there are probably only 4/5 teams that can realistically win SL. They then get all the best players and tend to generate the most money. Fair play to those clubs, I can't fault them.
What about the other teams? Specifically those in the bottom 3 or 4 of the league. What I mean by that is - with relegation always a threat (if it's brought back in) how will they grow?
I can't see us progressing as a sport with P&R. I'm not against it, but I don't see what it achieves for the health of the game. What has changed since we scrapped it in favour of licensing? Serious question. It just strikes me as going back to having teams "yo-yo'ing" up and down between SL and the Championship and a pool of players just switching from the team that goes down to the team that comes up.
Are the RFL or SLE aiming to introduce parachute payments? That is the only way to continue encouraging teams across the league to continue developing players... otherwise we're just going back to journeymen filling squad places through fear of relegation and ruin.
Have we lost sight of why Licensing was brought in in the first place? Yes, it has failed to stop the issues at some clubs (mainly financially) but P&R isn't going to solve it either - in fact, I'd say it'll probably be worse.
Sky money will be split still - but this needs to go all through the game - not just to the SL end where that gulf will continue to grow. Be interesting to see if SL clubs at the top of the game agree to a reduction in funding to improve the quality of rugby league (not just SL) in England.
As for the thread topic.... I'd have to say London and Bradford for the bottom two.'"
The new structure does NOT mean AUTOMATIC promotion and relegation is back. That is the beauty of the new structure. It avoids the old yo-yo syndrome in that it could be years before a team is actually promoted to/relegated from SL. This is how it will work:-
Forthcoming 2014 season = bottom 2 in SL relegated at end of the season.
2015 season onwards = "SL1" - 12 teams and "SL2" - 12 teams
(the 12 in SL2 for the 2015 season will be the bottom 2 in SL that are relegated at the end of the forthcoming 2014 season plus the teams ending in the top 10 of the Championship at the end of the forthcoming 2014 season.)
Each season from 2015 onwards, the 12's play 23 matches. (Every team home & away and a Magic weekend match). Then, after the 23 games, the 24 teams are split into 3 groups of 8. The 8's play the other 7 teams once = 7 more matches.
The middle eight of the three lots of 8 is where the POTENTIAL for promotion comes in. The four teams ending in the top four places of the middle 8 re-join the top 8 to make up the 12 in SL1 for the following season. Thus, there is the POTENTIAL for promotion to SL1 - but promotion is NOT automatic (in that the four teams that end up top of the middle 8 may well be the same 4 that were in SL1 for the initial 23 games).
All this will be made very clear by the RFL in mid-January 2014 when the associated split of the distribution of SKY money relating to this new 2x12 - 3x8 structure is finally agreed by the clubs.
To answer your question about how the SL title is decided. The 4 teams finishing the season at the top of the top 8 will play off; 1v4, 2v3. The two winners meet in the Grand Final.
Q. What has changed since the potential for promotion was taken away by 'licensing'?
A Crowds outside SL have almost halved.
SL clubs' supporters are bored with playing the same old teams at the same old grounds time after time.