Quote luke ShipleyRed="luke ShipleyRed"Is that it didn't raise the standard '"
You can measure that in many ways, but it certainly raised standards at many clubs off the field. Warrington, St Helens, Salford, Leeds and Catalans (off the top of my head) all moved to new stadiums or undertook significant improvement works during the licencing period. That's just one example.
Quote luke ShipleyRedit didnt lead to more younger players coming through (you could argue that more have come through in the 8's), '"
I'd be interested to see your working on that one. I don't have the figures to hand, but one thing that did decline during the licencing period was the number of overseas-trained players in Super League.
And what I do have figures for are participation. When licencing was introduced, participation in Rugby League stood at around 132,000. In 2016 it was 67,000. That might not be due to licencing alone, but there's no question that many clubs have neglected this important aspect in their local communities and I believe that there needs to be much more of a drive to force thinking in this regard.
Quote luke ShipleyRedit didn't bring the crowds in. And it didn't improve how clubs marketed themselves (they got lazier)'"
I agree. And that was one of the problems with the way licencing was done in my view, rather than licencing itself. We all know certain clubs gave cheap and free tickets out like confetti in the run-up to licencing. What should have been done, and I still believe should be done, is clubs given a ticket revenue target. That would force them to market themselves properly, not to under-sell the product.
Quote luke ShipleyRedAnd the sponsorship wasn't as good. '"
And that again is a failure of clubs, not the system. The clubs aren't marketing themselves properly, they aren't engaging the audiences that advertisers and sponsors want to reach, and that makes it very difficult for the RFL to sell the sport.
Quote luke ShipleyRedWe need something that includes promtion/relegation otheerwise the sport stands still. I like the 8's, but if not them then how about a 14 team SL, bottom team relegated/1st promoted. 13th enters into a play off with 2nd,3rd,4th placed teams?'"
All of the problems you cite with licencing are simply there in another guise with the Super 8s or any other P&L model we've tried. What's needed is a mass of 10-14 clubs that can all broadly compete on a relatively equal footing both on and on the field. Unfortunately, we don't have that and I suspect that we never will - because I simply think too few clubs are capable of rising up to the standards they need to reach.