Showing posts with label Leicester Tigers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leicester Tigers. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 August 2016

Critical Erasmus Year for Munster Rugby


It was a bleak message from Philip Browne, CEO of the Irish Rugby Football Union in terms of Munster Rugby’s finances. The war chest a long way from a number of years ago were the region was in its full splendour. It was made even starker when the head of Irish rugby said there were no more bail outs should the region be unable to meet its obligations as they stand now. Indeed, the Honorary Treasurer, Tom Grace, explained matters further;

“One of our provinces is experiencing financial difficulty and one of the main reasons for this is poor match results,” said IRFU honorary treasurer Tom Grace. “It is no secret that the increased revenues available to French and English clubs are having a serious inflationary impact on player remuneration.”

“There was no repayment received this year in respect of the Munster loan which relates to Thomond Park,” said Grace. “A €200,000 payment was due last April with €4.2 million due in April 2017 and €500,000 to be paid every year until 2026 with a final lump sum of €761,778 expected in 2027.” A stark message it has to be said. But perhaps no greater motivation than having the financial nitty-gritty aired publicly to alert all involved that the cub is currently on life support. 

What remains clear is that Munster face a challenge and marginally improved by securing Champions Cup place for the new season. Albeit a group with Racing 92, this year’s losing finalists, Leicester Tigers, semi-finalists in May and Glasgow, the losing semi-finalists to Connacht in the Guinness Pro 12 last season. A sobering set of fixtures that wouldn’t lighten the heart of the Munster Rugby CEO when making the budget forecast for the season. And along way from the natural order in the days when they ruled Europe in 2006.

But some fixed costs can’t be reduced and that pressure increased with the arrival of Rassie Erasmus; the return of Darren O’Shea and the new signing Jean Kleyn on a three-year contract. The 22-year-old has made 17 appearances for the Stormers and represented Western Province on 22 occasions. Kleyn will re-join his former Defence Coach Jacques Nienaber who has also been recruited by Munster this year. U few heavy bills there no doubt on the back of a very poor season that saw Thomond Park filled very rarely.

Critical to any operation is that the current costs are met of operating income, and the investment rationalised by equalling gate income accordingly. Or financial support from sponsorship programmes or other revenue streams. But not only does Munster Rugby need to manage their operational costs but also have to accrue for the payment of €220k due to the IRFU. Along with another €4.25m due to the IRFU next April. All to be achieved through rugby income given there are no further grants or payments to be accessed. A very tough task and one that - looking on from the outside - spells danger. 

Or could create an environment that will only add further pressure on Erasmus and company to deliver much needed silverware this season in the Champions Cup. However, the stark reality is that no bonuses are earned until quarterfinal and semi-finals Unlike the UEFA Champions League where reaching knockout stage delivers €1.5m. Or as Dundalk FC have seen on reaching the play-off’s was worth 7m this season – and a place in the Europa League. Even having just failed to get into the Champions League proper. 

The IRFU are the central purse holders for rugby in Ireland and in the past have benefited from a disproportionate distribution of income given the nation’s size, a positive perhaps from the International Rugby Board [IRB] settling in Dublin. The financial bonus despite that the Irish TV market contributes only €5 million per annum to the central pot (c.€3m to the Six Nations pot and c.€2 million to the ERC pot). The figure shows the other TV markets contribute much more. Yet the IRFU therefore receives €16 million each year from the central pot (c.€11m from Six Nations and c.€5m from ERC). This constitutes about 24% of the IRFU's total annual turnover. 

The latter though changes somewhat with the establishment of new European Rugby Champions Cup, now based in Switzerland. Really the love child in effect of Premiership Rugby and the Ligue Nacional de Rugby in France. In effect addressing those imbalances prevalent with the Heineken Cup and the ERC [ European Rugby Cup]. The losers in the revamp have been the Irish clubs as the other nations became fatigued with Ireland’s domination of the Heineken - winning it five times in seven years. Coupled with a Grand Slam in 2009. But to the victors go the spoils. Or so it was.

But from 2012 the unrest saw the English clubs agree a TV deal with new upstart, BT Sport, that, and that opened the way for an alternative broadcast route for English and French rugby and staged a breakaway in 2014. The changes impacted Irish rugby at a number of levels and coincided with a loss of dominance in the competition by both Leinster and Munster. A trend though which has now seen no Irish team reach the final since 2012 with French and English clubs now dominating that fixture. The current Champions Saracens being losing finalist on previous occasions. 

Now the Premiership announced the salary cap would be raised from £5.5 million to £6.5 million in the 2016-17 season and £7 million the following year. Accounting for two marquee players who would be excluded from the cap along with home-grown player credits, compensation for missing England players and a fund to cover long-term injured players, some clubs will be able to spend upwards of £9 million. That has led to a spate of eye-catching signings. Bath, who are interested in South Africa scrum half Fourie Du Preez, have recruited Wales pair Luke Charteris and Taulupe Faletau; Leicester have snapped up the Australia centre Matt Toomua; and, perhaps most strikingly of all, Northampton have persuaded Louis Picamoles, the France No 8, to leave Top 14 Toulouse. However, not every club spends up to – and in certain cases nowhere near – that salary cap. 

There are fears that while the increased spending power will narrow the gap with French clubs, the Premiership will come to be divided between the haves and have‑nots. Given that Leicester, Northampton and Saracens have qualified for the play-offs for the past six seasons, that divide is already partly established. But for a league that prides itself on its competitiveness the idea of a two tier game - such as exists in the football Premier League -will be deeply uncomfortable. Saracens are unlikely to be perturbed, especially since they boast Europe’s only perfect record this season. The signing of Schalke Burger only making them more formidable. But then that was exactly what Munster did in their heyday.

In terms of income the distribution of EPCR’s revenues will be made on the basis of an equal three-way split to the Top 14, Premiership Rugby and Prowl teams. But for the second year in succession, Munster failed to emerge from the pool stages and former player Alan Quinlan was forthright in his analysis on their as final game this season in the tournament:

“Embarrassing, humiliating, disgraceful, these are words that spring to mind,” he told Sky Sports viewers. “Munster have no divine right to win these games…It’s embarrassing. This whole organisation needs to be dissected.”

“Guys falling off tackles, no desire, no shape, it’s very distressing to watch. Borderline disgraceful, disgraceful might be a bit too strong. When guys are falling off tackles and walking around, it’s frustrating and a real worry...There’s no attack whatsoever.”

So Rassie Erasmus has a big job ahead. With the players in the squad he can win games. Or more accurately, he must win games. Then winning could get them closer to silverware so that by April the club are better placed to address the payments that come due. If not, then the burden of expanding Thomond Park and the investment in the club may prove their biggest opponent. In that sense Philip Browne’s words are only stark but understandable.

But perhaps inevitable and prophetic.

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Sunday, 24 January 2016

Stade End Ulster Championship Hope


Ulster are out of the Champions Cup despite Saturday’s hammering of Oyonnax after Leicester Tigers were beaten 36-21 away at Stade Francais.

Leicester had already secured top spot in Pool 4 after winning their opening five matches but were unable to make it six from six as Stade Francais claimed a bonus-point triumph in Paris which sealed the French side’s quarter-final berth as well.

England centre Tuilagi, in his third game since returning from his lengthy lay-off with a groin injury, lasted 50 minutes before being replaced as he continued his comeback and never looked out of place.

And it was the 24-year-old who opened the scoring in the 19th minute with a 35-metre dash to the posts for a try that was converted by Freddie Burns.

However, Stade Francais’ response was emphatic with the French champions running in three tries in the space of 10 minutes through Jules Plisson, Waisea Vuidarvuwalu and Rabah Slimani to establish a 19-7 lead at half-time.

The home side’s bonus point try, from their rampaging flanker Raphael Lakafia, came in the 53rd minute shortly after Leicester had lost their skipper and hooker Tom Youngs to the sin-bin for a midfield fracas with Slimani.

That try more or less ensured Stade — who had scored 26 unanswered points at that stage — would go into the quarter-final draw and meant Ulster were pushed out, resulting in no Irish province being in the last eight in the top tier of European rugby for the first time since 1998.

Leicester had no such concerns, as they were already assured of a home quarter-final before kick-off.

And the Tigers were good value for the lead given to them by Tuilagi’s score having totally dominated the opening 20 minutes.

But then the momentum shifted as Stade tightened their discipline as well as getting their off-loading game going.

Plisson, who finished the match with 16 points, got the home side on the scoreboard following good work by Jonathan Danty, and the fly-half converted his own try to make it 7-7.

Vuidarvuwalu then went over in the left corner on the overlap before prop Slimani powered over for another score soon after, Plisson adding the extras on that occasion having missed his previous conversion attempt to put Stade 12 points clear.

Plisson also converted the Lakafia score that brought up the crucial bonus point, but the Tigers then regrouped and hit back.

Dom Barrow used all of his 6ft 7in frame to touch down at full stretch for a try at the posts and there could have been another had the TMO not called up Sam Harrison’s inside pass as forward.

There was a third Leicester try from replacement hooker Harry Thacker to close the gap to eight points heading into the final four minutes, but an interception score from replacement centre Geoffrey Doumayrou gave the French side a final flourish as they progressed to the last eight as one of the best runners-up.

Saturday, 21 November 2015

Treviso v Leicester - Preview


Leicester have recalled Telusa Veainu and Tommy Bell to their backline for Saturday's European Rugby Champions Cup trip to Treviso, live on Sky Sports 2 HD from 12.30pm.

Tonga international Veainu is named at full-back with Bell returning at fly-half in the absence of Owen Williams.

Their return allows a reshuffle in the backline with Peter Betham restored to the wing and captain Mathew Tait at centre alongside Matt Smith.

Tom Croft returns to the forward pack after missing the win over Stade Francais last weekend with a back injury.

Having picked up maximum points against the French champions in the opening round, Leicester will be looking for another bonus-point win on the road.

"We made a really good start to the tournament with five points against Stade Francais last weekend but that will not count for much if we cannot follow up with another strong performance in Italy this weekend," said Tigers director of rugby Richard Cockerill.

"We've got competition for places in the squad which means we can pick the freshest team available for this week and have a potential threat throughout the 23-man squad.

"Treviso are always a tough side to play against and on our last couple of visits we've needed late scores to get a win there, so we know we have to play well, we will have to be physical and we will have to be accurate."

Treviso are still looking for their first win of the season after falling to a 32-7 opening round defeat against Munster at Thomond Park. 

Treviso 
15 Luke McLean, 14 Ludovico Nitoglia, 13 Enrico Bacchin, 12 Samuel Christie, 11 Tommaso Iannone, 10 James Ambrosini, 9 Edoardo Gori (c); 1 Matteo Zanusso, 2 Ornel Gega, 3 Rupert Harden, 4 Filo Paulo, 5 Jean-François Montauriol, 6 Marco Barbini, 7 Francesco Minto, 8 Abraham Jurgens Steyn.
Replacements: 16 Davide Giazzon, 17 Matteo Muccignat, 18 Filippo Filippetto, 19 Dean Budd, 20 Marco Lazzaroni, 21 Alberto de Marchi, 22 Christopher Smylie, 23 Andrea Pratichetti.

Leicester Tigers
15 Telusa Veainu; 14 Peter Betham, 13 Matthew Tait (c), 12 Matt Smith, 11 Vereniki Goneva; 10 Thomas Bell, 9 Sam Harrison; 1 Marcos Ayerza, 2 Tom Youngs, 3 Fraser Balmain, 4 Dom Barrow, 5 Michael Fitzgerald, 6 Tom Croft, 7 Brendon O'Connor, 8 Jordan Crane
Replacements: 16 Greg Bateman, 17 Matias Aguero, 18 Dan Cole, 19 Ed Slater, 20 Lachlan McCaffrey, 21 Ben Youngs, 22 Seremaia Bai, 23 George Catchpole.


Monday, 22 October 2012

Heineken High at Welford Road

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Leicester kept their Heineken Cup hopes alive with a vital 39-22 victory over Ospreys at Welford Road on Sunday.

Three tries in the final eight minutes from Toby Flood, Ben Youngs and Manu Tuilagi, added to Tuilagi's first half score, gave the Tigers a much-needed bonus point from the must-win encounter.

Flood added a further 19 points with the boot in a superb kicking display, while Ospreys' points came through Ryan Jones' try plus 17 points from fly-half Dan Biggar.

Ospreys grabbed the lead in the second minute when Ryan Jones drove over from close range and Biggar converted to put his side 7-0 up.

Just 10 minutes later the fly-half extended the Welsh side's advantage with a fine long-range penalty from the halfway before Flood finally booted Leicester onto the scoreboard in the 28th minute.

The hosts levelled the scores three minutes later when some superb link play from the Tigers backs put Tuilagi in on the right for a beautifully-worked try that Flood converted.

Biggar put his side back in front almost immediately after the break but Flood put the Tigers ahead for the first time with two penalties and then extended the lead on 49 minutes with a 47-metre effort.

Biggar hit back with two of his own to put his side on level terms going into the final quarter before Flood wrestled back the lead with a superb kick with 14 minutes to go.

Moments later the England fly-half opened the floodgates with a brilliant interception to all but guarantee the win and Youngs and Tuilagi followed in quick succession to seal a dramatic bonus point.



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Saturday, 26 May 2012

Harlequins v Leicester - Preview


A sold-out Twickenham will see Harlequins and Leicester slug it out for the Aviva Premiership title on Saturday.

The showpiece event pitches table-topping Harlequins, who were the long-time leaders of the Premiership following a stellar start to the campaign, against the regular season runners-up.

Leicester's run of 11 successive wins - including victories over Quins, Northampton and defending champions Saracens - meant they finished just one off the pace.

And having booked their place in an eighth consecutive final , they will fancy their chances of bouncing back from last year's defeat and reclaiming their crown.

Harlequins, though, have shown a steely edge at times and despite not finishing the season at the same pace as they came out the blocks, they will make the short time full of confidence.
Capable

While they might not have the same Premiership final experience as the Tigers - they have won their last four appearances in finals, including the 2011 Amlin Challenge Cup.

And wins over Northampton, Leicester and away in Toulouse (in the Heineken Cup) have proved how far the side have come under the guidance of Conor O'Shea.

Crucially Quins will welcome back England internationals Ugo Monye and Danny Care to their line-up following the win over the Saints.

Leicester have suffered a setback in their preparations with Toby Flood is only fit enough for the bench - however as proved in the semi-final win over Sarries, George Ford is a more than capable replacement.

There is one change to the staring XV from that victory, with Julian Salvi replacing Craig Newby in the back-row.

Harlequins: 15 Mike Brown, 14 Tom Williams, 13 George Lowe, 12 Jordan Turner-Hall, 11 Ugo Monye, 10 Nick Evans, 9 Danny Care, 8 Nick Easter, 7 Chris Robshaw (capt), 6 Maurie Fa'asavalu, 5 George Robson, 4 Olly Kohn, 3 James Johnston, 2 Joe Gray, 1 Joe Marler.
Replacements: 16 Rob Buchanan, 17 Mark Lambert, 18 Will Collier, 19 Tomas Vallejos, 20 Tom Guest, 21 Karl Dickson, 22 Rory Clegg, 23 Matt Hopper.

Leicester: 15 Geordan Murphy (capt), 14 Horacio Agulla, 13 Manusamoa Tuilagi, 12 Anthony Allen, 11 Alesana Tuilagi, 10 George Ford, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Thomas Waldrom, 7 Julian Salvi, 6 Steve Mafi, 5 Geoff Parling, 4 George Skivington, 3 Dan Cole, 2 George Chuter, 1 Marcos Ayerza.
Replacements: 16 Tom Youngs, 17 Logovi'i Mulipola, 18 Martin Castrogiovanni, 19 Graham Kitchener, 20 Craig Newby, 21 Sam Harrison, 22 Toby Flood, 23 Scott Hamilton.


Tuesday, 22 May 2012

O'Shea Hoping for Mighty Quins


Harlequins director of rugby Conor O'Shea is convinced that his side's Aviva Premiership final with Leicester will be decided by "fine margins".

Quins finished first in the regular season table after leading the way for virtually the entire campaign, but still find themselves as underdogs heading into the showdown at Twickenham on Saturday.

The Tigers emerged clear winners when the two sides faced each other at Twickenham Stoop in April, while the second-place finishers also dumped out reigning champions Saracens in their play-off semi-final.

But O'Shea is convinced Quins can go toe-to-toe with the nine-time Premiership champions and thinks a small number of key moments will decide the destiny of this season's title.

"What we'll take comfort from is the fact that this is a big game. This will be decided by fine margins. Our match at the Stoop a few weeks back was 44-33," he told Sky Sports.

"We had momentum, we took chances - they had momentum, they took more chances.

"I hope this game is similar, it's a massive match that will be decided on pivotal moments, whether it be a last-ditch tackle, the bounce of the ball, a chance taken or a chance missed.
Momentum

"At the end of the match we just hope we have taken more than them and when we have momentum we take our chances, and when they have we stop them.

"I think it is going to be an incredibly close game. Whatever the scoreboard says at the end of the game it will be decided on certain things which we have to work on and make sure they go our way."

Harlequins needed a last-gasp try from Joe Marler to scrape past Northampton and book their place in the Premiership final for the first time.

In contrast, Leicester will be competing in their eighth consecutive final but O'Shea is certain that his side will be able to handle the occasion just as well.

He added: "The semi-finals you put to one side, the shackles are off (now).

"We know we're the underdogs, we know people are probably expecting to go along and watch Leicester be crowned champions again, but we're very confident in ourselves and what we can bring to the party.

"We'll certainly take solace from the big games that we've played over the last 12 months, whether it was winning at Thomond Park last year, winning at Toulouse this year or winning at Wembley against Saracens.

"We know the challenge is massive but we're not going in to be cowed, we're going in to take the game to Leicester and see where it takes us."


Saturday, 14 April 2012

Flood Keeps Tigers on Course


England fly-half Toby Flood kept Leicester on course for an eighth successive Aviva Premiership final as the Tigers beat Northampton 21-35 on Saturday.

Flood grabbed a 25-point haul in front of a sell-out crowd at Franklin's Gardens as Leicester claimed a Premiership record with their fifth successive bonus-point win.

Flood scored two of the Tigers' four tries and booted three conversions plus three penalties, while wingers Alesana Tuilagi and Horacio Agulla also crossed for the visitors.

Northampton's tries came from England pair Lee Dickson and Chris Ashton, with Ryan Lamb kicking three penalties and Stephen Myler a conversion.

Northampton led 6-0 after 13 minutes thanks to two penalties from fly-half Lamb but the game swung the Tigers' way straight from the restart after his second kick.

Leicester centre Anthony Allen charged down the number 10's attempted clearance and Flood pounced to score under the posts before adding the conversion.
Fierce pressure

Two minutes later Leicester led 14-6 after a brilliant piece of skill by Agulla, who chipped a defender, caught the ball and off-loaded inside to fellow winger Alesana Tuilagi, who went under the posts.

Soon after Leicester flanker Julian Salvi just did enough to put off Ashton with the line at his mercy, while at the other lock George Skivington had a try chalked off for a forward pass by Allen.

Fierce Leicester pressure led to a penalty for Flood but that was cancelled out by Lamb's third penalty after Agulla had come to Leicester's rescue with a great try-saving tackle on winger Paul Diggin.

Leicester shot out of the blocks after half-time and fierce pressure led to their third try after just four minutes, Youngs putting Flood through a hole near the posts.

Flood's conversion made it 24-9, and while he was short with a long-range penalty minutes later he made no mistake with one from 40 metres.

It was turning into the Flood show and he almost scored a third try but was beaten to his chip over the line by Foden.

In the 54th minute, Agulla scored Leicester's bonus-point try, beating Diggin in the right corner after more fierce pressure in the Saints line. Flood missed the conversion.

Northampton hit back six minutes later when Dickson scampered over after great work by his forwards and replacement fly-half Myler added the conversion.

Northampton should have scored again in the 63rd minute but Ashton fell over making a pass when he should have gone for the line.

Flood's third penalty in the 70th minute made it 35-16 before Tigers replacement prop Martin Castrogiovanni was sin-binned for a professional foul, and with two minutes left Ashton's hard work was rewarded with a try from Myler's chip.

But Manu Tuilagi pulled off a brilliant try-saving tackle on opposite number George Pisi, who also got a bad bounce from a chip ahead after Hamilton failed to deal with the danger.

Leicester also had a lucky escape when Hamilton was again slow to deal with a bouncing ball in his own 22.