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Richie McCaw speaks for first time on rugby's civil war

Author
Gregor Paul,
Publish Date
Fri, 24 May 2024, 7:07am
The former All Blacks captain hopes for a clean resolution to the chaos. Photo / Getty Images
The former All Blacks captain hopes for a clean resolution to the chaos. Photo / Getty Images

Richie McCaw speaks for first time on rugby's civil war

Author
Gregor Paul,
Publish Date
Fri, 24 May 2024, 7:07am

- Richie McCaw urges New Zealand Rugby听to adopt a new governance structure based on an independent review, emphasising long-term benefits over short-term interests.
- 鈥淐hange can be a bit scary at times but being brave and having the courage to do the right thing is why people are in the positions they are in, to be able to vote.鈥
- McCaw warns against losing the unity that has historically strengthened New Zealand rugby, from grassroots听to the elite level.
- The All Blacks听great highlights the potential negative impact of framing the debate as a conflict between professional players and provincial unions.
- McCaw stresses the importance of including diverse experiences on the NZR board and warns against overly restrictive criteria for board membership.
- He advocates for decisions that ensure the continued connection between professional and community rugby, preserving the game鈥檚 integrity and grassroots values.

Former听All Blacks听captain Richie McCaw is a man who knows the value of legacy and the power of history, which is why he鈥檚 decided to speak publicly about the governance stand-off and urge those with a vote to think about how they will be judged in the future.

McCaw is almost 10 years retired and still his name endures, his mana pervades and his influence grows, because he captained the All Blacks to back-to-back World Cups, was three times crowned the planet鈥檚 best player and was universally recognised as the best No 7 there has ever been.

But his position in history is secured not just by what he achieved, but the way he did it 鈥 which was through extreme sacrifice, putting the team first and by believing that New Zealand rugby鈥檚 greatest strength was its unity of purpose from grassroots to All Blacks.

And it is the danger of the unity being lost, and the prospect of history judging this era poorly, that is troubling McCaw.

He, like everyone else, has seen the debate about which听governance structure New Zealand Rugby (NZR) should adopt听go around in circles for the last nine months and he is imploring those who have a vote to cast at next week鈥檚听special general meeting听to see beyond their own needs and interests and back the governance change proposal that mostly supports the recommendations of an听independent review.

鈥淭his moment in the game is similar to one or two other moments throughout our history,鈥 McCaw told the听Herald听of next week鈥檚 vote.

鈥淚 have been trying to say to people, that in 30-40 years, when people look back, you want them to be able to say, 鈥榡eez whoever was involved made a good decision鈥.

New Zealand Rugby will hold a crunch special general meeting next week. Photo / Mark MitchellNew Zealand Rugby will hold a crunch special general meeting next week. Photo / Mark Mitchell

鈥淭hey had a fork in the road, and they took the opportunity to get it right or get it wrong and wherever you sit, we are in those shoes now.

鈥淭he big thing I would urge people that make the decision is to not just think about their own patches, but to step above that and think what is right for New Zealand rugby in the long term so it caters for the game no matter where you sit in the ecosystem.

鈥淚f you are able to do that, hopefully the right decision will be made and that is to back the expert people who have put a recommendation on how that can look.

鈥淐hange can be a bit scary at times but being brave and having the courage to do the right thing is why people are in the positions they are in, to be able to vote.鈥

As a former All Blacks captain who now sits on the board of New Zealand Rugby Commercial 鈥 the company set up to manage the game鈥檚 revenue-generating assets 鈥 as a representative of the New Zealand Rugby Players鈥 Association (NZRPA), he鈥檚 wary that the debate is being framed as a 鈥渢hem versus us鈥 scenario 鈥 seen as a push by a small cohort of professional players to protect their income and power in shaping executive decision-making and strategy.

That sense of conflict has intensified because the NZRPA this week wrote to the unions听to say it will withdraw its right for NZR to govern the game听if the provinces vote for their own governance change proposal, which essentially preserves the current representation model.

McCaw sees that presentation of this being a battle of wills between the NZRPA and provincial unions as not only deliberately divisive, but totally wrong.

He says there is no agenda attached to the governance change proposal that he believes is the right one for NZR to adopt, as it has been created on the back of a comprehensive, independent review to which all stakeholders in the game contributed.

鈥淭his is about what is right for the game 鈥 not them versus us,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 have seen a fair bit of stuff over the last three or four years which just keeps reaffirming that we have an opportunity to get it right.

鈥淚t is not like we are trying to push our own agenda. This is something that people who have heard from all of the game 鈥 every stakeholder 鈥 have come up with and is what they think is best.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the bit people have to remember 鈥 all the feedback from everyone is put into this [Pilkington Review report] and they have come back with their findings.

鈥淚t may not 100 per cent suit your little patch, but for the good of the game, this is what people have put forward.

鈥淵ou can have a debate whether they are 100 per cent right, but we all agreed they were the people in the right spot to make that call.

鈥淭his is not professional players versus the provincial unions, it is a bunch of experts who came up with something and we just want to see that implemented for the best of the game.鈥

Richie McCaw (left) with fellow New Zealand great Dan Carter and the Webb Ellis Trophy in 2015 at Twickenham, after defending the Rugby World Cup against the Wallabies. Photo / PhotosportRichie McCaw (left) with fellow New Zealand great Dan Carter and the Webb Ellis Trophy in 2015 at Twickenham, after defending the Rugby World Cup against the Wallabies. Photo / Photosport

To emphasise his point, he wants voting members and the New Zealand rugby fraternity to be certain that the professional players have never acted in their own interests or been disconnected from the community game.

He captained the All Blacks more than 100 times and won 148 test caps, but McCaw says he never lost sight of how important his grassroots introduction to the sport was and the values he learned there.

鈥淲e are unique in New Zealand that we have the grassroots still connected right through to the elite level and we want to see that continue,鈥 McCaw says.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to see a split like other professional sports have where the elite become untouchable doing their own thing, because we have all got a connection to the community game. That is what a small country can do, and we want it to stay like that.

鈥淚 know from a professional players鈥 point of view, when I was on the board and through the years, that yes, we needed to make sure that we kept the professional players in New Zealand because that was the shop front.

鈥淏ut it couldn鈥檛 be at the cost of the community game. We wanted to make sure that the community game 鈥 which is feeding through our next layer of Black Ferns and All Blacks and all our supporters 鈥 remains the game it was when I was a young fella.

鈥淲e always wanted to ensure that people were playing rugby for the reasons we played rugby and that the clubs which gave us our opportunities were doing what they had always done.鈥

And it鈥檚 this desire to protect and enhance all aspects of the game that McCaw hopes will prevail at next week鈥檚 vote.

He understands why the provinces are wary of change but doesn鈥檛 believe that voting for the review proposal will leave them disenfranchised or marginalised.

Of the many differences between the two governance proposals on the table, the most significant is that the union鈥檚 blueprint has a specific requirement for at least three NZR directors to have had three years鈥 experience on a provincial board.

The problem with this mandated approach, says McCaw, is that it is too narrow and potentially restrictive.

鈥淭he first thing is that if you have had three years鈥 experience, it doesn鈥檛 preclude you from putting your name forward.

鈥淏ut you start eliminating people who might have had different experiences. People who might have been on the board of a Super Rugby club or done other things who might add just as much expertise as someone who has provincial union experience.

鈥淭he big thing is you don鈥檛 want to preclude people who might be the right people to be on the board that will serve exactly the things that you are trying to mandate.

鈥淭he skills matrix of what people will need to have to be on the board 鈥 part of it is understanding the landscape of New Zealand rugby.

鈥淭he appointments panel will be looking for that 鈥 for people who know the provincial game, the school game, the community and professional game 鈥 all of those things.

鈥淚t is important to have that experience and knowledge. To think that you will get a bunch of people who are purely commercially focused, professionally focused... that just won鈥檛 happen.

鈥淎nd at the end of the day, the provincial unions still have the ultimate say. They can remove the board if they are not happy. They still have that right.鈥

Nor does he think that the status quo can be preserved because it doesn鈥檛 accurately reflect the variety of stakeholders in the game.

鈥淭here is more than just one lot of stakeholders and that is what the report highlighted,鈥 he says.

鈥淵ou have got schools, the clubs, the provinces, the Super Rugby clubs, professional players 鈥 there are a lot of people who make up what is New Zealand rugby and no one is 100 per cent right all the time.

鈥淏ut it is how we all work together to make sure we can all function. That鈥檚 what the report highlighted 鈥 the need for a board that can weigh up all these things, all the different stakeholders and say what is best for New Zealand rugby in the long term?

鈥淲hat decisions need to be made to be sure that we all thrive the best we can? We are all reliant on each other, it is not one or the other.

鈥淭he thing that gets a bit lost is that the outcome a lot of us want to see is that hopefully we will have the right people looking after every corner of the game.

鈥淔rom grassroots up and to be able to do that in a way in which we all have confidence.鈥

Gregor Paul is one of New Zealand鈥檚 most respected rugby writers听and columnists. He has won multiple awards for journalism and has written several books about sport.

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