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Melbourne Rebels officially axed from Super Rugby over financial woes

By PA
Rebels players look dejected during the round 14 Super Rugby Pacific match between ACT Brumbies and Melbourne Rebels at GIO Stadium, on May 24, 2024, in Canberra, Australia. (Photo by Mark Nolan/Getty Images)

Australian Super Rugby outfit Melbourne Rebels have been dropped from the competition due to financial difficulties.

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The Rebels have been in voluntary administration since January and Rugby Australia confirmed on Thursday it had not accepted a proposal from a consortium to take over the club’s licence from 2025.

Staff and players were told of the decision before flying to Fiji for their final regular-season match on Saturday.

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The Rebels, who lie seventh in the table, have reached the playoffs for the first time since being founded in 2011.

A statement from Rugby Australia (RA) said the consortium’s proposals “did not demonstrate sufficient financial viability” and said no documentary evidence had been provided to support a projected 18 million Australian dollars (£9.3 million) in funding.

“Since the Rebels’ inaugural year in 2011, (the Rebels have) not been independently financially sustainable despite significant additional investment by RA over and above committed club grants,” the statement said.

“There is nothing in the consortium’s proposal which demonstrates with sufficient certainty that this will change.”

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The Rebels handed over their competition licence to Rugby Australia when it entered administration with debts exceeding 23 million dollars (£12 million), including 11.5 million dollars (£6 million) owed to the tax office.

Rugby Australia, who cut staff and took over player and coaching payments for the season, said an agreement with the consortium carried “an unacceptable level of risk”.

“RA does not take this decision lightly, however it must act in the best interests of the game and its stakeholders, and to provide certainty for the Rebels’ players and staff, and all Super Rugby clubs in planning for the 2025 Super Rugby Pacific season,” the statement said.

Rugby Australia and the Rugby Union Players’ Association held meetings with players last week to discuss options.

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“The focus right now is on supporting the impacted staff and players at the Rebels,” said Rugby Australia chairman Phil Waugh.

“As Australian Rugby evolves, we will consider the game’s professional footprint, and how it best serves the game and Super Rugby.”

He said the authority is “evaluating possibilities” for the Rebels’ scheduled tour game against the British & Irish Lions in Melbourne in July 2025.

The Rebels posted a club statement on X, formerly known as Twitter, thanking fans for their support throughout a “turbulent” year.

The statement said: “We are all incredibly proud of our players, coaches, and staff in delivering our most successful season ever in the most challenging of circumstances.

“We have one final ride – our first-ever finals campaign.”

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Comments

5 Comments
J
JW 294 days ago

They look they must have known before the game.


Photo’s can be rough like that.

C
ClintP 294 days ago

Fingers crossed the Super Round comes to Brisbane now.

C
CC 293 days ago

I think it should move from city to city, give fans all over the chance to enjoy a weekend of non stop rugby

A
Andrew 294 days ago

Oh yes. The Melbourne thing has been a piss poorly attended humiliation of Rugby. It was only in Melbourne because the state govt and corporates paid for it to be there.

O
OJohn 294 days ago

You can’t fudge the books and play an unattractive style of rugby and hope to survive. Simples.

W
Willie 292 days ago

especially in AFL heartland!

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R
RedWarriors 1 hour ago
'Ulster, though no one wants to admit it, isn't much more than a development province right now.'

I actually think Ulster are showing a few green shoots this year. The fact that they ahve the second biggest Provincial population of 2.3 million is misleading. Half the population are unlikely to play due to background. The other half have seen a fall off in private school attendance preferring to school in GB esp Scotland and lost to the system. That will reverse in time.

The solution to the thorny issue of participation based on political background can be solved by breaking Rugby as a truly mainstream sport in the rest of Ireland and thus a sport for all no matter what background.

The QF defeat to NZ in 2023 was a devastating blow to that potential but the IRFU must truly put a lot of resources into this via coaching in ‘regular’ schools and pathways though AIL league etc.

The URC standings of Irish provinces needs a little mitigation. Each club in URC plays their home clubs twice. As Leinster have decided the best strategy to win the URC and challenge in Champions Cup is to decisively have the league phase in the bag so resources can be spared later and home matches in all KOs assured. That means Munster, Ulster and Connaught will score a combined total of zero points against Leinster. Compare that to Welsh teams who will score a combined total of 30 points against Dragons.

There is no weak Irish team so no easy points on offer. The standard has dipped a little but Connaught are good as their European campaign shows and all three will improve next year including Ulster.

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