Unequal funding for Welsh regions after Ospreys and Scarlets miss WRU deadline
Wales' four professional regions will not be evenly funded after the country's rugby union (WRU) said on Sunday that Ospreys and Scarlets did not sign the new Professional Rugby Agreement before the deadline.
The WRU said Dragons and Cardiff signed up to the terms of a new agreement which had been under negotiation since August last year but Ospreys and Scarlets missed the deadline, forcing the WRU to issue a two-year notice to terminate the agreement.
The current PRA deal runs out in 2027 and the WRU said "broader performance, financial and strategic needs of the game" should take precedence.
"The WRU's preference from the outset was to maintain four professional clubs (on equal funding) within this framework. Everyone worked hard to achieve that," the WRU said in a statement.
"In practical terms, the WRU will work closely with all four professional clubs to agree the way forward beyond June 2027, with an open mind to all constructive and realistic proposals.
"That said, given the seismic changes in the rugby landscape since we first started negotiating PRA 2025, the system will not return to the model of four evenly funded clubs."
Although Welsh media reported that the number of professional teams would be reduced to three, the WRU made no mention of cutting a region.
"We are continuing to talk to all four clubs about what the future will hold," WRU CEO Abi Tierney said.
"We recognise this will be a time of uncertainty and are committed to treating all the clubs, players, and supporters with respect and fairness throughout this process.
"We acknowledge the continued commitment of each club to Welsh rugby and will formulate a new plan with the best interests of the whole game in Wales at the forefront of our thinking."
Scarlets and Ospreys play in the United Rugby Championship and the second-tier European Challenge Cup. Reuters has contacted both teams for comment. REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
2 days ago
- Straits Times
Leinster to face Bulls in United Rugby Championship final
FILE PHOTO: Rugby Union - European Champions Cup - Quarter Final - Leicester Tigers v Leinster - Welford Road Stadium, Leicester, Britain - May 7, 2022 Leinster's Ross Molony celebrates after the match with Joe McCarthy Action Images via Reuters/Ed Sykes/File photo REUTERS Irish side Leinster will face the Bulls from South Africa in the United Rugby Championship final at Croke Park in Dublin on June 14 after both recorded home semi-final victories on Saturday. Leinster defeated defending champions Glasgow Warriors 37-19 at the Aviva Stadium, while the Pretoria-based Bulls beat compatriots the Sharks from Durban 25-13 in front of 47,000 spectators at Loftus Versfeld. Hooker Dan Sheehan and fullback Jamie Osborne scored two tries each for record eight-times winners Leinster as they feature in the final of the competition for the first time since 2021. Leinster led when Sheehan crossed for the first score and they raced into a 25-5 halftime lead against their outmuscled opponents. Replacement flyhalf Ciaran Frawley and prop Tom Clarkson also crossed for tries. The only negative for coach Leo Cullen will have been the form off the tee of number 10 Sam Prendergast, who missed several simple kicks at goal. "It's making sure we have a great week now and get excited about putting on another performance, showing what it means to play for Leinster," Cullen told reporters. "Can they (his players) play their best every week? Listen, they're not robots. There is an opposition that is fully motivated as well. It's about dusting ourselves off now, it was a very physical game and I'm sure the (final) will be too." The Bulls will play their third final in four seasons, but lost on both previous occasions to Stormers in 2022 and Glasgow. They scored three tries against the Sharks through wings Sebastian de Klerk and Canan Moodie, and centre Dan Kriel. "I am proud with the way we defended, we were under the pump and sometimes you need those moments to get into the game," Bulls coach Jake White said. "It is a third final in four years and hopefully we can learn from the mistakes we made in the other. We play really well away from home." REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


CNA
2 days ago
- CNA
Leinster to face Bulls in United Rugby Championship final
Irish side Leinster will face the Bulls from South Africa in the United Rugby Championship final at Croke Park in Dublin on June 14 after both recorded home semi-final victories on Saturday. Leinster defeated defending champions Glasgow Warriors 37-19 at the Aviva Stadium, while the Pretoria-based Bulls beat compatriots the Sharks from Durban 25-13 in front of 47,000 spectators at Loftus Versfeld. Hooker Dan Sheehan and fullback Jamie Osborne scored two tries each for record eight-times winners Leinster as they feature in the final of the competition for the first time since 2021. Leinster led when Sheehan crossed for the first score and they raced into a 25-5 halftime lead against their outmuscled opponents. Replacement flyhalf Ciaran Frawley and prop Tom Clarkson also crossed for tries. The only negative for coach Leo Cullen will have been the form off the tee of number 10 Sam Prendergast, who missed several simple kicks at goal. "It's making sure we have a great week now and get excited about putting on another performance, showing what it means to play for Leinster," Cullen told reporters. "Can they (his players) play their best every week? Listen, they're not robots. There is an opposition that is fully motivated as well. It's about dusting ourselves off now, it was a very physical game and I'm sure the (final) will be too." The Bulls will play their third final in four seasons, but lost on both previous occasions to Stormers in 2022 and Glasgow. They scored three tries against the Sharks through wings Sebastian de Klerk and Canan Moodie, and centre Dan Kriel. "I am proud with the way we defended, we were under the pump and sometimes you need those moments to get into the game," Bulls coach Jake White said. "It is a third final in four years and hopefully we can learn from the mistakes we made in the other. We play really well away from home."


New Paper
5 days ago
- New Paper
Look Hoo's trying to go one better
It has been three years to the day, and David Probert has hardly gone through a day without reliving the bittersweet moment of "the one that got away" in UK's most famous flat race, the Epsom Derby. On June 4, 2022, the Welsh jockey felt the adrenaline rush kicking shortly after Tattenham Corner when he began weaving a passage on his 150-1 mount Hoo Ya Mal for his former master Andrew Balding. But, when he saw daylight at the 500m, he knew deep down he would have to settle for second-best. The Sir Michael Stoute-trained Desert Crown (Richard Kingscote) was in full flight and beyond catching. Hoo Ya Mal still ran out of his skin, clipping down the deficit on the winner to 2½ lengths, while holding off a late charge from Westover to win the battle for the minors by a head. Probert, 34, has since not sat on a Derby contender again, leaving it to fate to gift him with a second chance to go one better one day, so he can realise his boyhood dream. As fate would have it, Hoo Ya Mal's owner, Ahmad Al Shaikh has turned dream-maker for the 1,600-odd race-winning jockey again. The Dubai brain behind Green Team Racing has booked Probert on the Owen Burrows-trained Al Wasl Storm, and yet again, they head in as overlooked underdogs. The three-year-old grey by Affinisea is another long shot at cricket odds, just a touch better than Hoo Ya Mal at 100-1. Probert, whose highest acclaim is an overseas Group 2 win aboard Highland Knight for Balding in the Oettingen-Rennen at Baden-Baden in Germany in 2012, is fully aware of the racing conundrum facing him in the £1.5 million (S$2.6 million) Group 1 2,400m race on June 7 (10.30pm Singapore time). Overjoyed to finally get a chance to soothe the three-year-long hurt, he is, however, sitting atop a horse bred for jumps against a host of Derby bluebloods. Yet, he knows first-hand about the romance of just being a ticket holder and even coming so close to hitting the jackpot. "A Derby win would be massive. We all grow up wanting to ride in a race like this, compete at a high level," said Probert. "Hoo Ya Mal ran a great second in the Derby. I watched that race plenty of times. "I got a nice split down the inside. Hoo Ya Mal was renowned to be quite keen, but we managed to get a nice split through the inside. "But, lo and behold, Desert Crown was still on the bridle on the outside a furlong down. "I was still delighted. This is what this is all about, isn't it? Trying to find these horses and hopefully, we found one." Like most jockeys saddled with a "no-hoper", Probert would rather look for any silver lining. "He actually has a good profile about him. He hasn't had much experience," he said. "He's done very little wrong in all the starts that he's had." Probert was aboard at the last two of Al Wasl Storm's three starts, including the last when he broke his maiden tag in a 2,400m race at Chester on May 9, but said the character-building run outweighed the win. "Chester is renowned as a good Derby trial. He seemed to handle the sharp ends and quick track very well," he said. "It feels like as if, mentally, he's grown up a lot. He was still quite raw going into Chester. "He had to do things the hard way from the front. He galloped it out relentlessly. "So, I'd imagine a mile and a half around a track like Epsom could suit him. He's a well-balanced horse and has a good mind on him." Al Wasl Storm had a first taste of the undulating Epsom course in an easy stretch-out on May 28. "It was nice to get him on the track with lovely ground this morning," said Probert. "We just took it from the mile. He never had a lead, we just allowed him to use himself, he quickened up well. "I'm delighted with the way he is in himself. Al Shaikh is a passionate fellow, and I'd just love for him to run well for him. "This is what dreams are made of. You've got to be in it to win it." manyan@