
R360 makes correct diagnosis but proposed cure is unproven
R360 is brought to us by the team of Mike Tindall, Stuart Hooper, whose management career at Bath was one seven-year lesson in the Peter Principle that organisation's tend to promote people to the point of their incompetence, player agent Mark Spoors and John Loffhagen, who had a 13-month spell as the chief legal adviser for LIV golf. Their idea is to create two new superclub competitions, one between eight male sides, one between four female sides, which would sit above the club structure. They would compete in a 16-match season in two windows from April to June and then August to September, with rounds taking place in a different city each week.
The words are cheap, but what they are promising sounds very expensive. They say they want to hire the 360 best players in the world on double their salaries, mention São Paulo, Barcelona, New York and Los Angeles as potential venues and plan to run 'a week of live events', including gigs before every game. Investors from the Premier League, F1 and NFL are said to have 'expressed interest', and 'dozens' of players have apparently signed letters of intent. All of which will be good for nothing but hamster bedding unless the organisers can fulfil their end of the deal and raise all the necessary capital by September.
There is (there always is) a lot of ready talk about emulating the runaway success of the Indian Premier League, which is built on the support of the largest single-sport market on the planet, and LIV golf, a competition launched by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund as a screw-you to the PGA Tour after they refused to allow their players to compete in the existing tournaments. It is amazing what you can do when you have a billion fans with no worthwhile domestic competition to watch or the backing of a trillion-dollar petrochemical fund run by a man with a grudge.
What rugby does have, according to a Nielsen report from 2021, is 800m supporters worldwide. That is 800m supporters who like the game more or less the way it is and don't necessarily want to tune in to a match between two newly minted teams designed by committee, see their favourite players creamed off from club rugby by a rival competition or ruled out of the next Test because they are playing in a domestic game that clashes with southern hemisphere internationals scheduled to take place in the August-September window.
That is if anyone who makes the hop across to the new competition is even allowed to carry on playing for their country. Right now, anyone who signs up would probably be ineligible to play for England unless the 'exceptional circumstances' clause was triggered. That won't happen unless World Rugby votes in favour of the enterprise and that won't happen unless the unions are on board and all the anti-doping and insurance regulation issues are resolved (all of which, you can be sure, would happen surprisingly quickly if R360 can persuade PIF to spend a few of their spare billions on all this).
Sign up to The Breakdown
The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed
after newsletter promotion
Unless that happens, it seems the large part of the money is supposed to come from, well, us, the paying public. Last May, Tindall talked it all through with his former Gloucester teammate Mark Foster, who went on to become an executive at LIV, on an episode of his podcast, The Good, the Bad and the Rugby. Tindall's main complaint is that rugby is not extracting enough money from its fans. Foster explains that a new business model could conceivably involve charging £75 a ticket, and '£100 a day easy on food and beverages' so by the time you have bought your new team jersey 'everyone there is spending three-to-five hundred pounds' at the match.
It's worth a listen, not least because they say so much right about what is wrong with the game. Tindall absolutely has a point when he says that piecemeal change, when repeated tweaks are made to the existing game, have not worked and that something more radical than the Club World Cup is needed. But he has a long way to go, and a lot of money to find, to begin to persuade anyone this is it. You do not need to be a medical expert to know someone is sick, but it sure helps to be one when you're trying to find a cure.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
14 minutes ago
- The Independent
How the expressive Ellie Kildunne emerged as the face of England's home World Cup
Growing up in the rural West Yorkshire village of Riddlesden, Ellie Kildunne had a Roald Dahl quote pinned on her wall. 'Lukewarm is no good,' it read, a maxim which Kildunne has carried with her to the top of her sport. These next few weeks in which she will be the postergirl of a home World Cup that England are overwhelming favourites to win could catapult the 25-year-old to superstardom; it is a good job, then, that Kildunne appears totally at ease with the fame for which she has long felt destined. 'She was playing against my daughter in an under-15 game and I'd never seen anything like it,' former England head coach Simon Middleton once recalled of the first time he had seen Kildunne play. 'Her team went 30 points down and she kept them in it, almost on her own, running in tries and kicking goals from the touchline. You don't see that from many 15-year-olds.' Prepare to see plenty more feats of daring and dynamism from a Red Rose in full bloom as the World Cup begins. With a great shock of curls decorating an upright yet deceptively powerful frame, Kildunne is a smooth mover, with trademark serpentine weaves in and out of contact employed to devastating effect since her introduction to international rugby as a teenager. Off the pitch, too, she will be tough to miss; brand deals with Asahi, LG, Canterbury and others befit her status as World Player of the Year. It would be easy to fatigue given the prominence afforded her even within a standard-setting side, but Kildunne's natural charisma and charm has been clear in every media engagement ahead of a tournament of which she may become the face. 'I haven't even scratched my potential yet,' Kildunne told The Independent, ominously, last year, clutching the individual award earned by a superlative 2024 that brought Six Nations and WXV success and a foray back to sevens at the Paris Olympics. If such bold declarations are typical of athletes with her sort of stratospheric ambition, it was nonetheless delivered with the conviction of a certain truth. For there is still a sense that Kildunne is still figuring out the game. Catapulted into an England environment at the age of 18, there was a sense that neither player nor individual quite knew what to do with the raw talent at their disposal. Deployed at full-back on a bit of a hunch – the teenage Kildunne was pretty unfamiliar with the position – flashes of supreme athletic talent were mixed with the growing pains of youth; while Abby Dow and Jess Breach, the other prongs in England's back three triumvirate who made their debut in the same game, soon established their place in the senior side, it took a couple of seasons on the sevens circuit for Kildunne to really make her name. Even by the time of the last World Cup, when her star was fully on the rise, she likely wouldn't have started the final if not for Helena Rowland's injury. "The disappointment and the heartbreak of the last World Cup reignited a flame inside me that I already thought was burning pretty bright," she said ahead of her second tournament. "We've learnt so much from that tournament and built so much in our culture that we're in a completely different space. It's something that you can rewrite and that's something that we're very much focused on. It's not a revenge story, we're just rewriting." But the heartbreak and hard lessons of a relatively tough first major tournament have driven Kildunne to new heights. Growing up, the youngster sported the Liverpool shirts of first sporting heroes like Fernando Torres; now it is her name emblazoned of the backs of a growing legion amidst the swelling army of Red Roses fans. Even among a squad of outstanding ambassadors and engaging personalities, the full-back stands out for her unique connection with her audience. Authentically herself, Kildunne has thrived under John Mitchell in an environment that has encouraged its players to show their personalities on and off the pitch. Her lasso celebration, born at WXV in 2023 with the forming of a 'Cowboys' group within the squad of which Meg Jones is the 'Sheriff', has begun to be imitated on the terraces; when 500 Red Roses cowboy hats were crafted ahead of the Women's Six Nations decider against France, supposedly at the personal request of RFU chief executive Bill Sweeney, the accoutrements sold out almost two hours before kick off. Away from the pitch, Kildunne's expressive edge is clear. A keen photographer and fashion designer, she has worked with clothing brands and O2 to fight the gender awareness gap with a bespoke range of apparel; new boots will be sported during the World Cup featuring a design very much reflecting her character. But elite teams are not picked on popularity or personality alone, and Kildunne has had to work hard to really take command of her starting spot. A tendency to try to do too much herself from earlier in her career, often with success, has been eschewed by a maturing full-back increasingly getting the best out of others as well. Yet Kildunne knows that the intensity of the spotlight upon her will add scrutiny - but the bright lights have never really bothered her. "It will add that target on to my back; I see it as pressure but I don't think pressure is a bad thing," she stressed ahead of the tournament. "I see pressure as a privilege and I definitely think it's a good thing. I use the pressure to challenge myself to exceed people's expectations and to rewrite what people may think I can do and take it to the next level. "I'm feeling strong and confident - the most confident I've ever felt - so I'm ready and raring to go."


Daily Mail
15 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
The terrifying moment footy star wanted to drive his car into a wall because of crippling depression
On the field, Terrell May is a scary sight. But the rugby league star has revealed that he came close to throwing it all away following a worrying bout of depression that almost cost him more than his NRL career. The Wests Tigers star is happy these days, playing alongside his brother Taylan and coming within an inch of State of Origin selection for New South Wales this season. However, he has revealed that he came close to taking his own life in 2024 when he was still contracted to the Sydney Roosters. Speaking with Taylan on the Mayday podcast, Terrell opened up on how a terrifying bout of depression took him to the brink. 'I was driving to Roosters training, I told him I'm quitting,' he said. 'I'm turning the car around to ring Robbo [coach Trent Robinson] to tell him I'm quitting. I'm done. 'Just cause I was just done, with everything. 'I called my manager and I told him, I'm not playing anymore, rip my contract up, I don't care anymore. 'I don't know what happened, it was just one of those days where I was just depressed as.' Struggling to get the words out, Terrell admitted to Taylan that suicide had crossed his mind during his darkest time. 'As bad as it sounds, I wanted to properly drive my car [into a wall],' he said. 'I was on the M4, I wanted to drive my car into the wall, bro.' Taylan said that mental health was 'no joke' and asked his brother what he would say to somebody battling their own demons. 'Now, I have coping mechanisms,' Terrell said. 'When i start feeling like s*** or like depressed, I think about [how] there's other people doing it way worse in other countries and that kind of stuff. 'I always say to myself ... you life a hectic life, you've got a roof, you've got food, you've got all this stuff, like a house, a car. 'Then there's kids starving and dying and getting bombed and that kind of stuff. 'It's crazy. And you think your life is hard? Imagine them. They would probably love life if they were in my situation. 'They would think 'this is the best ever'. All those kids that are doing it tough. And all those families. 'I know there's people out there struggling with mental health and I say seek help.' Terrell said that religion had helped him get through the darkest days and he constantly turned to his faith for strength. 'To be honest, God fixed many problems in my life,' he said. 'Every time I'm feeling down, I know there's one person I can count on - and that's him. 'He's never going to change, he's always going to be the same. 'Every time I backslide or feel like I am getting away from him, he pulls me closer, when I get depressed and that. 'That's probably my biggest thing, going back to God.' But Terrell urged anyone battling to seek professional medical help. 'There's people who should seek help. Even though we've got a good life in Australia, you should still seek help,' he said.


BBC News
42 minutes ago
- BBC News
Newcastle sign forward Lee-Warner
Newcastle Red Bulls have signed forward Fergus Lee-Warner on a one-year deal from New South Wales 31-year-old Australian has previously played in England for Worcester, where he worked with Newcastle director of rugby Steve Diamond, and Bath."I'm incredibly grateful to Dimes for reaching out – especially after our time together at Worcester Warriors was cut short," Lee-Warner told the club website., external"I can't wait to get stuck in with the fellas, work hard and soak up as much as I can when I arrive."He is the club's second signing since energy drinks giant Red Bull completed their takeover of the Prem Rugby club last Tuesday.