
Ground-breaking Griffin takes over as RFU president
Griffin is travelling to the tournament in a unique way, driving to games in her campervan and staying at campsites."My daughter is coming with me. She lives in New York, and only gets three weeks holiday a year, so I have to make sure I've got campsites with good wi-fi, because she'll be working from the camper van for the duration," Griffin said.Griffin recently met with England's women at their training base as they prepare for the World Cup.There has been much talk about the Red Roses emulating the success of England's football Lionesses, who have just become back-to-back European champions.The Red Roses have won 25 games in a row and will go into the tournament on home soil as favourites - but despite reaching the last six World Cup finals they have only once came out as world champions."There's my heart, which obviously hopes that they're lifting that trophy at the end of the tournament," said Griffin."But you know, I just have to remain pragmatic. I've seen enough World Cup finals to know that it doesn't always go with the form."
Griffin gets stuck into governance reform
While the World Cup will dominate Griffin's early days, come the autumn the RFU's governance reform will return to the headlines.After a tumultuous period last season, when RFU chief executive Bill Sweeney survived a vote of no confidence, her role will focus on helping English rugby evolve."I do believe that all parts of the game want us to evolve and improve our governance," she said. "That's really, really important - and a lot of that is in response to societal changes. The world doesn't stand still, and neither can we."It won't move as fast as people maybe think it should, but then I don't think that's a problem."We won't have another major governance review, probably for another 10 years or more. So it's really, really important - I'd rather get this right."The results of the governance review will go to the RFU Council in the autumn but work on giving more devolved power to different regions could come sooner.Having visited clubs across England in her previous roles with the RFU, she wants the union to become more agile and responsive to each region's needs."I think people want to have more influence over conversations and decisions that are being made regionally," she said. "One solution for Cumbria is not the same as the solution for Hampshire. We've been working on this for several years in terms of how we can make those decisions, particularly around the growth of rugby at more local levels."We have to move on with that regionalisation, and the governance has to be aligned with that. You can't do everything all at once. So we very much want to get the regionalisation under way in the next season."
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