As things stand, the popular assumption is that Newcastle
will take Saracens‘ place in next season’s Premiership, but Trailfinders rugby
director Ward told The Rugby Paper: “We’re taking counsel at the moment from a
legal perspective as to what our position is.
“We’ve still got to play Newcastle and we have a game in hand, which is against Yorkshire Carnegie, so while they look like they’re far ahead of us, the gap could quickly close.
“You look at what’s happening and I get this is a unique
situation, but why is Premier League football saying it must preserve the
integrity of their competition when we don’t?
“Premiership Rugby aren’t prepared to end their competition
yet, so why are we lumping the Championship in with the community game and
being told to call a halt?”
While most Premiership clubs are slashing player wage bills, Ward says ambitious Ealing will continue paying their players full whack as they continue to think big.
Ward added: “Nothing will stop for us. We won’t change players’ salaries. We pride ourselves on our player welfare and we’re building for the future, so that carries on.”
Meanwhile, Cornish Pirates chief executive Paul Durkin has
slammed the RFU over their handling of the coronavirus affair. He believes the
decision to call off the season came too late as he prepares for swingeing
squad cuts in the aftermath of cancellations.
“We believe the league should have been stopped two weeks
ago,” Durkin said. “I think the leadership of the RFU has been appalling. They
held off and held off, not wanting to make a decision, but all it did was leave
clubs in limbo when we needed to plan.
“We’ll try to protect our players mentally and financially
and we haven’t cut any wages yet, but I can tell you now our squad will not be
the same size next season. We’re pushing forward with the Stadium for Cornwall
but this will set our squad back a year.”
Durkin believes the RFU must call a moratorium on
Championship funding cuts, adding: “Next season the RFU were cutting our money
by £200,000 and then it was going to be cut again, so we’ve got a triple-whammy
now and some clubs may not survive.
“The RFU should think about what package they might be able
to put together and even if they say they can’t hand out any money, they could
place a moratorium on next season’s cuts. That would be a really positive thing
to help clubs stay alive.”
Outside the top two tiers, other clubs are suffering.
Max Venables, chief executive of National One Plymouth
Albion, told TRP: “We’ll lose £100,000 in turnover on our remaining games and
hospitality business.
“There’s a lot of uncertainty around but we’ve managed to
put a good squad together and we’ll try to hold everything together and come
out the other side.”
National Two South leaders Taunton face a bigger
predicament, with president Dick Macey saying: “The players have been stood
down and there’s no money for rugby.
“Our Monday to Friday business that’s worth £400,000-a-year
has just evaporated and the question now is whether we can ever resurrect it?
We don’t pay our players a lot anyway, but our recruitment plans are on hold
and we face some tough decisions.
“The grass will be cut, the ground will be spiked, but other than that it’s grim.”