Qatar floats billion-dollar offer for Nations Championship

Publish Date
Tuesday, 30 April 2024, 9:30AM

Rugby could be headed to the Middle East, with Qatar reportedly making a shock pitch to host the newly minted Nations Championship.

The Daily Mail reports Qatar has proposed a three-day event, tentatively referred to as the “Superbowl of rugby”, to host the deciding fixtures, starting in 2026.

It is reported Qatar’s bid would make use of stadiums and infrastructure already in place from the 2022 Fifa Football World Cup.

The proposal would have Qatar play host for eight years, and stage the first four editions of the Nations Championship final. That would mean a final, as well as match-ups from second down to sixth, to be played over three days by all 12 teams.

The Daily Mail says Qatar’s bid has promised commercial returns of £800 million ($1.68 billion).

The initial proposal is understood to have been sent to the Six Nations and Sanzaar unions last week, with a seven-day deadline to engage in negotiations.

The Herald has approached New Zealand Rugby for comment.

The Nations Championship will have 12 teams from both the Northern and Southern hemispheres face off in a league-style competition, taking place between Rugby World Cup cycles.

Fixtures will be used to give context to test matches played in the Southern Hemisphere’s July window, and the corresponding November period for the Northern Hemisphere.

Each nation would host three matches in its own window, before touring the rival hemisphere for three away matches in the opposite.

The 12 teams will be split into two conferences of six, with the two leaders at the end of the November window to meet in a final to decide a champion.

New Zealand, Australia, South Africa and Argentina will represent the Southern Hemisphere, while England, Ireland, France, Wales, Scotland and Italy are confirmed to be playing on behalf of the north.

Two more nations, believed to be Japan and Fiji, will be invited into the inaugural competition, and take the Southern Hemisphere’s conference total to six.

However, while the competition has on one hand been welcome due to the context of matches outside of a Rugby Championship, Six Nations or World Cup, it has also come under fire for further establishing the idea of an elite group.

Limiting the total to only 12 teams will probably mean up-and-coming sides like Samoa, Tonga, USA, Canada, Georgia and Romania among others limited in their opportunities to face top-tier opposition outside World Cup years.

This article was first published on nzherald.co.nz and is republished here with permission

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