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Road To Nowhere: The WRU's Non-Plan For 2026

Welsh Rugby appears determined to enter 2026 in the same manner it exited 2025: in a tailspin of paranoia, terrible results and misery.

Road To Nowhere: The WRU's Non-Plan For 2026

Welsh Rugby appears determined to enter 2026 in the same manner it exited 2025: in a tailspin of paranoia, terrible results and misery.

Rome wasn’t built in a day, but you’d think than after a couple of months even an ancient civilisation would have dug a few foundations, maybe put up a bit of scaffolding and cordoned off a few areas by now. Since they announced the intent to cull a region back in October, all the WRU have achieved is forcing Wales’ best 2 forwards - Jac Morgan and Dewi Lake - to pack their bags and head for the mid-table mediocrity of Gloucester, rather than sit around and wait for more mid-table mediocrity in Wales.

The WRU genuinely appear to have thought that after their announcement to drop to 3 regions, the problem would have sorted itself out by now. Given that, a year ago to this day, the WRU was locked in months long negotiations over an increase in regional funding, how they thought these particular turkeys would have voted for Christmas within just a few weeks was naivety on a whole new scale.

Meantime, the WRU saw fit to release a Christmas statement - a message of optimism as they looked to the future. In it, they confirmed that the regions had not, indeed, agreed amongst themselves who would be the sacrificial lamb:

"While we had hoped to provide certainty before Christmas, it has become clear that a few more weeks are needed to try and reach an agreed way forward."

Instead, they reiterated their full commitment to the plan the only came up with right at the last minute:

"It is about creating a professional game that is sustainable, competitive and capable of supporting the wider rugby ecosystem in the long term. Fewer teams means stronger squads, more stable finances and clearer pathways for players.”

None of the reasons given in that final sentence stand up to scrutiny. A mass exodus of talent from Wales to England is already underway, directly caused by the WRU proposals. The financial backers who keep the regions afloat have made it very clear that they want no part of the WRU’s new plans and how reducing the playing pathways to professionalism by 25% helps develop more players is anyone’s guess.

On the subject of finances, the WRU continued its favourite running gag of insisting there is no money to spend whilst simultaneously boasting about how much money it is spending. This time, it’s a promise of an extra 28 million pounds worth of investment over the next 5 years and from 2026 the women’s Celtic challenge teams will receive an extra 1 million pounds combined, although it still isn’t fully clear exactly what this money will be spent on.

The WRU even go so far as to say "We have strengthened our financial position” but don’t give details as to how. Given that the savings from cutting a region are yet to be realised whilst the best part of 100,000 tickets went unsold for the November internationals, it would be some achievement if true.

We still don’t know how they intend to wiggle out of their contract with the URC, we still don’t know who the new sponsor of the national stadium will be, we still don’t know who will be the full time assistant coaches for either the men’s or women’s national teams. The Six Nations starts in 5 weeks; more part-timers on secondment from club sides, is it?

Unlike Peter Pan or Cinderella, the Welsh rugby farce won’t come to a close with the end of pantomime season. At least regional supporters have been able to distract themselves with some wins lately, and the healthy crowds at Parc Y Scarlets and Cardiff Arms Park on Boxing Day show the rugby culture in Wales is not fully dead yet.

‘Yet’ being the operative word.

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Huw Griffin

Huw Griffin

@huwgriffinrugby

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