Super Rugby organizers South Africa, New Zealand and Australia Rugby (SANZAR) have confirmed that the competition is set to expand into Asia, with Japan and Singapore vying for the license to run a team in 2016.
The two countries best met the criteria required to successfully operate a Super Rugby franchise, SANZAR said.
A decision is to be made in September or October.
“We are now able to confirm that two parties from Asia will compete for the opportunity to join an expanded Super Rugby competition in 2016,” SANZAR chief executive Greg Peters said in a statement late on Wednesday.
“Asia is a region that has been the focus of considerable investment by the International Rugby Board in recent years and is a strategically sound location for the evolution of Super Rugby,” he added.
“We were happy with the number of responses received, however the two stand-out expressions of interest that were most attractive to the SANZAR unions were received from Japan and Singapore,” Peters said.
However, SANZAR’s decision has raised concerns that the extra teams would dilute the competition’s playing talent.
Coastal Sharks coach Jake White said he preferred the old format, where all teams played home and away games across the season, rather than being divided into a conference format.
“I think that less is more, I think that you should play everybody in a competition to see how good you are,” the Springbok World Cup-winning coach told Radio Sport in New Zealand.
“You want to play Kiwi and Aussie sides when you’re South African. We should have gone back to the old format, where you play everybody and the winner becomes the winner,” White added.
Peters said each bid in the proposed expanded competition had the support of their national unions and included other interested parties who would provide commercial and business support for the venture.
The two bidders now have until the middle of next month to submit formal tender documents pushing their case to join Super Rugby when it expands from 15 to 18 teams in 2016.
SANZAR said the bids would be assessed against the key criteria of commercial value, infrastructure, geographic location, rugby readiness and ongoing sustainability.
The return of the Kings from South Africa’s Eastern Cape and a team based in Argentina had already been confirmed by SANZAR when the 18-team format was announced in May.
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