And Mark Cueto of Sale Sharks banned for six weeks by his club in an attempt to gain a more favourable result from the rfu disciplinary panel after being charged with 'making contact with the eyes' of another player.
Last edit (honest ):
uk.reuters.com wrote:
(Reuters) - England fullback Ben Foden has been warned over his future conduct by the Rugby Football Union after his arrest and caution for causing criminal damage last month
And Mark Cueto of Sale Sharks banned for six weeks by his club in an attempt to gain a more favourable result from the rfu disciplinary panel after being charged with 'making contact with the eyes' of another player.
Last edit (honest ):
uk.reuters.com wrote:
(Reuters) - England fullback Ben Foden has been warned over his future conduct by the Rugby Football Union after his arrest and caution for causing criminal damage last month
Sale have not had a sell-out at their Edgeley Park home this season and plans to redevelop the ground have barely advanced beyond the discussion stage because the £8m the work would cost is not in place.
Sale are losing around £1.5m a year, which Kennedy takes care of. The two clubs below them in the table, Leeds and Newcastle, are the other two northern sides in the Premiership. The three have the lowest average home attendances in the division and have been bankrolled by millionaire owners while other clubs have increased turnover by developing their grounds and increasing capacity.
"The game in the north is dying," Kennedy says. "What we have as a sport is a bust business model. If owners stopped supporting clubs, there would only be three or four left in the Premiership."
Sale have not had a sell-out at their Edgeley Park home this season and plans to redevelop the ground have barely advanced beyond the discussion stage because the £8m the work would cost is not in place.
Sale are losing around £1.5m a year, which Kennedy takes care of. The two clubs below them in the table, Leeds and Newcastle, are the other two northern sides in the Premiership. The three have the lowest average home attendances in the division and have been bankrolled by millionaire owners while other clubs have increased turnover by developing their grounds and increasing capacity.
"The game in the north is dying," Kennedy says. "What we have as a sport is a bust business model. If owners stopped supporting clubs, there would only be three or four left in the Premiership."
Who was deriding rugby league for its porous defences? Take at look at the scoreline from Leicester yesterday.
If I were a Sale Sharks fan I'd be asking questions of Mick Hogan and his marketing team. Not a sell out but 16k isn't too shabby. One person I spoke to who went said the Reebok didn't look like there were that many in though.
Who was deriding rugby league for its porous defences? Take at look at the scoreline from Leicester yesterday.
If I were a Sale Sharks fan I'd be asking questions of Mick Hogan and his marketing team. Not a sell out but 16k isn't too shabby. One person I spoke to who went said the Reebok didn't look like there were that many in though.
I saw more people in Sale gear in town yesterday that you normally would, I wouldn't doubt that 16k made it over. But there you go- they did bang on about filling it, and nemesis has followed hubris.
On an unrelated note, took my girlfriend, a southerner whose mates play union and tried to get her to watch it more often, to her first ever RL game on Friday night. Her reaction? "Thoroughly converted". Now to work on the rest of the southerners!
I did think that it looked a bit empty at the start, but it was probably just over half full so that figure makes sense.
The West Stand lower tier was pretty full, upper tier about 2/3 and the East Stand lower tier was fairly full. I was in the North Stand which was busy and so 16,428 is about right. They didn't open the other top 3 tiers.
There has been a lot in the press about it this week, about the United and City game impacting ticket sales.
You can be like the toffs on the Planet Rugby forum and say "wendyball should have no impact on Rugby sales" - but it does, and it did. I had to give 3 of my 6 tickets away to somebody off the Sale forum as 3 friends dropped out.
I also kept a keen eye on the online ticket sales. There were a lot of limited and sold out areas that went back on general sale towards the end of the week. So I wouldn't be at all surprised if there were a lot of returns.
Nevertheless it was a good day out and despite the on field performance in the first half I look forward to it again. I am a traditionalist and love old Football grounds, but it was nice to be in a ground with nice facilities for a change and a roof above my seat.
It was also nice to see so many Sale fans around the pubs and on the train on the way back. Made it feel like an away day atmosphere, something which is hard to find in club Union with teams not bringing many away fans, or when they do they are dotted all over the ground and not sat together.
We're planning on doing it for the next 3 seasons, so if they time it right and do it against a team with a big away following - we should be able to get a bigger crowd each year.
I did think that it looked a bit empty at the start, but it was probably just over half full so that figure makes sense.
The West Stand lower tier was pretty full, upper tier about 2/3 and the East Stand lower tier was fairly full. I was in the North Stand which was busy and so 16,428 is about right. They didn't open the other top 3 tiers.
There has been a lot in the press about it this week, about the United and City game impacting ticket sales.
You can be like the toffs on the Planet Rugby forum and say "wendyball should have no impact on Rugby sales" - but it does, and it did. I had to give 3 of my 6 tickets away to somebody off the Sale forum as 3 friends dropped out.
I also kept a keen eye on the online ticket sales. There were a lot of limited and sold out areas that went back on general sale towards the end of the week. So I wouldn't be at all surprised if there were a lot of returns.
Nevertheless it was a good day out and despite the on field performance in the first half I look forward to it again. I am a traditionalist and love old Football grounds, but it was nice to be in a ground with nice facilities for a change and a roof above my seat.
It was also nice to see so many Sale fans around the pubs and on the train on the way back. Made it feel like an away day atmosphere, something which is hard to find in club Union with teams not bringing many away fans, or when they do they are dotted all over the ground and not sat together.
We're planning on doing it for the next 3 seasons, so if they time it right and do it against a team with a big away following - we should be able to get a bigger crowd each year.
All makes sense. Football is this country's biggest sport and anyone who doesn't think that crowds in the North West, one of the traditional hotbeds of the game, will choose the main football event over RU, RL, cricket or whatever is dreaming.
Odd but had Liverpool beaten United in that round, or had Notts County clung on and knocked us out at Meadow Lane, Sale could have probably added on 3k. And Salford wouldn't have had such a low attendance as well.
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