Friday, November 22, 2024

Breakaway organisation led by England stars agrees four-year contract with RFU

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A breakaway organisation led by England stars has agreed a wide-ranging four-year contract with the Rugby Football Union.

Team England Rugby (TER) is a first-of-its-kind player-led organisation which has England stars Ellis Genge, Jamie George, Maro Itoje, Joe Marler and Anthony Watson on its board.

It has brokered a new Elite Playing Squad (EPS) agreement covering all aspects of playing for the national team, including commercial and welfare considerations.

The deal begins with immediate effect and runs through to 2028.

Maro Itoje is a member of the TER board which has struck the new deal with the RFU (Mike Egerton/PA)

The England men’s team’s fees and commercial deals had previously been negotiated on their behalf by the Rugby Players Association (RPA) but it was announced in January that relationship was ending, with the last RPA-brokered deal ending in the summer.

TER was set up as a not-for-profit organisation in January to represent the team’s collective views on all playing and commercial matters, address welfare concerns, ensure more tailored management of elite players and to work collaboratively with the RFU and other stakeholders towards the growth of the overall game.

The agreement includes new financial terms for the players, and introduces an exemption process to manage player load, where an individual is getting close to the 30-game limit agreed in September as part of the Professional Game Partnership.

The parties have also agreed to a research project to be undertaken and reviewed at the end of the 2024-25 season, which will inform future welfare and rest provisions.

England captain and TER board member George said: “While we have reservations about some aspects of the current protocols, we’re encouraged by the progress made. Reducing games from 35 to 30 demonstrates a commitment to player welfare that we believe is crucial for the success of English rugby.

“However, the intensity of international rugby is greater than ever, and we believe that specific international rest protocols need to be explored. We hope that the results of the research project will support this.”

Jamie George pictured in England training
England’s Jamie George says rest protocols specific to international players need to be explored (Adam Davy/PA)

The new agreement provides increased commercial and profile-building opportunities for players, with TER and RFU to work together on some commercial projects.

Genge added: “As a group, we felt that there was an opportunity with the new agreement to look at the commercialisation of England players, both collectively and individually, and we wanted to be at the forefront of these changes.

“The RFU also recognised that enhancing players’ commercial potential is an area that has not yet been maximised across rugby union and we hope these new measures bring in new partners and new fans.”

The RFU’s executive director of performance rugby Conor O’Shea said: “We are pleased to have been able to reach agreement on new areas of focus including new commercial opportunities for players and an extension to the extensive work we have done on player welfare.”

The TER player board makes the majority of decisions on behalf of the wider squad, unless a squad-wide decision is required, then a democratic voting process is in place.

England head coach Steve Borthwick later named the 17 players awarded the first enhanced EPS contracts.

The introduction of the hybrid central contracts, which form part of the newly created Men’s Professional Game Partnership announced in September, allows Borthwick to have the final say on all sports science and medical matters relating to the players.

England head coach Steve Borthwick pictured at the Allianz Stadium
England head coach Steve Borthwick has named the first 17 players who will receive enhanced EPS contracts (Zac Goodwin/PA)

The RFU will pay the 10 Gallagher Premiership clubs £33million per season for the first four-year cycle, with a profit share dictating the funding for the second four-year cycle.

As part of the arrangement, Borthwick has the freedom to select up to 25 players who will be paid as much as £160,000 annually in return for greater control of how they are managed on club duty.

The players awarded contracts are Ollie Chessum, Tom Curry, Theo Dan, Ben Earl, Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, George Ford, Tommy Freeman, George Furbank, Genge, George, Itoje, Ollie Lawrence, George Martin, Alex Mitchell, Henry Slade, Fin Smith and Marcus Smith.

The announcement comes just eight days before England’s opening Autumn Nations Series clash against New Zealand.

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