Exclusive: Rugby Australia board meet to discuss McLennan’s future – and there is one key figure missing

Australian rugby is in a state of crisis, with the Rugby Australia board meeting on Saturday morning to discuss the future of Hamish McLennan.

Less than 24 hours after six RA member unions called on McLennan to resign, the board scrambled to discuss the circus surrounding the leadership of the national union.

McLennan, crucially, was not invited, The Roar can reveal.

The last time the executives were not invited to a RA meeting was in the hours before former chief executive Raelene Castle resigned in 2020.

Rugby Australia Chairman Hamish McLennan’s future is in peril, with the RA board meeting to discuss his future on Saturday morning. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images for Rugby Australia)

The six member unions have urged McLennan to fall on his sword, citing a lack of confidence in his leadership following one of the the nation’s most tumultuous years since the game turned professional, which culminated in the Wallabies failing to progress out of the pool stage of a World Cup for the first time.

“We, the undersigned Member Unions of Rugby Australia, are calling for the Chair, Hamish McLennan, to immediately resign as Chair and Director of Rugby Australia,” a letter from the six dissenting members unions read to McLennan and the RA board.

“We do not believe Mr McLennan has been acting in the best interests of our game.

“We no longer have any trust or faith in his leadership, or the direction in which he is taking rugby in Australia.

“Additionally, we believe Mr McLennan has been acting outside his role as a director, exerting an undue influence on the operations and executives of Rugby Australia.

“This is not the best practice governance that we expect from leaders in our game.

“Should Mr McLennan not resign, this letter serves as notice for Directors to convene an Extraordinary General Meeting at the earliest possible opportunity, as per clause 4.1c of the Rugby Australia Constitution.”

McLennan was encouraged to resign on Friday evening, with Queensland Rugby Union chairman Brett Clark calling the embattled RA chair to tell him he had lost support.

The dissenting six member unions believe they have the numbers to vote McLennan out unless he walks, with the QRU, ACT Rugby, Rugby WA, NT Rugby, Tasmania Rugby and South Australia Rugby calling on change.

The NSW Rugby Union, Rugby Victoria and RUPA did not sign the letter, while it’s understood Andrew Forrest has pledged his support to McLennan.

RA Chief executive Phil Waugh attempted to stay out of the fray earlier in the week when asked by The Roar whether the RA board could build trust whilst McLennan was chairman.

“That’s not for me to answer as CEO. We’ve got the appropriate governance around the game and I think this is a really good step forward,” he said.

“We’re making good progress across the strategic direction.”

NSW Waratahs CEO Paul Doorn and Rugby Australia CEO Phil Waugh announced their alignment at Daceyville on November 14, 2023 in Sydney. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

McLennan led the charge to sack Dave Rennie at the start of the year to bring back Eddie Jones to spearhead the Wallabies’ World Cup year.

He also was the key figure involved in luring NRL sensation Joseph Suaalii to Rugby Australia, with the 20-year-old drawn in by a mega multimillion dollar, three-year deal.

Both decisions, particularly in light of the Wallabies’ World Cup failure and Jones’ sensational resignation, have come back to haunt him.

The inability to get a much-talked about private equity deal across the line, as well as usher through reform measures such as centralisation, have added to the destabilisation across the Australian rugby landscape.

“This is divisive by nature and pits state against state, parochialism over unity and centralisation,” McLennan told The Roar on Friday.

McLennan was catapulted into the chairmanship in the middle of the Covid pandemic, as the RA leadership was blown up.

He was a vital figure in RA securing its $29 million broadcast deal across the line after it had fallen flat under the leadership of Castle, who had turned down $45m from Foxtel and taken the package to market expecting Optus to go after it hard.

But Optus turned down pursuing rugby, leaving the game on the cusp of going under.

McLennan also helped RA secure the 2027 men’s Rugby World Cup and 2029 women’s World Cup.

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