A week after 10 Rebels staff were laid off, Rugby Australia has followed suit with their own ‘restructure’.
The Roar can reveal that 10 staff, including two members of the executive committee, were made redundant on the eve of the Super Rugby Pacific competition getting underway.
It’s believed Anthony French, who was a director who worked in government relations and was instrumental in helping get the 2027 and 2029 Rugby World Cups across the line, took a voluntary redundancy. French had been at RA for more than a decade.
Another was marketing officer Matt McGrath, who is the chief marketing officer for Deloitte.
Others from the partnerships and finance team were also let go.
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Last year’s World Cup blowout, which is believed to have been as high as $4 million, isn’t the reason being given for restructuring.
Indeed, RA chief executive Phil Waugh, who replaced Andy Marinos midway through last year, said the game needed to be run as effectively and efficiently as possible to thrive into the future.
“I’m conscious of the broader economic headwinds that the game faces and we’ve got to ensure that we’re leading by example,” Waugh told The Roar.
“We are focussed on being structured in the most effective way to achieve the broader objectives of the game.”
The restructuring will help RA get much-needed dollars off their books ahead of what is expected to be another difficult year. It follows the typically slow World Cup years, where the Wallabies played just two home Tests.
With no headline act like England to tour Australia like in 2022, RA is bracing for another tough year with Wales and Georgia to play the Wallabies for three Tests in July before next year’s bumper British and Irish Lions campaign.
Waugh is expected to deliver the recommendations of the review into last year’s World Cup failure, where the Wallabies missed the knockout stages for the first time, next week.
Meanwhile, the Melbourne Rebels have been given 60 days to determine who is liable for their debt.
The Super Rugby franchise went into voluntary administration in late January before it was revealed in early February that they had $20 million worth of debt.
The Melbourne-based franchise was sent a letter from PWC to inform them that they had won the ruling to give them 60 days to determine who owes the debt.