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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Robert Kitson

Worcester wind back to life with second-tier return and vow to clear debts

Worcester CEO Stephen Vaughan, owner Christopher Holland, Tier 2 chairman Simon Gillham and RFU director of performance Conor O’Shea at Sixways
Worcester CEO Stephen Vaughan (from left), owner Christopher Holland, Tier 2 chairman Simon Gillham and RFU director of performance Conor O’Shea at Sixways. Photograph: Ben Birchall/PA

Worcester Warriors insist they will be both sustainable and competitive when they return to English rugby’s second tier next season almost three years after going bust. The club’s new owners have had to provide stringent financial guarantees and commit to repaying rugby creditors left high and dry when Worcester went into administration with debts of more than £2 5m in September 2022.

In the past clubs such as Richmond and London Welsh have been forced to start again at the foot of the English pyramid but a condition of Worcester’s return to the new-look Tier 2 league is that outstanding debts to, among others, HMRC and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport will be settled by the end of the year. In addition, the new owners have already made substantial payments to the administrators.

Worcester are now set to take their place in a 14-team league that will include the 12 existing Championship clubs and the top side in National One, which Richmond currently lead by 10 points with three games remaining. The Warriors will be based at their old ground at Sixways, latterly used for football, and the club’s owner, Christopher Holland, says Worcester, whose last game was against Newcastle in September 2022, have long-term aspirations to return to the Gallagher Premiership.

That scenario is slightly complicated by the fact that Holland also owns Wasps, who also went out of business in the 2022-23 season. If Wasps were also to return to the English leagues, he would be allowed to own only one club and have a stake no higher then 25% in another. There is no imminent prospect, however, of either Wasps or London Irish – the third top-tier English club to fold in recent years – returning to the Premiership, with Holland indicating the United Rugby Championship could be a likelier option.

For the time being, Holland is more preoccupied with rebooting rugby in the West Midlands, a rich breeding ground for English talent that has nurtured the current England internationals Fin Smith, Ollie Lawrence and Ted Hill. “Our budget is there or thereabouts with regards to the top five clubs [in the Championship],” said Holland. “We are sustainable and we have planned for the resilience of this for some time. We would expect to be in the top three or four, hopefully … once you’ve seen the teamsheet for the first time I think that’ll probably answer most questions. There is a big energy to return to [the top tier] when we can afford to do so.”

Worcester, however, have had to go through “a very detailed and challenging process” before being admitted to Tier 2. “It was three months of going to the dentist, effectively,” said Holland. “All through that our sustainability and business plans were tested and retested. One thing we’re not going to do is overspend. We’ll spend within the budget. We’re fortunate that the business plans we have here have been supported by the local authority and the planning authority with regards to enabling development on the car park at Sixways. We’re going to take things slowly within the budget and then hopefully we will be able to increase our spend on the squad.”

With the financial state of English club rugby still “very fragile” to quote one insider, the return of Worcester is seen as potentially helpful in terms of boosting the profile and longer-term marketability of the league. “The vision for this league is really ambitious and so much work and collaboration has taken place over nearly two years to establish a path towards a vibrant and self-sustaining competition,” said Simon Gillham, the Tier 2 board chair. “Today marks a significant step forward with Worcester Warriors returning to professional rugby under new ownership in a heartland for our sport. We’re really pleased [to] see their return to professional rugby as I’m sure are their fans.”

Former Scotland captain and British & Irish Lions hooker Frank Laidlaw has died at the age of 84, Scottish Rugby has announced.
Hawick-born Laidlaw won 32 caps for Scotland between 1965 and 1971 and toured with the Lions to Australia, New Zealand and Canada in 1966 and then New Zealand in 1971.
"Scottish Rugby is flying the flag at Scottish Gas Murrayfield Stadium at half-mast to honour Frank Laidlaw and all he did for the game," read a statement from Scottish Rugby, who posted an obituary for the former Melrose forward.
"We send our sincere condolences to all his family and many friends.
"On Friday 11 April at 2.45pm, all are welcome to pay their respects as Frank Laidlaw's funeral cortege passes The Greenyards in Melrose en route to a private service at Borders Crematorium."

Gillham, however, conceded that readmitting Worcester would not be popular with clubs who were not allowed similar leeway in past years. “Worcester Warriors have been a fascinating case. We knew from the outset that whichever way we decided it would be a challenging and contested decision. We knew what we were letting ourselves in for.

“We put them through a very rigorous process which, sometimes, might have felt unfair. It was more than any other club which is in Tier 2. We demanded conditions and did not allow them any wriggle room. As a result they have provided us with a substantial financial guarantee. I think that is a first in English rugby, in terms of financial discipline and assurance.”

The longer-term hope, furthermore, is that fresh life can be breathed into the Championship and that a more collaborative relationship can be struck with the Premiership at a delicate time in the history of the professional game. “There is quite a lot of investor fatigue around at the moment, both in the Premiership and in Tier 2,” said Gillham. “We have to address that very, very quickly. I can’t say at this stage what the solution is, but what we have to do is get into the same room and sit around the table together. This is my personal opinion but I think that if we don’t have a system of aspiration and jeopardy then we will implode.”

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