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| Monday, 2 December, 2002, 13:08 GMT Tough decisions for new rugby chief ![]() Moffett has warned of 'painful' changes to Welsh rugby The new head of the Welsh Rugby Union has said he will waste little time in implementing initiatives aimed at improving the state of the game. David Moffett, the former head of Sport England and New Zealand Rugby Football Union, has become the first group chief executive of the WRU, taking home �200,000 a year. Just hours into the job, Mr Moffett announced he planned to scrap the existing pitch system at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium following widespread criticism after the recent internationals. The present system uses individual pallets which can be removed for events like concerts and speedway competitions. He told BBC Radio Wales the system did not work.
"We're going to have to lay a normal pitch albeit that is going to have to be replaced two or three times a year. "But I think once we can get to that, we can make sure the pitch is good all the time." For the time being, the WRU said the existing pallet-based system would continue. A new pitch, costing about �180,000, would be laid on top of the pallets for cricket exhibition matches in January, the Six Nations championships and the Wales-Azerbaijan European football qualifier. Pain Fifty-five year old David Moffett was born in Doncaster but emigrated to Australia as a child. Now he has pledged to reverse the ailing fortunes of Wales national side and put it at the forefront of world rugby. He said his priorities are to increase funding and boost the numbers of people playing the game. But he warned changes to the structure of rugby in Wales would not come smoothly.
"The WRU is going to go through a lot of change as well because one of my first tasks is to restructure the WRU. "There's going to be a few redundancies, there's going to be an interest in getting our costs under control so we can look at the whole of Welsh rugby. "We have the requirements of the Premier League but we also have the issue of the grassroots of rugby in Wales. "If you don't fix the grassroots, then we haven't got a future in the game." Pay Mr Moffett said no player in the lower divisions of the league should be paid, and said there were probably no more than 150 players in Wales who should get wages for playing the game. "We're currently discussing whether players should be contracted to the union, the clubs or a combination of both," he revealed. The WRU will also look at the thorny issue of whether to reorganise sides into regional teams rather than clubs. He said the practice had paid dividends in New Zealand for the national side, where he had been in charge of overseeing the switch. "What we want to do is put in place a system that is going to allow [the national team] to play to high standards week in, week out," he said. |
See also: 24 Nov 02 | International 01 Nov 02 | International Top International stories now: Links to more International stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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