Big stars, small crowds

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TOKYO: Rich clubs owned by massive corporations have attracted a parade of star players to Japan but the unusual set-up hasn’t been a hit with fans, prompting a re-think as the World Cup looms. Sparse crowds for Japan’s Top League, where giants of the game play alongside amateurs for the pride of major companies, have triggered m o v e s towards a fully pro
fessional league as Japan gears up to host Asia’s first World Cup. Dan Carter, Sonny Bill Williams, George Gregan are just some of the luminaries who have plied their trade in Japan, picking up generous pay cheques.

A file photo shows Dan Carter of New Zealand scoring a penalty kick during Japan’s rugby Top League tournament final match between the Kobelco Steelers and Suntory Sungoliath at Prince Chichibu Memorial Ground in Tokyo on December 15, 2018. Photo: AFP

The trend shows no sign of stopping, with All Black captain Kieran Read, fellow New Zealander Brodie Retallick and Australian scrum-half Will Genia among a number of players heading to Japan after the World Cup. Wallaby fly-half Christian Lealiifano abandoned the captaincy of the ACT Brumbies after receiving an offer he said was “too hard to turn down” from Ichikawa-based NTT Communications. The Japanese league attracts such top talent — often players approaching the twilight of their careers —because the seasons are short and less physically demanding. The higher salaries help too.

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All Black legend Carter was said to be earning around $1.3m at the Kobelco Steelers, not counting the lucrative endorsement deals that saw the World Cup-winning fly-half become a Japanese media star. But the high-profile players have failed to bring fans through the turnstiles, with attendances in freefall and embarrassingly low gates at some matches. Even the Top League final, which saw the Kobelco Steelers beat the Kubota Spears 43-7 on August 10, attracted a meagre crowd of 7,890. Throughout the season crowds averaged around 2,500, hitting a low of 528 for a match between Toyota Loom and NECG reen Rockets.

Crowds are small because there is no loyalty for the corporate-based teams, said Akimoto Hinato, an expert in rugby in Japan. The Top League has a unique structure, with Japan Inc powerhouses like Toyota, Toshiba, Mitsubishi and Honda prepared to splash serious cash to run a side for company prestige. The system started after the war when companies such as Kobe Steel founded rugby clubs and encouraged employees to play to improve morale and fitness.

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As late as the early 2000s, the league was known as the Japan Company Rugby Football Championship, only changing to the Top League in 2003 in a bid to become more professional. But even now, many teams are a mix of former internationals on hefty salaries and company employees, who have been known to miss training for meetings. This hybrid pro-am system was exposed during a recent Japanese national team tour to England when it emerged the amateur players were getting a daily allowance of just 2,000 yen.

Unsurprisingly, it’s also had an impact on quality. Fiji’s Nemani Nadolo has been quoted as saying that “anyone with two legs could play there” and Japan’s test captain Michael Leitch has raised doubts about the ability of the competition to breed Japan internationals of the future. – AFP

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