Totally agree Frank, its been a disaster of a tournament for me. The one sided scorelines against so called home nations and fledging nations has been an embarrassment, not to mention the off field antics played out in the papers. It shows how far we are behind the Southern Hemisphere sides and how the international game must change.
There is not enough talent to host a world cup for 14 nations. Realistically there are only four nations that have a realistic shot at the final this year (Aus, NZ, Eng & Ton). And I really don't understand though why we split down to England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland.
We need to make it more competitive and more inivative (strangely by embracing the structure of past World Cups). This would be my view of how internationals should be structured (if I was RL's glorious world leader)...
For a start, I'd break internationals down to three tiers;
Tier One would be the elite nations (established with players developed already)
Tier Two would be emerging nations (countries who are still developing their own players).
Tier Three would be home nations to create a breeding ground for players not established/selected or in form to make the GB side. It would also remove the headache of having to choose a nation to represent (you could proudly represent eligable home nations in the knowledge good form would allow you to play at the highest level)
Tier One Elite NationsAustrailia
New Zealand
Great Britain
Tier Two AustralasiaTonga
PNG
Samoa
Fiji
Tier Two Europe/Middle EastFrance
Italy
Russia
Lebanon
Tier Two AmericasUSA
Canada
Jamaica
Tier Three Home NationsScotland
Wales
Ireland
England Knights
Tier One would play for two trophies - Four Nations & World Cup
Four Nations - Alternate years in Northern & Southern Hemisphere (except in World Cup Year)
- Would include three elite nations plus one other nation (to be determined by qualifying tournaments (See Tier Two comps)
World Cup - Every 4 years
- Would include three elite nations plus qualifiers from Tier Two Europe/Middle East, Australasia and Americas (six team)
- World Cup would take form as a league throughout the year (each team plays each other once randomised home/away)
- Top 4 qualify for Finals competition
Tier Two competitions would take form as a league (home & away fixtures) over a two year period
- Winners of Australasian Group would take part in Four Nations when held in Southern Hemisphere
- Winners of Europe/Middle East and Americas play off, with winners taking part in Four Nations (Northern Hemisphere)
- Home Nations Tier Three would purely be an international breeding ground for those who are not ready for GB side (gives them a chance to prove themselves on an international setting). Competitive league running through two year cycles.
The Annual Calendar could therefore be something like this:
2018February - Australasian Group starts two year league cycle
October/November - Four Nations Northern Hemisphere (Aus, NZ, GB & highest ranked Europe/Middle East/Americas nation from 2017 World Cup)
October/November - Home Nations Group starts two year league cycle
2019February - Europe/Middle East & Americas Groups - Start two year league cycle begins
July - Australasian Group two year league cycle concludes... winners qualify for Four Nations
October/November Four Nations Southern Hemisphere (Aus, NZ, GB & Australasian Group qualifier)
October/November - Home Nations Group concludes
2020May - Europe/Middle East & Americas Groups two year league cycle concludes... winners qualify for Four Nations Playoff
August - Europe/Middle East Winner vs Americas Four Nations Playoff (two leg) - winners qualify for Four Nations
October/November Four Nations Northern Hemisphere (Aus, NZ, GB & Europe/Middle East/Americas qualifier)
October/November - Home Nations Group starts two year league cycle
2021February - World Cup league cycle begins (Aus, NZ, GB, Europe/Middle East Group Qualifier 2020, Americas Group Qualifier 2020 & Australasian Group Qualifier 2019)
August - World Cup league concludes. Top four qualify for World Cup Finals
October - Home Nations Group concludes
November - World Cup Finals (Semi Finals and Finals) held in Northern Hemisphere
2022February - European/Middle East & Americas Group starts two year league cycle
October/November - Four Nations Southern Hemisphere (Aus, NZ, GB & highest ranked Australasian nation from World Cup 2021)
October/November - Home Nations Group starts two year league cycle
2023February - Australasian Group starts two year league cycle
May - Europe/Middle East & Americas Groups two year league cycle concludes... winners qualify for Four Nations Playoff
August - Europe/Middle East Winner vs Americas Four Nations Playoff (two leg) - winners qualify for Four Nations
October/November Four Nations Northern Hemisphere (Aus, NZ, GB & Europe/Middle East/Americas qualifier)
October/November - Home Nations Group concludes
2024July - Australasian Group two year league cycle concludes... winners qualify for Four Nations
October/November Four Nations Southern Hemisphere (Aus, NZ, GB & Australasian qualifier)
October/November - Home Nations Group starts two year league cycle
2025February - World Cup league cycle begins (Aus, NZ, GB, Europe/Middle East Group Qualifiers 2023, Americas Group Qualifier 2023 & Australasian Group Qualifier 2024)
August - World Cup league concludes. Top four qualify for World Cup Finals
October - Home Nations Group concludes
November - World Cup Finals (Semi Finals and Finals) held in Southern Hemisphere
And so it continues... New nations can be integrated into existing groups easily and if necessary can grow to further groups.
We will not grow our international game if we continue to allow mismatched fixtures, squads solely made up of average/part time Australians and competition to play at the highest level.
Note to self... its at times like these where you really should have a word with yourself and get out a bit more!!!