The Prime Minister is planned for another season without promotion and relegation after the leaders of the Championship League, Ealing Trailfinders, did not meet the minimum standards of standards required for altitude.
The West London Club has exceeded the second 13 -point division won the league in the past two of the last three seasons, but has not satisfied the requirements concerning the capacity of the capacity and the security of the soil and compliance with Rugby Football Union (RFU).
Coventry, third, did not meet the criteria, the only championship eligible for the promotion of Doncaster Knights. Yorkshire’s outfit is 29 points behind Trailfinders in eighth.
Were a club to garnish the table and satisfy the regulations of the RFU, they would face the side of the Premièrehip placed below in a promotion / relegation stars. It has been four years now that the Saracens, which have been relegated to the PremièreHip after the scandal of the salary ceiling, were the last team to move between the two best levels of rugby.
“We are in a new era for the male professional game and there are conversations in progress and very live on the way in which we can build an investable framework which guarantees that it is sustainable,” said Mike Mctighe, Chairman of the Male Professional Rugby Council.
“While at the moment, only one championship club meets the requirements that would allow them to come to the League, we work hard to make sure that this is not always the case and that we apply the right flexibility and good support where this is appropriate.
“We know how these clubs with aspirations to join the Prime Minister work both to generate the investment required to be sustainable in this league and to ensure that they have the infrastructure required to support themselves.”
There is a renewed control over the finance of the English club rugby union after a report News suggested that the nine other Prime Minister’s clubs and investors from the CVC Capital Partners League are preparing to offer a loan to Newcastle Falcons to maintain the club.
The Premiere -Rugby Financial Supervisory Committee, set up after the disappearance of Worcester, Wasps and London Irish, requires insurance from the 10 clubs in the League at the end of April that they can financially fill in the 2025/26 campaign, with decisions and decisions that then finalized by the end of the season.
The owner of Newcastle, Semore Kurdi, announced last year that he was looking for a sale of the club, but that the investment had not yet been to come.
The club, currently at the bottom of the Première, has a frozen recruitment for next season in the middle of uncertainty, but Newcastle boss Steve Diamond insisted that the club was in “Good Fettle”.
“This is a public file that we are looking for investments and I am almost sure that if this investment does not come, then this (loan) is a rescue position to maintain our status in the league,” said Diamond, who was director of rugby at Worcester at the time of their suspension of the Premiership.
“When I was in Worcester, the situation was different from now because it was never there that we needed investment and everyone was kept in the dark, including the first rugby and RFU. The only Semore conversation [Kurdi, current owner] And I had potential investors arriving.
“I am confident that Newcastle will play next season and I do not know what promotion and relegation is and if other teams do not meet the criteria or do not play, we will be active to keep our status. This year has been remarkably well compared to the place where we were, even if we still lose 2 million pounds sterling. We are in good shape. “