Quote EastStandFaithful="EastStandFaithful"I don't understand your comment - what do you mean?'"
It is unworkable because when a team is relegated they have to effectively cease being a professional team. All playing contracts are ripped up and the players become free agents. The team is effectively destroyed.
It isn't just about sporting success and failure it is about money and finance. When the sport was semi-pro relegation was just a sporting failure and the financial aspect wasn't a big factor. Players who worked down the pit carried on working down the pit. They may have earned a bit less in win bonuses in a lower division but then they were not full time professionals whose sole income was from sport.
I forget what the salary cap is in NL1 but I think it is £400K. The SL salary cap which is split between your top 25 players gives an average wage of £64K per player. In NL1 it is £16K.
Now the RFL could say you can carry on with your £1.6m salary cap if you get relegated but what is the point of that? All that would mean is you would win every game the season after and get promoted straight back into SL. More than likely swapping places with the the team who took your place. A complete pointless exercise.
Chairman are saying there is not enough money for a 14 team super league. To make P&R work the gap between the standards in the divisions needs to be much smaller than it is which implies spreading the cash even further.
You want P&R - then start a campaign for a return to semi-professional status for al clubs.