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PRO14 chief executive excited by addition of South African sides

Torsten van Jaarsveld, Jonny Gray, Jonathan Davies, Lubabalo Mtyanda and Garry Ringrose at the PRO14 launch in South Africa
Image: Cheetahs and Southern Kings are part of expanded competition

Expanding the PRO14 to take in two South African sides is a risk worth taking, according to the tournament's chief executive.

Martin Anayi said he had learned the lessons of Super Rugby - the southern hemisphere competition which has downsized after acknowledging problems with its expanded format - and was confident the upsized PRO14 would not suffer the same issues.

The two South African causalities of Super Rugby's rationalisation - the Bloemfontein-based Cheetahs and Port Elizabeth's Southern Kings - are now joining Irish, Welsh, Scottish and Italian sides in a new-look PRO14.

As well as the additional teams, the competition will now be divided into a conference format, rather than a more familiar single league structure.

At an official launch event to mark the new season, Anayi said the time zone issue that had presented problems for Super Rugby would not be a factor for the PRO14.

"I watched Super Rugby from the start, that is the thing that got me into rugby personally, so it's great tournament," he told an audience at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin.

The pro12 has become the PRO14 with the inclusion of the Cheetahs and the Kings
Image: The PRO12 has become the PRO14 with the inclusion of the Cheetahs and the Kings

"Some of the areas that we looked at in our due diligence was to say 'well, what hasn't maybe worked so well and why are they going from 18 back to 15 (teams)'.

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"One of those is travel actually and time zones. Broadcasters and fans cannot get up to watch the games because they are across 18 time zones, that's one thing we have been very aware of when we have tried to expand, looked to expansion.

"South Africa is one or two hours from a time zone point of view - it's an overnight flight - so we have looked at all of those things.

"In my position, you have to look at risk first actually and then you have to build a case why risk is something you should take on.

 Martin Anayi, Managing Director, PRO12 Rugby
Image: Martin Anayi says competition improved with addition of South African teams

"And we absolutely looked at that and said across the board an expansion has to work from a player welfare point of view, it has to work from a conference or a format point of view, it has to work that the teams coming in are going to be more competitive than the teams we have got, and has to work commercially - and South Africa absolutely does that for us."

Coaches and leading players of all the teams attended the event in Dublin, and Rory Duncan, director of rugby at the Toyota Cheetahs, said there is widespread excitement about the new-look Pro14.

Rory Duncan, director of rugby at the Toyota Cheetahs, said his players were excited by the challenge.

"It is something that the South African support base has been asking for for years," he said. "Something the players have been asking for quite some time as well.

CJ Stander tries to break through the Racing 92 defence
Image: Ireland and Munster number eight CJ Stander was born in South Africa

"Everyone wants to know how we compare to the teams up north - now they have got an opportunity.

"It's not just a case of playing games away, we have obviously got half our games at home and we are really looking forward to seeing the teams come and play in Bloemfontein at altitude in the summer."

Lions and Ireland star CJ Stander, Munster's South African-born number eight, said the arrival of the southern hemisphere sides would bring a "different vibe" to the tournament.

"Everyone's looking forward to it, it's going to bring something different to the game and we are going to learn more from them," he said.

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