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Empty seats leave Champions Cup licking its wounds and looking at rejig

European club rugby faces crunch time with CVC sniffing around Pro14 and the only certainty being that change is afootNext month in Newcastle they are promising to host the best weekend that club rugby union has ever known. A convivial city, an iconic stadium, two ding-dong finals and a vibrant late-night social scene: anyone heading to Tyneside is in for a treat. Assuming the weather plays along, it will make Twickenham feel like Madame Tussauds.It might come as a surprise to many, therefore, that the future of Europe’s elite club competition is not yet entirely guaranteed beyond 2022. The entire road map of domestic and international rugby is in the process of being reassessed and no one currently knows where...

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Ospreys prepare for bloody fight against merger with Scarlets | Paul Rees

The club has railed against the WRU’s ‘Project Reset’ and the courts could become involved in a fight for their identityWhen Mike James, for a few minutes longer the chairman of the Ospreys, sat down at lunchtime on Tuesday to talk to his Welsh Rugby Union counterpart, Gareth Davies, his mind could have drifted back 20 years, to when the two were allies against the governing body in one of the many bitter battles waged in the country in the professional era.James was then bankrolling Swansea while Davies was the chief executive of Cardiff, two clubs who that season rebelled against the WRU by arranging friendly matches against England’s leading clubs rather than take part in competitions organised by their...

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European club rugby 2017-18 season review: our writers’ highs and lows

From Johnny Sexton’s heroic contribution to Leinster’s double win to a Billy Twelvetrees try that was thrillingly assisted by Henry Trinder it has been a club season to rememberJohnny Sexton. Pivotal for grand-slam winning Ireland and his double-winning province. Just the World Cup to go now. Robert Kitson Related: Saracens champions again as Chris Wyles leads conquest of Exeter Related: Leinster complete double to join the elite with victory over Scarlets Related: Exeter come up short on the day but the future is theirs to shape | Michael Aylwin Continue reading...

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Finals between leading four teams bring curtain down on bruising season | The Breakdown

The irresistible force meets the immovable object when Exeter play Saracens while Leinster are favourites against ScarletsThe season, domestically at least, ends this weekend. As it came in, so it goes out with players queuing for surgery. Artificial pitches have come under scrutiny after Jack Willis, John Barclay and Steffon Armitage suffered leg injuries in the last month that will keep them out of action for between six months and a year but other factors, such as fatigue, come into play.It is not so much the number of matches players take part in but the cumulative effect of training. Mako Vunipola, who was with the Lions in New Zealand, will make his 32nd appearance of the campaign on Saturday when...

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Saracens turn focus on recapturing Premiership title from Exeter | Robert Kitson

This year there will be no distractions as the European champions attempt to regain the domestic crown from last season’s surprise packageThis time last year Wasps and Munster had just finished ahead of the rest of the Premiership and Pro 12 respectively and had every reason to believe they could translate that success into silverware. Three weeks later they watched Exeter and Scarlets lift the two trophies instead, a harsh reminder of the sizeable difference between the marathon regular season and the play‑off sprint.That crucially important lesson will not be lost on this year’s table toppers – Exeter, Glasgow and Leinster – all of whom appreciate that nine months of relentless toil can quite easily be undermined in the sunshine of May....

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