Wales coach Steve Tandy left trapped in middle of toxic Ospreys and Cardiff saga
Briefly

Wales coach Steve Tandy left trapped in middle of toxic Ospreys and Cardiff saga
"The prevailing mood in Welsh rugby has frequently been dark but rarely this bible black. Once upon a time a Six Nations squad announcement would have topped the agenda across the country; on Tuesday it felt like a semicolon in a much bigger narrative. Even Wales have never selected seven players whose club is in imminent danger of being axed by their own union."
"The existing owners of Ospreys, Wales's most successful region of the past two decades, have just been controversially nominated as the preferred bidders for Cardiff, potentially clearing the way to reduce the number of Welsh professional sides from four to three. The internecine politics have become so increasingly toxic that Steve Tandy, the national head coach, had to plead for rugby-related questions at his lunchtime squad announcement."
"Barely had Tandy, a distinguished ex-Ospreys player and coach himself, completed his media duties in a soggy Vale of Glamorgan than a statement was being issued by the current Ospreys squad on social media, accusing their owners and the Welsh Rugby Union of leaving them in the dark. We struggle to believe the most successful Welsh team to exist with the biggest history is on the brink of non-existence, read the statement, making clear the players had yet to receive any notification of any kind."
Welsh rugby is facing a severe crisis as uncertainty surrounds the future of the Ospreys and the structure of professional regional sides. The Ospreys' owners have been nominated as preferred bidders for Cardiff, potentially enabling a reduction from four Welsh professional teams to three. Seven Wales squad members represent clubs facing imminent axing. Political infighting has become toxic, prompting coach Steve Tandy to plead for rugby-focused questions. The Ospreys squad publicly accused owners and the Welsh Rugby Union of leaving players uninformed and pledged to continue playing for fans. Local MPs and councils are considering legal and political responses while calls grow for extraordinary union meetings and parliamentary scrutiny.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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