All Blacks' new sponsorship deal sparks outrage
NEWS: New Zealand Rugby confirmed a deal Wednesday for a petrochemical giant to sponsor the All Blacks.
However, the agreement between petrochemical giant Ineos and NZ rugby has been slammed by environmental watchdog Greenpeace.
The petrochemical giant Ineos has signed a six-year deal which will put its logo on the shorts of the 15- and seven-a-side men’s and women’s All Blacks teams as well as the Maori All Blacks and the New Zealand under-20 side.
The tie-up, reported in local media to be worth NZ$8.0 million ($5.6 million), puts the All Blacks into the high-performing Ineos sports stable along with the Mercedes F1 team, Grenadiers cycling team and Team UK sailing, as well as the Nice and Lausanne-Sport football clubs.
The tie-up has sparked major controversy with 13 000 Kiwis signing a Greenpeace petition telling NZR to ditch the association due to Ineos being among the world’s biggest polluters.
NZR chief executive Mark Robinson claimed player buy-in for the sponsorship, deferring repeatedly when questioned about the ethics of a deal during a government-declared climate emergency.
๐๐ฝ Welcome aboard to @INEOS – the official performance partner of our Teams in Black.
MORE ๐๐ฝ https://t.co/LY7rI4gyyk
โ All Blacks (@AllBlacks) July 27, 2021
“We’re really comfortable with the due diligence we’ve done over the last several months,” he said.
“We’re very heartened about the work INEOS is doing around investment and sustainability.”
Robinson said he took community sentiment “very seriously” but “ultimately you have to weigh those considerations up with more broadly what we believe is in the right interest of the game”.
All Blacks Captain Sam Whitelock said he welcomed being involved in the Ineos high-performance sport group.
“The All Blacks are looking forward to being part of this performance partnership and learning from some of their incredible sporting partnerships as well,” he said
Rugby Champs shake-up
The lucrative sponsorship comes as NZR attempts to answer several challenges for the sport – beginning with where and when the All Blacks Tests will be played this year.
Tough new border rules have required a Rugby Championship shake-up, with no certainty beyond the Bledisloe opener against the Wallabies at Auckland’s Eden Park on August 7.
NZR would like to play a second match in Wellington a week later but have been stymied by craft beer festival Beervana’s existing booking at Sky Stadium.
The All Blacks then hope to head to Perth for the Bledisloe concluder on August 21, aiming to announce full series details within a week.
Home Tests against Argentina will now be shifted to Australia in a financial hit for NZR.
Two Tests against South Africa also hang in the balance depending on the government’s border settings.
The Springboks tour is dependent on New Zealand reopening its borders by late September, as Robinson isn’t comfortable with the South African party taking places in NZ’s quarantine hotel system, known as MIQ.
“I can’t see that scenario happening. We wouldn’t have people coming through MIQ and expecting them to play games,” he said.
Beyond the INEOS sponsorship, NZR still has no clarity on its proposed partial sell-off to US private equity firm Silver Lake, worth $NZ465million ($A439 million).
The players association has rebelled over the deal, backing a counter-proposal from local firm Forsyth Barr, and will meet NZR next week to advance talks.
Former captain Ritchie McCaw says the Silver Lake deal “scares” him, an investment which would mean for the first time in the All Blacks’ storied history, they are not wholly owned by Kiwis.