Toronto Wolfpack: Visa issues may prevent Canadian club finishing 2020 Super League season
- Published
Toronto Wolfpack could be forced to pull out of this season's Super League campaign when it resumes in August, because visa issues could rob them of up to seven players, including multi-million pound signing Sonny Bill Williams.
大象传媒 Sport understands Wolfpack representatives took part in a meeting of clubs earlier this week, and were unable to guarantee they would be able to complete fixtures in 2020.
The club say visas for seven overseas players, from Australia and New Zealand, only allow them to stay in England for a maximum of six months.
That time limit has been exceeded because they have been forced to remain here during lockdown and they will now have to return home.
Toronto owner David Argyle "We have laid this out to Super League and the Rugby Football League and it's an issue that we can't keep kicking down the road.
"It's been suggested to us that we could loan young players from other clubs, but we're not here to make up the numbers and we never have been.
"I'm not blaming anybody. I can understand the bureaucratic position and we are only a very small issue for an organisation like the Home Office. But we've come to a crunch point now where it needs to be resolved."
A Super League spokesman said competition organisers were "concerned by the news", and described the timing, when a revised fixture list is being finalised, as "unhelpful".
"We are looking into the details and have offered the club, and the RFL, our full support to resolve these issues ahead of the season restarting on 2 August," the spokesman said.
The RFL added: "We have been working closely with the relevant authorities to help Toronto Wolfpack with the issues caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, specifically their inability to play home fixtures in Canada, and the resulting need for their overseas players to stay in England for several more months.
"We are grateful to the government for recognising these issues in recent days - but appreciate the situation remains challenging for the club."
Toronto's playing roster was stretched even before the season was suspended becaue of the coronavirus pandemic - and they have had visa issues in the past, with Australian prop Darcy Lussick unable to re-enter the country last year.
But it is also understood that the club is facing financial stresses as well with rumours persisting of players being regularly paid late.
Many of Toronto's income streams have dried up in 2020 with the club unable to play any home matches in Canada since being promoted to Super League for the first time in their five-year history.
They do not take a share of central TV funding and have been unable to place players on furlough.
The RFL is still to decide whether relegation from Super League will be scrapped this year.
If it is not, then the Wolfpack would be heavy favourites for the drop if they were to lose the core of their squad, as they are already bottom of the league after losing their opening six matches before the season suspension.
Even if the threat of relegation was lifted, officials at the clubs' meeting admitted they still might fail to make the starting gate on resumption in less than three weeks time.
That would leave the RFL and the other 11 clubs with a tough decision - whether to suspend Toronto's place in Super League until the 2021 campaign because of exceptional circumstances, or relegate them to the Championship or maybe back to League One as punishment for failing to fulfil fixtures.