Newcastle need help to survive -Varndell

TOM Varndell has been “sad” to witness 's form at the start of the season and feels the league must urgently improve its governance to ensure the game is not wiped out in the north of England.

Despite new coach Alex Codling admitting they would be playing this season on limited resources, the Falcons made a promising start to the campaign in the Cup as they won four of their five games and finished second in Pool B.

But a 60-7 defeat to in their penultimate match of that competition indicated ominous signs for the league season, and it was at the same venue where they suffered their eighth defeat from as many games in the Premiership recently as they were beaten 47-3 in a poor display at Welford Road.

Varndell, the former Premiership top try scorer, said on the latest edition of The Rugby Paper : “I was commentating on that Leicester-Newcastle game and it was just sad to watch them. It's not a lack of effort, it's the fact they just don't have the weapons in terms of personnel and squad size to compete at all in the Premiership.

“They're probably in the game for 45-50 minutes every single week, and then that last half hour they completely disintegrate. They don't have the strength in depth that all other Premiership teams have.”

Concern: Tom Varndell

Following that defeat to Tigers, Falcons were only able to attract 3,802 supporters to their opener against , which was their lowest home attendance of the season at their 10,200 capacity ground Kingston Park, as poor defence saw them miss a golden opportunity to beat the side bottom of the French Top 14.

Varndell believes it is essential that changes are implemented for the most northerly team in the top flight to stop talent being drained from their academy – such as George Mc-Guigan who left the club he started his career at for a second time as he moved to during last season –and keep the game alive in the city.

“It is worrying because even when you go up to Newcastle and watch them their stadium's not full,” Varndell said. “It's still a horrible place to go to play as an away team, but it's not a great advertisement for the game itself when you see empty stadiums for a Premiership team.

“You need a team in the Premiership up in the north, otherwise it becomes a Midlands and southern competition and the game doesn't grow. Newcastle need a lot of help to support and to grow it up there.

“They've have always produced fantastic players like Jonny Wilkinson, Mathew Tait and Toby Flood, and they've still got a really good academy which is getting boys through, but then these players leave because obviously they can't afford to keep them.

“Something has to happen to lift it up there in some way. I don't know what it is, I'm not a marketing expert, but it has to be more appealing and at the moment I don't know how much investment or time is being put into it.”

During a Premiership career in which he scored 92 tries, most of which for the now defunct , Varndell believes it is essential that another Premiership team is not lost after that club and two others – Worcester and – went into liquidation last season.

Suggesting other ways to improve the plight of teams that have struggled at the bottom end of the table, both in terms of playing and financial performance, he is dumfounded by the light touch approach that has seemingly been taken to governance of the league and feels it must change.

“What can't happen is we can't lose another top team,” he added. “That would be absolutely catastrophic. To lose the likes of Wasps and Worcester was just horrendous, but now Jersey have gone, London Irish have gone.

“In America, they have a draft system. We could have had it where if a team fails, or goes into administration, those players are then put into a draft and then put out to the weaker teams. It works [in the US] because every year you don't know who's going to win, and that's the way it should be.

“Not only have they let three teams go bust, which I still can't believe happened, but then they've just allowed these players to go to the big clubs again like , Tigers and Bath.

So close: Adam Radwan breaks through for Newcastle against Montpellier last weekend
PICTURES: Getty Images

“Bath have picked up Ollie Lawrence and he's been outstanding, probably one of the best players in the Premiership, he should've been put up to Newcastle. Growthegame! They'renot doing it at the moment and it just blows my mind how they've allowed it to fail like it has. As for ringfencing, Ealing should've been promoted. They talk about their stadium not being big enough, who cares? Newcastle only get 3,000 people at theirs, Ealing have got the capacity for that. Now we have 10 teams, or nine really that are competing with each other, who wants to watch that? It's such a shame. There's talent, there's some great rugby there, but attendance numbers are dropping because people are not interested anymore.”

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