An information blackout imposed by the Rugby Football League (RFL) has fuelled an inferno of opposition to the Super League’s expansion, transforming what might have been a manageable debate into a raging crisis. The governing body’s secrecy around key financial details and procedural documents has acted as an accelerant, turning sparks of doubt into a wildfire of mistrust.
The blackout began, according to clubs, with the failure to provide any written business plan for the 14-team proposal. This initial act of withholding crucial information created a combustible atmosphere of uncertainty and suspicion.
This was then followed by a refusal to shed light on the decision-making process itself. The RFL’s failure to distribute the minutes of the July vote has been a key grievance. This has created a black hole at the centre of the process, leaving clubs to suspect the worst about what was discussed and agreed upon.
The RFL has continued this blackout by reportedly ignoring multiple requests from several clubs for the financial modelling that underpins the expansion. This ongoing secrecy has been interpreted not as an oversight, but as a deliberate attempt to prevent scrutiny of a flawed plan.
In the darkness of this information blackout, the clubs’ fears have been allowed to grow unchecked. Without any official data to counter their anxieties, the narratives of financial ruin, a hostile broadcaster, and a rushed process have caught fire and spread rapidly. The RFL is now learning a harsh lesson: in the absence of information, people will assume the worst, and secrecy is the oxygen that a crisis needs to become an inferno.