Derek Beaumont reveals the two Super League structures rejected before 14 teams agreed

DEREK BEAUMONT has revealed that a ten- and twelve-team Super League were both rejected in favour of a 14-team competition at Monday’s crunch meeting.

Twelve clubs will be chosen to take part in Super League via the grading system and another two will be chosen by an independent panel chaired by Lord Jonathan Caine.

Leigh Leopards owner Beaumont, who has been an outspoken advocate of change and was key to the appointment of Nigel Wood as RFL chairman, has revealed how that decision was taken.

“The shareholders meeting was held to decide on number one: should Super League be reduced to ten teams?” Beaumont said.

“If number one fails then number two gets looked at. Number two: should Super League remain at twelve teams?

“If that doesn’t get voted in favour of. Should Super League increase to 14? If that gets supported then should it be for 2026 or 2027?

“We all know that the first two weren’t supported but the final two were. For what it’s worth, we support the outcome. I am massively in favour of the outcome.

“If you reduce the size of Super League to ten teams, the waterfall of RL Commercial changes. The money that those two teams were getting doesn’t go to the other ten teams, it goes to the Championship waterfall and some stays and some goes.

“Any cuts to the centre is not Super League Europe’s money, it’s all worked on a format.

“Ten teams doesn’t deal with the overriding issue of getting rid of loop fixtures. If you play each other three times, it’s still an unfair competition.

“If you play Wigan twice away and once at home, it’s harder than playing Wigan twice at home and once away. It’s not a fair competition.

“Let’s get as close to home and away as we can and that by the halfway mark we have all played each other.

“The ten-team Super League is getting rid of two clubs. It’s causing disappointment to however many fans, it made no sense.

“Twelve is where we are at, we’re not happy with it. We need change because the loop fixtures are still there.

“So 14 teams was the obvious answer. It gets rid of the loops, you get home and away and it gives more chances for players to play in Super League and more opportunities for more Sky subscriptions.

“What problems does a 14-team Super League present? We’ve already said we can’t afford to split the pie by 14. We have to ensure we don’t end up with blowout fixtures.

“The most significant part of this is the sustainability of the two clubs coming up.”