Ospreys and Scarlets set to merge in radical overhaul

Welsh rugby is set for its most radical overhaul since 2003 with the country’s two most successful professional sides – Ospreys and Scarlets – poised to merge for as soon as the start of next season.

Ospreys and Scarlets set to merge in radical overhaul

Welsh rugby is set for its most radical overhaul since 2003 with the country’s two most successful professional sides – Ospreys and Scarlets – poised to merge for as soon as the start of next season.

While Warren Gatland’s national side are just two victories away from a first Six Nations Grand Slam since 2012 having won their last 12 games, off the field political chaos has ensued.

Crunch talks over ‘Project Reset’ – the system by which Welsh rugby will be run moving forwards – have been held between the Welsh Rugby Union and its four professional sides.

WRU chief executive Martyn Phillips has long been keen to establish a new outfit in north Wales which has led to the current outfits – Dragons, Cardiff Blues, Ospreys and Scarlets – fearing for their future.

It is understood Ospreys and Scarlets will combine to form a new team moving forwards.

Discussions over what the new combined region will be called and where they will play are ongoing, but barring any last minute hitches an announcement is imminent.

Discussions between the WRU and its four regions over the last fortnight saw every option considered, but the Scarlets have stepped in to ensure the Ospreys have some sort of future.

The new franchise will have a higher budget than both the Ospreys and Scarlets respectively and the hope is the combined region will stand a chance of competing to win the Heineken Champions Cup.

Current contracts for players on both sides will be honoured. Incoming Scarlets head coach Brad Mooar and Ospreys boss Allen Clarke will both have future coaching roles at the new side.

It is also understood that initially the plans are to play Guinness PRO14 fixtures out of Parc y Scarlets in Llanelli with European games at Swansea’s Liberty Stadium.

The side will train at Llandarcy, the home of the Ospreys as things stand.

Benefactors of both the Ospreys and Scarlets will pump money into this new entity and are confident it can become self-sustainable and successful over the next few seasons.

The Ospreys and Scarlets boast some of Gatland’s biggest Six Nations stars including captain Alun Wyn Jones, Ken Owens, Jonathan Davies, Justin Tipuric, Rob Evans, Samson Lee and Gareth Davies.

Those players are set to join together with recruitment plans for next season well underway.

An imminent amalgamation of the Ospreys and Scarlets – who have five Celtic League titles between them – means a new professional region in north Wales based in Colwyn Bay is imminent.

The Dragons and Blues will continue in their current guises.

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