• Wales name five uncapped players for Barbarians

    • Published
      4 hours ago
  • Red Roses stars in line for £100K to retain World Cup

    • Published
      2 days ago

While the numbers don’t compare to their Women’s Super League counterparts £45m deal with Barclays, it does represent a significant step forward as PWR continues to dominate the global club landscape for women.

The league has long been attracting the world’s top talent, further cemented with the announcement of France centre Gabriel Vernier’s move to Gloucester-Hartpury earlier this month.

Jaecoo has already invested into rugby union across the United Kingdom with their sponsorship of European Professional Club Rugby and the podcast market.

The link-up with PWR was part-motivated to move into women’s sport.

“They were very clear about that, that they felt that they had really strong investments across men’s rugby, but they wanted to invest in women’s rugby and see the opportunity there,” reported Shore.

“The rugby audience that PWR is bringing is perhaps a bit more youthful and fresh.”

The missing piece of the PWR puzzle – analysis

By

Sara Orchard

Rugby union commentator

It has long felt like the missing piece of the PWR puzzle is a sponsor with serious cash.

The league had moved well beyond freebies, brand link-ups and in-kind support. What it needed was hard investment, and now it has it.

Shore described the deal as “momentous” and “joyful”, but you suspect “relief” belongs in that mix too.

Credit should go to the executive chair, who by all accounts held out for the right deal rather than underselling the value of the PWR product.

Having driven the global club game forward since the league’s inception, this agreement both underlines the PWR’s status and sets a benchmark for what others in women’s rugby can aim for.

With the news landing in the same week England’s Red Roses secured a 25 per cent pay rise, women’s rugby is becoming an increasingly attractive proposition.

The league’s next challenge is not just expansion but making sure the benefits of that growth are felt across the whole player base; particularly those outside England contracts who are still juggling full-time or part-time work alongside elite rugby.

Related topics

  • Rugby Union

More on this story

  • Listen: Sport’s Strangest Crimes – Bloodgate
  • Listen to the newest Rugby Union Weekly podcast

✔ today silver rate

✔ 2026 winter olympics

✔ chat gtp

✔ silver rate today

✔ silver rate today live

✔ 2030 winter olympics

Read More

Sports

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *