SCARLETS: Club confirms ‘significant’ new investment after difficult period amid financial rumours
The Scarlets have confirmed they have secured major new funding to secure the club’s future, in a statement that all but acknowledges the financial turbulence that has surrounded the region in recent weeks.
The board released a carefully worded statement on Friday that stopped short of detailing the scale of the difficulties the club has faced, but which thanked supporters for their “loyalty and patience during a difficult period” — a phrase that will resonate with fans who have watched months of uncertainty unfold.
The investment — described as “significant” — has come from within the club’s existing funding group, rather than from new external backers.
The Scarlets issued the following statement in full:
“The Scarlets Board can confirm that the club has secured significant further investment for the future stability of the club and region.
“The investment is an important vote of confidence in the Scarlets, in Llanelli, the enduring strength of our rugby heritage and in the future of professional rugby in the region and its links to sport, community and culture in west Wales.
“The club’s priority and focus continues to be about protecting its future, providing stability for players, staff, stakeholders and supporters, and creating the time needed to consider the next stage of professional rugby development in Wales properly and responsibly.
“The additional investment is provided from within our existing funding group who are committed to the future of the club and who deeply understand Scarlets rugby and its importance to Welsh rugby and west Wales.
“We would like to thank our supporters, staff, players, partners and the wider Scarlets community for their loyalty and patience during a difficult period. Their belief, loyalty and support of our club has never wavered. Neither has ours as the Scarlets Board.”
The language will not be lost on supporters. References to “stability,” a “difficult period” and the need to consider “the next stage of professional rugby development in Wales properly and responsibly” all but confirm that the rumours of serious financial difficulty were well-founded — even as the statement stops short of spelling out what that difficulty looked like.
Notably, the new investment comes from existing backers rather than fresh outside money, suggesting the club’s current funding group has stepped up to plug a gap rather than a new investor riding to the rescue.
The statement arrives against one of the most turbulent backdrops in Welsh rugby’s recent history. The WRU has been pressing ahead with plans to reduce the number of professional regions from four to three — and while the Ospreys have widely been reported as the region under threat, the union has stopped short of confirming that any final decision has been made. That ambiguity will do little to ease nerves in west Wales.
The WRU’s own governance has been in crisis in parallel. Clubs forced an extraordinary general meeting — initially set for April 13 — to hold the union’s leadership to account, in a saga that has lurched from confrontation to apparent resolution and back again. The union’s chair, Richard Collier-Keywood, announced he would stand down in July after months of pressure over the direction of the professional game.
With the regional picture still unresolved, the Scarlets’ statement that they need time to consider “the next stage of professional rugby development in Wales properly and responsibly” takes on added significance — raising the question of whether the club is positioning itself for a future that looks very different to the present.
The Scarlets declined to provide further detail on the level of investment secured, the identity of the investors, or the circumstances that made the additional funding necessary. Swansea Bay News has contacted the club for further comment.
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