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Domestic English rugby has been at a crossroads for a while but now it looks like Premiership Rugby has read the room.

Domestic English rugby has been at a crossroads for a while but now it looks like Premiership Rugby has read the room.
After seasons of stagnation and financial headaches, the top tier of English rugby, which has now become the 'Prem', is getting a much-needed facelift with Henry Pollock as the league's poster boy.
It is hoped that shortening the league's name will help it "talk how fans talk" and give it a less corporate, more informal feel. Officials also believe showcasing the confrontational nature of the sport, alongside players' athleticism and skill, will draw in new, younger fans after the Premiership recorded a 30% growth in fans between the ages of 18-34 between 2023 and 2024.
Pollock’s personality spearheads the revamp
At only 20, Northampton Saints flanker and current British & Irish Lion tourist, Pollock, embodies everything the league is trying to project — fearlessness, flair, and a personality that turns heads. On the pitch, he's a menace at the breakdown and possesses an impressive highlight reel of blistering breaks. Off it, he speaks with a confidence and humour that immediately resonates with younger fans. He doesn’t play like he’s easing in. He plays like he belongs.
A product of the Premiership pathway, an U20s World Cup winner, and now an international star in an era where the spotlight isn’t just on performance, but on personality as well. Crucially, he’s part of a new generation that understands the demands of the modern game and the value of connection — both with fans in the stands and followers online.
In many ways, Pollock is doing for English rugby what Marcus Smith did a few years ago — but with more of a personality and controversy, shown in his recent scuffles in the Champions Cup and Lions tour. And that suits the new tone perfectly.
Trying to get rugby on youngsters’ radars
The new 'Prem Rugby' approach is refreshingly honest: let the sport sell itself. Not through endless jargon, but through what actually brings people to the game: confrontation, charisma, and elite athleticism.
The sport’s biggest strength has always been its physical edge — the brutal ballet of contact, breakdowns, and high-stakes set pieces. But for too long, the league has marketed itself like it’s scared of that identity.
Hopefully, the league can finally start to showcase the people behind the jerseys. That matters. You don’t attract 15-year-old fans by highlighting a multi-year broadcast rights deal — you do it by giving them a fly-half with swagger, a prop who deadlifts small cars, and a winger who chirps every time he scores.
This isn't dumbing down — it's smartening up
There’s already pushback from traditionalists who worry that this tone risks "dumbing down" the game. But that misses the point. The sport doesn’t need to be simplified; it needs to be understood. That means making it accessible without losing its soul. It means using short-form clips to show a dominant scrum or a jackal turnover, not just to existing fans, but to kids scrolling TikTok who might think, "Wait — what is this and why haven’t I watched it before?"
Rugby doesn’t need reinvention. It just needs to be seen clearly. And for once, it feels like the Prem is ready to show its face — bruises and all.