Jantra wrote: you normally talk sense but that is just plain stupid. rugby would love to have the participation and numbers of spectators that football gets on a regular basis. 70,000 turning up 5 time a year to get pissed doesn't make rugby a national sport
No, 70000 odd pissheads turning up for an event doesn't make something a national sport, but it sure helps when the WRU owns the National Stadium and can regularly fill it, even when we all know that Wales is going to get a 40-point stuffing (i.e. every time New Zealand come to town).
Last year the FAW made something like 20k profit and don’t even have the funds to build their own home stadium! The Welsh football team didn't play its first international at the old National Stadium in Cardiff until 1989 (a nil-nil draw against West Germany). Contrast that with the WRU or England and Scotland, which have between them Wembley, Hampden Park, Twickenham and Murrayfield for football and rugby respectively. Given the FAW was founded 5 years before the WRU, what have they been doing if football is so significant in Wales?
Let's face it, everyone is proud of what Wales is doing now, but crowd attendances for Welsh football internationals have been utterly dismal in recent years to the point where the FAW had to stop borrowing the Millennium/Principality Stadium because the empty stands were embarrassing. The last time the FAW managed to fill that was when Wales hosted England for a World Cup qualifier. The noise of “God Save the Queen” was deafening, that’s how many English fans could get tickets for an “away” game! That's why I was really pleased the FAW offered the Euro tickets to their loyal fans, not the event-goers!
I see Cardiff City promptly moth-balled their upper tier too, owing to a lack of ticket sales. Sure, the games are still better attended than most regional rugby matches, but then regional rugby has been a disaster all-round. Arguments surrounding that topic could rage for weeks on end!
Regarding participation figures, you may find that golf will beat both of them.
I don’t know why football fans find this so sensitive (reflected on other forums), but let’s face facts. Sure, a lot of people may enjoy and be very passionate about football in Wales, but it’s still second to rugby in the national psyche. I think most people outside of Wales would probably agree too.