Fresh doubt has been cast on whether the Six Nations will go ahead as scheduled as organisers seek travel exemptions from the French government.
The French government introduced strict travel restrictions to and from the UK including a 6pm curfew, a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours of travel, and a seven-day quarantine.
The European Champions Cup and Challenge Cup was suspended earlier this month after the French government recommended that games against British clubs be postponed.
However, Ben Morel, the head of the Six Nations, is confident the competition will go ahead as planned. Morel said on Wednesday the organisation had considered a contingency plan to reschedule matches if necessary and are in constant dialogue with French authorities.
How those restrictions will impact the competition seems to be a discussion point as France begin the competition away to Italy on Feb. 6, then visit Ireland, but this issue is likely to come to a head before the visit of Scotland to Paris on Feb. 28.
“We have provided all our protocols. We have been considered as extremely robust and we are seeking some of the clarification on the specific rules about quarantine exemptions, which would look at entry from the UK, whether it is re-entry for the French teams or entry for the other unions,” Morel told reporters at the competition’s remote launch.
“We have reinforced our testing protocols, with the main point being we are doubling up on the testing and in the week prior to entering the international camp. Generally, elite sport benefits from widespread exemptions and what we are awaiting is the detail on the exemption.
“At the same time I think we’re confident, based on our protocols, that will be a positive outcome.”
Morel said that should any games be called off because of COVID-19 restrictions, there should be space in the calendar for them to be rescheduled, rather than one team be awarded a notional win, as happened during last year’s Autumn Nations Cup.
“The primary focus would be to reschedule,” he said. “The reason why we went for immediate results during the Nations Cup was that it had to progress because there was a finals weekend.
“We would obviously want to protect the sporting integrity of the Six Nations as much as possible.
“We are confident in our ability to stage the matches at the right time, it’s more what logistical gymnastics we need to adapt to.”
Information from Reuters contributed to this report.