The Newcastle Red Bulls aren’t wasting any time. With the 2025/26 Premiership season on the horizon, they’ve been busy assembling a squad that looks ready to compete.
Multiple internationals have already signed on, and for the first time in years there’s a real buzz around the Twin Farms – the local Falcons pub where optimism hasn’t flowed this freely in decades.
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But short-term signings are only half the story. The club’s mega-rich new ownership is said to be thinking long-term too, with heavyweight international coaches being linked. Scotland boss Gregor Townsend and former Wales and Lions chief Warren Gatland are two of the names circling the rumour mill. If either lands in the North East, it would be a statement of serious intent.
Importantly, Newcastle are keen not to become a retirement home for fading mercenaries. Rumours have linked the likes of Conor Murray and Leigh Halfpenny to Kingston Park, but so far the Red Bulls have resisted the temptation to sign marquee names past their prime.
Speaking of marquees, one crucial slot still remains open. The coveted “marquee player” – whose wages sit outside the Premiership salary cap – is being held back.
And RUCK understands the Falcons want that space filled by a genuine game-changer at fly-half, a player they can build a squad around for the next four to five years. Think Bath with Finn Russell – and the double they delivered last season.
Two names immediately leap off the page: George Ford, the England stalwart whose contract with Sale expires next summer, and Northampton’s 23-year-old prodigy Fin Smith, who many believe is the next big thing.
There is, however, a spanner in the works. The new R360 league is hovering over the market, ready to throw around massive offers to lure star talent abroad. Newcastle’s trump card? Any player staying in the Premiership keeps their England eligibility, while anyone jumping ship to R360 will be ruled out by the RFU.
For a club desperate to draw younger fans through the gates at Kingston Park, Smith is the dream. At 23, he could become the face of the franchise for a generation – and with whispers of a seven-figure annual salary on the table, Newcastle are clearly serious.
The Red Bulls are no longer a sleeping giant. Watch this space.
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“Goodbye Caterpillar ruck” – Four more rugby law changes for 2025
Rugby thrives on a mix of tradition and evolution, but some laws may no longer serve the game as effectively as they once did.
As the sport grows faster, stronger, and more tactical, certain laws stand out as ripe for reconsideration—not to upend the game, but to make it fairer, safer, and more exciting.
We highlight four specific laws that, with thoughtful updates, could better reflect the way rugby is played today. These ideas come from a deep respect for the game and a desire to see it flourish for players and fans alike.
World Rugby has shown it’s willing to adapt in recent years—these could be the next steps in that evolution.
1. Fewer Substitutions
Rugby has changed significantly over the years, and one of the biggest shifts is how the bench is used. These days, teams often bring on almost an entirely new forward pack late in the game. Big, fresh players crash into tired defenders, making the final 20 minutes less about skill and endurance, and more about brute force. Many fans and former players feel this has turned rugby into a collision sport rather than a contest of stamina and intelligence.
Reducing the number of substitutions would encourage players to pace themselves. Space would open up in the second half, creating more opportunities for creative play rather than endless phases of pick-and-go. It would reward fitness, smart decision-making, and those capable of performing for the full 80 minutes.
Fewer substitutions wouldn’t just make the game more exciting—it would make it fairer, safer, and more in line with the spirit of what rugby has always been about.
With the rise of 6–2 and even 7–1 bench splits, pioneered by Rassie Erasmus, the trend seems to be heading in the opposite direction. That’s all the more reason to act now.