Rugby chiefs to unveil Twickenham naming rights deal with Allianz

Business

English rugby chiefs have agreed to sell the naming rights to Twickenham Stadium, the home of the national rugby union side for the last century.

Sky News can reveal that the Rugby Football Union (RFU) has struck a deal with Allianz, the German insurer, to add its brand to one of the world’s most famous rugby venues.

Sources said the RFU and Allianz were planning to rush through an announcement of the partnership after both were contacted by Sky News on Monday afternoon.

The value of the deal was unclear, although sources said it would represent a significant boost to the governing body’s finances.

The plot of land on which the stadium sits was acquired by the RFU in 1907 at the instigation of committee member William Williams.

The RFU and Allianz have both been contacted for comment.

Allianz previously sponsored the home ground of Saracens, the serial Premiership winners.

More on Rugby

The insurer abandoned the partnership while Saracens was cast into the wilderness after being found to have breached salary cap rules.

The naming rights deal will become one of the most prominent in Britain, and rival the likes of the Emirates and Etihad stadia, which are the homes of Arsenal and Manchester City respectively.

Articles You May Like

‘When you hit profits, you hit growth’: Businesses criticise biggest budget tax increase in decades
Sources: Ex-Giant Jones to eye playoff contender
Amazon to invest another $4 billion in Anthropic, OpenAI’s biggest rival
FTX co-founder Gary Wang avoids prison time for role in crypto fraud
Trump can seek dismissal of hush money case as sentencing postponed