AS DAVID Moyes would no doubt tell you, sometimes it's better to be the man after the man after the man.

Next year we will be enjoying the RBS Six Nations at the Principality Stadium, or at least that's what the suits will want you to be saying.

The Welsh Rugby Union have penned a 10-year deal with the Principality Building Society that will see them attempting to get us to stop calling it the Millennium from 2016.

Unlike Moyes' six-year contract to succeed Alex Ferguson at Manchester United, this agreement won't come to an early end and it may well take a decade for the change to be ingrained.

Taking inspiration from Snickers and Starburst, the building society will attempt to get full value out of a reported £15million deal.

That's not quite a sum befitting a 'landmark deal' as the WRU would have us believe but the governing body have in some ways been backed into a corner by the notoriety of their stadium.

Merely bolting 'Principality' in front of Millennium Stadium would not have worked – how many people add BT Sport to the Arms Park or Murrayfield, Kia to the Oval, Emirates to Old Trafford?

There will be challenges ahead because I certainly refer to Newport Gwent Dragons travelling to Ravenhill (Kingspan Stadium) and Musgrave Park (Irish Independent Park) while I enjoy watching on television when South Africa play at Ellis Park (Emirates Airline Park).

The WRU have got 10 years to shake off their Millennium bug and then they may be in a position to negotiate a better deal and pit bidders against each other.

The Principality deal doesn't mean that cash is suddenly sloshing around but it's better than nothing and I hope that those at Rodney Parade are watching closely... if the television company Dave haven't been tapped up about sponsoring the North Terrace then they are missing a trick.