By permission of Alex Goff for
goffonrugby.com
January 4, 2006 — In writing and talking about
grand topics concerning rugby, whether it is how to get better results from
our national team, expand the game into middle schools, or finding new coaches
and new referees, it all comes down to this: getting more people involved in
the game.
And inside my head this question follows: Why?
Why rugby? Why do we want more people playing? Why do we
want more kids, more adults, more everybody playing, watching, and being a
part of this sport?
A few thoughts:
Inner strength. The first thing I think of (and I
remember discussing this very topic with USA Rugby's Game Development Czar
Rick Humm) is how rugby at its best cuts out the whiners.
I have been fortunate to spend a lot of time involved with kids as young
as two and as old as 19 in various sporting arenas. So often I've
noticed how kids are quick to complain, quick to claim a hurt that isn't
there.
Example:
There I am lightly bopping a bunch of four-year-olds on the head with a
balloon; some would say "Ow!" upon being touched. "Ow!" is their natural
reaction; claim the hurt before you know if it hurts or not. You get
sympathy, the other person gets in trouble.
If you see the current Chronicles of Narnia
movie you'll see that attitude in action. Four children engage in a snowball
fight. Three are pelting each other, having fun, and laughing. The
fourth, a morose boy named Edmund, stands aside and when hit in the shoulder
whines "Ow!" even though it's clear the snowball didn't hurt.
What does this have to do with rugby? You can't afford to get
caught up in the whining in rugby. If you do, the play is past and
you're down another five points. You have to shake it off. Now I'm
not one to say we should be ignoring partially severed limbs or anything of
that sort, but in this sue-first-ask-question-later world; in this world where
every comment on the state of the globe, God, or littering is taken as a
personal slight against those with differing views, perhaps a little shaking
it off is exactly what we all need.
And we do that by starting with the young people. Does it really
hurt? No? OK, quit yer griping and get on with it. When I
think of sports that preach that, rugby and ice hockey (despite the moments to
the contrary) come to mind immediately.
And of course, this attitude leads to the next:
Sportsmanship. I remember taking a small group of teenage girls
to their first rugby game. They were making up the numbers on another team in a
glorified scrimmage, and in doing so were of course invited to a sumptuous feast
of pasta and garlic bread and the local Eagles Club.
In the van driving back I heard one of the kids give her report to her
family. Had a good time, blah blah blah ... "Oh, and, best tradition ever!
They have to feed you!"
Yes, yes they do. We all know and love this tradition. And
while the post-match social was for a time bastardized into the post-match
"drink-up," a term I have come to despise, the growth of college and youth
rugby, combined with the growth of the number of family men involved in the
game, has helped us all get back to what this was really about: competitors
breaking bread together after hearty and sometimes heated competition.
It is still engrained in the sport how we aspire to (and don't always
reach) the ideals of treating our opponents and the officials with respect.
USA Rugby's involvement with the Positive Coaching Alliance is further
evidence of that.
And again, the world could use more sportsmanship, couldn't it?
The game itself. I love rugby as a game.
It flows. It has an almost mathematical structure to it, but one that is often
randomized by moments of great brilliance, or great ineptitude.
Rugby played at its highest level is still beautiful. The steady
flow of phase to phase; the commitment to the moment, the power of the tackle,
and brilliance of the passing all burn brightly. The same cannot be said
of other sports.
Inclusiveness. My good friend Pete Sullivan
was telling his kids one day early in their rugby lives about how much game
time they would get. Most would play all game, but some would come on as
subs. A few players groaned and then Pete explained it further.
Think about the best athlete at your school. The quarterback or
running back on the football team. He's on the field maybe 25 minutes a
game. In a ten-game high school season that's 250 minutes.
If he plays two ways he might be on the field for 45 minutes. That's 450
minutes in a season. On a high school rugby team a kid who comes on at
halftime every game will play almost as much (the team in question played 13
games that season so a sub would have been on the field 455 minutes.
Inclusiveness goes further than that, of course. As we know, every
player has to do everything, especially in these days of all skills all
positions. Run with the ball, pass, tackle, ruck, lead. Athletes
who never touched the football in gridiron find themselves running the ball
eight times a game or more.
All body types are needed in rugby. From
slim and quick to big and neckless to tall to short, we've got a place for all
of them. And even as the game becomes more professional this still holds
true. Our GoffonRugby 2005 Player of the Year is 5-9, 185. Not
exactly a behemoth. The MVP of the NASC was 5-9, 210.
At some levels, athletes who hardly got a look in other sports because
of their body types suddenly find themselves picked first in rugby.
Girls who struggle with their weight, when really they are just shaped a
certain way, suddenly find out that not only is there a sport for them,
there's a position they can play; and in fact if no one plays that position,
the game can't go on.
Rugby is inclusive but expects you to do something to earn that
inclusiveness; namely work hard, think, and be brave. Rugby encourages
sportsmanship and discourages the victim's mentality.
And finally, something I hear from rugby players on the national team,
as U14 touch games, and all in between. Rugby is just plain
a whole lot of fun.
That's why rugby for me. It is fun, and it has value that ripples
much farther afield than just one little sport. Why rugby for you?
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