Cue Michael Caton from The Castle: “Tell em, they’re dreaming.”
And yes, they don’t call me Scoop for nothing.
In the most congested football market in the world, with both the NRL and AFL pretty much going gangbusters, and soccer – via the Matildas, at least – going better than ever, it is all but impossible to see how such percentages can be gained.
“All three pillars are interdependent and critical to a thriving rugby ecosystem,” RA CEO Phil Waugh said in the statement. “And all have been developed in collaboration with member unions, Super Rugby clubs and RUPA. Australian Rugby is united, aligned, and poised for success on and off the field. The benefits of this all-of-game strategy will be realised for many years to come.”
As I say, these are pretty much what we used to call “motherhood” statements, but are now, I guess, parenthood statements. We all want that for rugby, and it is not news.
As to specifically HOW they are going to do things like increase participation, it is not, at first glance particularly … nuanced. Witness:
KEY ACTIONS
- Implement Get into Rugby in all junior clubs as the entry level format of the game for young boys and girls.
- Expand Tri Tag Rugby to every region in Australia
- Partner with Australian Schools Rugby Union to expand existing National Competitions in both the XVs and 7s format.
- Enhance the mentoring and development opportunities for coaches, match officials and administrators.
You get the drift. If you, too, have been looking for the magic formula – we all have – to my eyes it doesn’t look like there is one.
But against all that?
Well, against all that, are two new things that really do make it less pie-in-the-sky than it otherwise would be.
The first is – and I think I mentioned this once or twice? – the wonderful performance of the Wallabies on the just completed spring tour. Beating England at Twickenham in the manner they did, with the winning try coming in the 85th minute of a stunning match, brought the game alive, and the supporters from out of the mahogany woodwork. They’re all still there, they’ve just been buried for a while.
The win against Wales confirmed that, and even though the match against Scotland was slightly disappointing, the fact that they came within an ace of beating Ireland in Dublin was confirmation that it is possible, just possible, that a new age might be upon us. For it wasn’t just the results, it was the thrilling way they played, the razzle and dazzle, the swerve and verve, (Cliquot), the way they chanced their arm and never wavered. And if this does prove to be the team we have been waiting for, for so long, then the timing really couldn’t be better – with the Lions next year and hosting the Rugby World Cup two years after that.
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“With a once-in-a-generation runway of major events, coupled with an aligned and energised Australian Rugby ecosystem,” RA Chair Daniel Herbert said, “there has never been a better time to be involved in this great game.”
If our blokes can play like they did against England and Ireland, in both those coming tournaments – and win – then the transformation really will be stunning. Rugby’s great strength against its key competitors of the AFL and NRL is its genuinely global nature. If the Wallabies performed well on those stages it will be the best show in town, played out on the world stage, and indeed drive ratings and participation rates into the previously unheard of territory.
No, that territory still won’t be within a bull’s roar of the aforementioned stated goals, but it will be great nevertheless.
The key is seeing the Wallabies build on their hard-won momentum from this last tour, while also allocating sufficient resources to the other forms of the game to see them grow. The partridge won’t land, but we might at least be able to feel the flutter of its wings.