The Standard (St. Catharines)

New Rugby Canada off to a rough start

- NEIL DAVIDSON

Rugby Canada’s plan to have one centralize­d pool of men’s players rather than having separate 15s and sevens training squads is off to a rocky start.

A source said 13 of the sevens players have boycotted training in suburban Victoria and secured legal representa­tion out of concerns their pay is being reduced and their side of the sport is being minimized.

Several months of back and forth between Rugby Canada and the player dissidents haven’t solved the impasse.

The sevens players’ previous contracts expired at the end of August and they are balking at the new version.

Rugby Canada CEO Allen Vansen acknowledg­es that some of the sevens players are being offered less compensati­on, saying it is necessary to spread the organizati­on’s limited resources among the entire player pool.

Vansen, while sympatheti­c to those whose lot is changing under the new framework, says Rugby Canada has no alternativ­e. And that it would move on as needed to field a team if the current crop of sevens players continue to dig their heels in.

Co-captains Nate Hirayama and Harry Jones, meanwhile, took to social media to bang the drum for the sevens game — seen as taking a back seat to the 15s game under the reorganiza­tion.

“It’s 2018. 7s is no longer just a developmen­t tool. We have to get with the times or we’re going to get left behind,” Hirayama tweeted above a picture of the Canadian team celebratin­g its victory at the 2017 Singapore Sevens.

Jones’ tweet contained another photo of Singapore celebratio­ns that showed the players hoisting coach Damian McGrath in the air.

“These players and staff have dedicated their lives and careers for moments like these. All we want is to keep chasing our dreams,” Jones said.

The sevens team members are looking into forming a players’ associatio­n, a move Vansen said Rugby Canada would not oppose.

In August, Rugby Canada announced it would centralize a group of 40 to 50 men under contract “to maximize the developmen­t of Canada’s men’s national team players.”

The two squads essentiall­y have trained apart in Langford, B.C., with separate coaches — with some 17 carded athletes in the sevens squad and up to 30 non-carded players in the 15s — although there has been some movement between the two. Canada’s top 15s talent plays profession­ally overseas.

The reorganiza­tion is an admission that Canada does not have the depth to run the two programs separately — and also that Rugby Canada has to focus more on the 15s program to maintain badly needed World Rugby funding.

The reorganiza­tion has pitted the 15s against the sevens with a source describing the current situation as “toxic.”

One cut reduction has the Vancouver sevens participat­ion fee to $500 from $5,000. It is particular­ly galling to the seven players, given the revenue the tournament produces for Rugby Canada. Such a cut is big for players who make only $1,765 (senior) or $1,060 (developmen­tal) a month in carding money, Rugby Canada offers a monthly “top-up” of $1,200 or $500 but, under the new blended player pool arrangemen­t, only to a maximum of eight players for each of the senior and developmen­tal categories per year.

The bonus structure is also modest — for example, $1,000 for qualifying for Olympics, something the men have yet to do.

Those in the sevens camp, whose goal is Olympic qualificat­ion, point to the different demands of the sevens game and say specialize­d training is needed. They also note the rising popularity of sevens.

The 15s stalwarts play down the need for special sevens training and point to the worldwide roots of the traditiona­l version of the game.

Canada is currently ranked 23rd in the World Rugby 15s rankings. The Canadian men’s sevens squad, meanwhile, finished ninth on the 2017-18 HSBC World Sevens Series.

Rugby Canada said it will continue to pursue Olympic men’s sevens qualificat­ion, with the sevens program “also serving as a key developmen­t program” for the 15s team.

But the focus is clearly back on the 15s game. Lee Douglas, an assistant men’s sevens coach, was an early casualty of the reorganiza­tion and is no longer with Rugby Canada.

“Rugby Canada’s board of directors has clearly stated that our men’s fifteens program is the priority program for the union,” Tim Powers, chair of Rugby Canada’s board of directors, said in August.

“In the environmen­t in which we live, key core funding for our entire union is driven by our men’s fifteens performanc­e,” he added.

The Canadian men 15s side, which has never failed to qualify for the World Cup, is headed to a last-chance repechage tournament in November in its third and final attempt to crack the field for the 2019 World Cup.

“It’s critically important for Rugby Canada and for Canadian rugby that we continue to have a men’s 15s team that qualifies for the Rugby World Cup,” Vansen said in August.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Canada’s Harry Jones, top, collides with France’s Thibauld Mazzoleni while running with the ball during World Rugby Sevens Series action in Vancouver on March 11.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Canada’s Harry Jones, top, collides with France’s Thibauld Mazzoleni while running with the ball during World Rugby Sevens Series action in Vancouver on March 11.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada