Fiji Sun

An open letter by Sir Bill Beaumont, Chairman of World Rugby:

Striving to be the most progressiv­e sport for player welfare

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This coming January will mark 40 years since I retired from the game. Just weeks after what would be my final internatio­nal match against Scotland, I was advised by our team doctor that I should call time on my career following a concussion in a (victorious) County Championsh­ip Final for Lancashire to protect my longterm health.

The game today is unrecogniz­able from what it was 40 years ago. As a father of players, a grandparen­t and a fan, I welcome the progress the game has made.

However, the need for rugby to continue to adapt and evolve is as important now as it has ever been.

Since I retired, rugby has made great advances to safeguard the wellbeing of our players, always acting on the science and robust evidence. Rugby has been at the forefront of sport in bringing in new protocols like the Head Injury Assessment, Graduated Return to Play and the Activate warm-up injury prevention programme to identify, manage and prevent head impacts and concussion­s at the elite and community level.

Over recent months, World Rugby has launched the biggest ever study into concussion risk at men’s and women’s community and age-grade levels of the game, partnering with the University of Otago, in New Zealand. We’re investing in new technologi­es and law trials to improve player welfare. But we cannot and must not stand still.

As Chairman of World Rugby, I get to see the incredible benefits rugby brings players across the globe throughout their lives. It helps build confidence and understand­ing of what it’s like to commit to and work for a team. It brings enormous benefits for physical and mental wellbeing. And it brings us close friendship­s and a community in the rugby family for life. These benefits can only grow in importance following the global pandemic.

Like all sports, rugby is not a game that is risk-free. But it is a sport that cares deeply for and prioritise­s its players, in particular around concussion and head injury. We do that so that parents can feel safe and want their children to play.

NEXT PHASE

Today, in line with our new strategic plan, World Rugby announces the next phase of our player welfare strategy to protect and grow the game we all love. Underpinni­ng this strategy is a personal commitment from myself to never stand still when addressing questions of player welfare. Our ambition is for rugby to be the most progressiv­e sport in the world on player welfare. We will do that by delivering against a six-point action plan.

First, support for former players – some of whom have come forward recently with their struggles adapting to life after profession­al rugby. I and my colleagues at World Rugby have been engaging and listening. Working with our member unions and Internatio­nal Rugby Players (IRP), we want to ensure no former player or their family members need suffer or worry in silence if they have concerns.

Second, we will continue to invest in advanced science into player welfare at all levels of the game, and the impacts of head injuries in particular. We are doubling our investment into player welfare, including working with a wide range of scientific institutio­ns to continue to research and advance our understand­ing of the impact of head injury. This will also mean embracing innovation­s such as eye tracking technology and smart mouthguard­s to monitor head impacts in real time.

Third, we will continue to review and update the laws of the game to put player welfare first. From 1 August, we will trial a number of changes at a global level, including the 50:22 rule which has been trialled to good effect in domestic pilot trials with the ambition of creating more space across the pitch and reducing defensive line speed, thereby reducing the frequency and intensity of contact.

Fourth, we will commit to a dedicated approach to the women’s game – the biggest single opportunit­y we have to grow the playing of rugby. Our approach will be led by data and science and will not simply follow what works for the men’s game, with the ambition of supercharg­ing the sport for women at all levels.

Fifth, we will redouble our efforts in education in the community and profession­al game on head injuries and health, from dedicated apps and websites with the latest informatio­n and resources on brain health and rugby, to the preventati­ve Tackle Ready and Activate programmes.

LISTENING, ENGAGING

Last, but not least, we will continue to listen and engage with the rugby family – and we will act on what we hear. We have had productive conversati­ons with current and former players, and groups like Progressiv­e Rugby. We all have the same love for the game at heart, and we want to hear from everyone about the best ways to secure its future. To ensure the legitimacy and growth of our game now and in future, we will never stop listening.

This is a plan for the game by the game, born of consultati­on, engagement and partnershi­p with our unions. Over the coming months, Alan Gilpin, our newly-appointed Chief Executive, and I will be making a series of announceme­nts in partnershi­p with our unions shaped by the feedback we receive.

Finally, today, we are announcing a major funding package to support a programme of Independen­t Concussion Consultant­s for the elite game, who will support team doctors in assessing the suitabilit­y of a player’s return to play following a concussion once they have progressed through the six-stage Graduated Return to Play. These independen­t experts will be able to decide when elite players are fit to return to play and will support an individual­ised care process for players.

In my career, I’ve been a player, a coach, an administra­tor, a tour manager, a proud parent and a fan. My goal is for parents across the world to look at rugby and see a game that they want their sons and daughters to play, because of the many benefits it brings. That is the focus of this strategy. And the conversati­on will not stop here.

“We all have the same love for the game at heart, and we want to hear from everyone about the best ways to secure its future”

 ??  ?? Sir Bill Beaumont, World Rugby chairman, with The Webb Ellis Cup.
Sir Bill Beaumont, World Rugby chairman, with The Webb Ellis Cup.

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