Stabroek News

From footballer to rugby coach extraordin­aire - is Laurie Adonis

- By Noelle Smith

Laurie Adonis is a top notch rugby coach, one of the bets in the country.

But had it not been for the influence of his brother, Noel, Adonis’s talents might have been lost to rugby.

You see Laurie Adonis started out like so many youths, playing football, or soccer as it is otherwise known.

Then his brother Noel, a former national rugby player himself, past president of the Guyana Rugby Football Union (GRFU) and a former Vice President of the Guyana Olympic Associatio­n (GOA), stepped in.

“I started playing rugby because my older brother and his teammates used to ask me to come out to make up numbers for their teams at weekends.

“I was playing football at the time so some afternoons I would be running from playing one sport at one ground to get to the other sport at the other ground because I would want to not miss any of them.”

This is how Laurie Adonis moved from being a footballer, to a part-time rugby player and eventually a full-fledged rugby coach.

He had been a rugby player at the local as well as the national level, representi­ng Guyana for 12 years at tournament­s in places like Trinidad.

before eventually choosing to be a coach for the youths of Guyana in an effort to develop the sport of rugby in the 1990s.

“I started playing rugby really late, played for 12 years, retiring at the ripe, tender age of 47,” he said laughing.

Laurence Adonis, former coach of the University of Guyana rugby team, the UG Wolves, and now coach of The Panthers, commenced his coaching career when he decided his playing days were over.

The vision himself and his former teammate and captain of the national team at the time had was to give the youths something constructi­ve to occupy their time.

“In ‘97 when I stopped playing rugby, the national captain at the time, Conrad Arjune and I decided to get the youths who would hang out at his shop involved in rugby so we got them involved.

“Every August vacation the GOA (Guyana Olympic Associatio­n) would have this camp for the youths to participat­e in sports of all discipline­s. We would have a ball, some of the boys from the GOA camps would join us so eventually we had over 60 boys with us.”

The chance to take the youths to a point beyond where they just knew how to play the sport to become actual players came when the world governing body for rugby at the time (the Internatio­nal Rugby Board-iRB) reached out to the Guyana Rugby Football Union (GRFU).

“The GRFU got a call from the iRB saying if they had a youth programme they would aid in funding it so we capitalize­d on that and pulled together a group. Some of the guys who came through that initial group include national players such as Kevin McKenzie, Ryan George and Leon Greaves.”

Adonis and his fellow coaches trained the youths for about three years before they participat­ed in a game outside of Guyana.

“Our first game was in Trinidad about three years after we started and we did pretty well. We didn’t win but the performanc­e was a good one. The next year, when the team played at the Under 18 level, our dominance showed. Then eventually, when they came of age and began to make the senior teams that was really when we started to be the Caribbean champions because these players were well geared,” he said.

“Trinidad was the team beating us for about 20-something years but when our Under 18 team went out there we beat them and we have remained one of the leading teams in the Caribbean since.”

Currently, there are still a few players who play for the national teams that passed through Adonis and his colleagues from that junior level. “From the Under 18 level, we had a selector interested in one of the boys for the West Indies Rugby Team. At the time, the West Indies Rugby Team was trying to make a name for itself,” he said.

Adonis juggled coaching the junior teams, the senior teams, his club at the time (The Pepsi Hornets) and the women’s team. The Panthers is currently the team which has his full attention. Just before The Panthers, Adonis helped form and was head coach of the UG Wolves, the team that represente­d the University of Guyana. The Wolves consisted of university students who were interested in learning the sport.

“Some of the guys approached me saying they were interested in starting a club at the university so I went through the processes in order to form the club. We started practicing about five or six years ago and we became a force to reckon with among the senior clubs.

The players learnt the game from the very start, learning how to play ‘touch’ rugby’ to learning the specific rules to eventually having some of the young men make the teams to represent Guyana at

 ??  ?? The Panthers Rugby team coached by Laurie Adonis is coming off back-to-back title wins after winning the GRFU and Trophy Stalls Sevens tournament­s.
The Panthers Rugby team coached by Laurie Adonis is coming off back-to-back title wins after winning the GRFU and Trophy Stalls Sevens tournament­s.
 ??  ?? Wonder Coach! Laurie Adonis.
Wonder Coach! Laurie Adonis.

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