Irish Independent

Warburton’s early retirement a red flag, insists World Rugby

- Jack de Menezes

SAM WARBURTON’s injury-enforced retirement is a “red flag” for rugby union that could be the trigger to bring in a radical change to how players are handled, admitted World Rugby vice-chairman Agustin Pichot.

The former Wales and British and Irish Lions captain announced his retirement this week at the age of just 29, after his body finally cracked under the rigours of a nine-year profession­al career that saw the flanker suffer more than 20 major injuries.

Having led the Lions to a series victory over Australia in 2013 and a draw with New Zealand four years later, Warburton’s announceme­nt caused a seismic shock across the game that was felt here in San Francisco, where World Rugby are hosting the Sevens World Cup in the hope of expanding the game into the United States.

Given the concerns over health and safety in sport given the recent concussion lawsuit in NFL, the news of Warburton’s retirement has been greeted with unsurprisi­ng concern, and Pichot admitted it is felt just as much among the sport’s governing body as it is by the players.

GENERATION­S

“The red flags are there,” former Argentina internatio­nal Pichot said. “Sam is one red flag – there was a tweet I saw about the number of injuries he has had and it was frightenin­g.

“He had an outstandin­g career, but a number of injuries. We have to take care of the future generation­s.

“We are working really hard on that with the Internatio­nal Rugby Players’ Associatio­n (IRPA) – we already had a conference on that a month ago, and will have another on August 8.”

One potential solution being considered by World Rugby and the IRPA is reducing the level of training that players are committed to between games, a system that has been used in NFL in an effort to reduce the impact on the players’ bodies throughout a season.

Whether that would work in a sport that now features a 10-month season – as opposed to the NFL’s shorter period – is up for debate, but the admission from World Rugby that something needs to

be done in order to stop players such as Warburton retiring so early could be the catalyst for change in the not-toodistant future.

“We are working towards a training-load system,” Pichot added. “We mentioned it with the players in Monaco last year. We said, ‘we want to take care of you, but let’s be honest, when you sign a contract, sometimes you

don’t protect yourself and want to play week-in week-out’. There is a balance to be made.”

He added: “That came from a players’ movement. It is how you implement that – is there evidence to show that training is the problem?

“If stopping contact in training is the answer, we will do everything we can to address that, for sure.”

World Rugby chairman Bill Beaumont tried to ease concerns, stressing: “Rest assured, we have player welfare always at the front of everything we do.”

However, with the England great also forced to retire at the same age, the realities of rugby and the devastatin­g impact that it can have on later life are all too obvious. (© Independen­t News Service)

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