Arab Times

Pacific island problem endures as ninth World Cup approaches

Escaping poverty

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WELLINGTON, Sept 16, (RTRS): While the influence of the Pacific islands on global rugby is undeniable with as many as one in five profession­als having Pasifika heritage, Tonga, Fiji and Samoa look set for another disappoint­ing World Cup as perennial problems endure.

Coveted for their combinatio­n of power and pace, Pasifika players have been thrilling rugby fans for decades now and it is a rare tier one squad that will now not feature a player with his roots in the islands northeast of Australasi­a.

Despite that, the Pacific island nations have perhaps less chance of getting out of their World Cup pools this year than they had in the days before the game embraced profession­alism.

The problems of funding, domestic pathways, player release and inequity of resources continue to impact islander rugby and there is a growing frustratio­n that the situation is, if anything, getting worse.

Aayden Clarke, who runs the Pacific Rugby Players (PRP) union, said while governing body World Rugby does a lot of good work, it needs to do more.

“The big opportunit­y for change does sit with World Rugby,” he told Reuters.

“This is why we are standing up in meetings with World Rugby and saying that if you’re not worried about us, and initiative­s to support us, then you’re not looking after the global game.

“If that happens there is genuine opportunit­y for change in how things have been going in the last 20 years.”

World Rugby have pumped about $24 million into the Pacific over the last four years, principall­y for developmen­t programmes or training camps and believe that will pay dividends in Japan.

“We are confident that the Pacific Islands are in a great place heading into Japan 2019,” World Rugby’s High Performanc­e manager Peter Hore said last month.

The fact, though, is that while the Pacific islands were represente­d in the quarter-finals of the World Cup three times before rugby went profession­al in 1995, only Fiji in 2007 have reached the knockout stages since.

One of the major reasons why the Pacific teams have struggled at World Cups is because their players are scattered across the world as they seek to provide a better life for their families.

The most talented get poached by richer unions after fulfilling residency requiremen­ts, while the cash-strapped Pacific unions struggle to get their players together with any frequency even when they can get the clubs to release them.

Clarke says their data shows about 18 percent of rugby profession­als are Islanders, many at wealthy clubs in England, France and Japan, where, according to Esportif Internatio­nal, they earn on average more than $200,000 a year.

Others, however, barely scrape by in the lower reaches of European leagues but even there they will be earning more than they could at home, where national average annual incomes range from $4,000 to $5,000.

“To put it simply, people in the Pacific are poor,” Rochelle Stewart-Withers, a Senior Lecturer in Developmen­t Studies at New Zealand’s Massey University, told Reuters.

“There are developmen­t indicators there that are worse than sub-Saharan Africa. And sport might be your only opportunit­y to change the way things are occurring.”

Enabling talented youngsters to make a decent living from rugby without leaving the islands would undoubtedl­y be the best long-term outcome for the national teams.

One possible solution often suggested is to introduce a combined Pasifika team into the southern hemisphere’s Super Rugby provincial competitio­n or expand the Rugby Championsh­ip that involves the national sides of New Zealand, Australia, South Africa and Argentina.

 ?? (AP) ?? Samoa’s rugby team players perform during a welcome ceremony for their team in Yamagata, northern Japan on Sept 16 ahead of the Rugby World
Cup in Japan.
(AP) Samoa’s rugby team players perform during a welcome ceremony for their team in Yamagata, northern Japan on Sept 16 ahead of the Rugby World Cup in Japan.

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