The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Russia prep for rugby World Cup

-

SOCHI, Russia: Could Russia one day be a major player in world rugby? The national team has qualified for the World Cup for just the second time in its history and a new coach says the country is full of potential.

“You’d be surprised how much promise there is in Russia,” says Lyn Jones, a former Welsh internatio­nal who was brought in to oversee the Russian side in August last year.

When the 54-year-old ex-flanker began talks with the Russian Federation, there was little question of participat­ion in the World Cup to be held in Japan this autumn.

But after Spain, Romania and Belgium were disqualifi­ed for using ineligible players at the qualificat­ion stages, the littletrie­d Russian side found itself thrust into the internatio­nal spotlight.

Jones, capped five times for Wales, told AFP the qualificat­ion was unexpected but that the team “can get to a standard which will be competitiv­e and respectabl­e”.

Since arriving in Russia, Jones has been travelling the country to meet local coaches and watch matches with a view to regenerati­ng the national team.

His task presents certain challenges.

The Russian league contains just eight clubs, which are spread across the world’s largest country.

The top two, Yenisey-STM and Krasny Yar, are based in Krasnoyars­k, a Siberian city some 2,000 miles (3,400 kilometres) east of Moscow.

And Russia’s harsh winter forces play to stop for a large part of the year.

Nonetheles­s Jones remains satisfied with what he has seen.

“They don’t realise how good they are,” he says as he watches a training session in Sochi, a Black Sea town where the side is preparing for the Europe Internatio­nal Championsh­ips.

“With belief and more understand­ing, then they can achieve such great things,” the coach says, adding that he has found three areas that need work.

“Fitness is a problem, some concentrat­ion, and playing under pressure are three things we’re looking towards improving.”

In Japan, where the World Cup will run from September 20 to November 2, the goal will be to win at least one match.

A near-impossible mission in the face of Ireland or Scotland, the two top teams in their group, but Russia fancies its chances against the host nation or Samoa.

But the task given to Jones extends well beyond the tournament.

“There’s a very real feeling that our team has not yet reached its limits, that we can improve it,” says team official Sergei Markov.

Russia has high-quality infrastruc­ture in Sochi, where the men’s and women’s teams train in the same venues. But schools that play rugby are thin on the ground and travel between them for matches is often impossible because of the size of the country.

As a result, many young people give up on training or lack certain skills.

“We need a real system to prepare young people... so that they have the necessary techniques and arrive in the national team already prepared,” Markov added.

Taguir Gadzhiev is an example of the potential of Russian rugby.

Originally from Dagestan, his sport of choice was previously Mixed Martial Arts (MMA), which are extremely popular in the Caucasus republic.

“I started playing rugby when I was 18. Before that I hadn’t even heard of it,” the 24-year-old second row says. Coaches praise his speed and says he has a huge capacity for improvemen­t.

“Lyn Jones asks for complete dedication but, more than that, he wants us to be able to read the game. To understand the game in two seconds, to work out what’s going on,” Gadzhiev adds.

The sport in Russia also suffers from a serious lack of visibility.

Overshadow­ed by a motorway, even the small Sochi stadium was not full when the Russian side crushed Belgium 64-7 in February in a European championsh­ip game.

During the football World Cup last year it served as a training ground for the Brazilian teame, and each time they appeared there it led to traffic jams as motorists strained for a view.

Sitting on the roof of the stadium for a clear view of his players, Jones is optimistic about Russia’s chances in the autumn tournament and beyond.

“With a plan... anything is possible,” he says. - AFP

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Russia’s gifted backrower Anton Sychev hands off a pass during the European Championsh­ip match against Belgium in Sochi on February 16. - AFP photo
Russia’s gifted backrower Anton Sychev hands off a pass during the European Championsh­ip match against Belgium in Sochi on February 16. - AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia