The Borneo Post

Bizarre student rituals leading to player exodus — Report

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LONDON: Bizarre university rituals – including having to fish dead rats out of buckets – are contributi­ng to a dramatic dropoff in the number of rugby players, a report said Wednesday.

Britain’s Times newspaper said other initiation­s included chilli powder being applied to sensitive areas and new students having vomit thrown over them.

The Rugby Footbal l Union ( RFU), the governing body in England, estimates that 10,000 recent school-leavers have stopped playing the sport since the end of last season and fears one reason is they are put off by the rugby culture at university.

Students at the University of Manchester have had to participat­e in a twisted version of apple bobbing, using their mouth to pull a dead rat from a bucket of cider, the Times report said.

At Loughborou­gh University, students have reportedly been challenged to drink four litres of cider. They were all then sick into a bucket and the last to finish had the vomit thrown on them.

University of Bath students were blindfolde­d, ordered to put their hands out and then urinated on, the Times said.

“It’s not me or anyone being square. It’s got beyond that. We see the rugby club standing on chairs, throwing up into bins and being forced to drink vomit,” one student told The Times.

Another said: “There’s no way you can play university rugby without buying into the culture.”

RFU rugby developmen­t

We have to be careful we don’t sensationa­lise it and give people the impression it happens whenever you go near any rugby team.

director Steve Grainger said he was shocked by the reports.

“We have to be careful we don’t sensationa­lise it and give people the impression it happens whenever you go near any rugby team,” he told the paper.

“For every story you hear about an initiation, you can talk to 100 players who have never been near one or didn’t know they existed.

“But when we do hear about it, you can’t help your stomach turning and thinking ‘ that is another challenge we have to overcome’ because it changes peoples’ perception of the game.”

It is not the first time British university rugby culture has been in the spotlight.

In 2014, the London School of Economics disbanded its rugby club for an academic year after the publicatio­n of a leaflet described as “misogynist­ic, sexist and homophobic”. — AFP

Steve Grainger, RFU rugby developmen­t director

 ??  ?? File photo of players in a scrum during a rugby match.
File photo of players in a scrum during a rugby match.

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