The New Zealand Herald

World Cup snag

Inferior conditions for women

- Gregor Paul

Rugby’s drive to create gender equality has hit an iceberg with the 2021 World Cup set to offer women inferior, basic conditions to those the men will have in Japan this year.

World Rugby has made it a goal to close the gender divide and yet has awarded New Zealand the 2021 Women’s World Cup when a key facet of the bid failed to meet the minimum standard required to host the men’s tournament.

All 20 teams heading to Japan this week for the men’s World Cup will be staying in four and five star accommodat­ion. The same promise has not been made for the women’s teams coming to the 2021 World Cup in New Zealand.

New Zealand’s bid states that women’s teams could be housed in three-star accommodat­ion at the showpiece tournament in two years.

In comparison, to host the male tournament, bids have no chance of being successful unless they guarantee players will be put-up in a minimum of four-star accommodat­ion or preferably five.

No male team that came to New Zealand for the 2011 World Cup was placed in three-star accommodat­ion.

A spokespers­on for NZ Rugby said that final decisions have not yet been made on where all 12 teams will be staying in 2021 but confirmed the successful bid offered a mix of three and four-star accommodat­ion in Whangarei where some of the games will be played and a mix of three and 41⁄2-star accommodat­ion in Auckland.

Nigel Cass, NZR chief rugby officer, said: “Our bid was provided within the terms provided by World Rugby. Where available, teams will be staying in four-star accommodat­ion — the same as other national teams.”

In contrast, the All Blacks will be staying at a variety of hotels during the 2019 World Cup in Japan, all of which have a 41⁄2-star rating.

The discrepanc­y in basic accommodat­ion standards at the two tournament­s comes only weeks after World Rugby announced it was

Unintentio­nal gender bias in sport is an ongoing issue. We need to lead from the front. World Rugby boss Bill Beaumont

removing the gender specificat­ion of the 2021 event as part of its drive to increase the profile of the women’s game and put it on an equal footing with the men.

“Unintentio­nal gender bias in sport is an ongoing issue,” World Rugby chairman Sir Bill Beaumont said. “As a global sporting federation, we need to be leading from the front on the

issue of equality. By adopting gender balance in the naming of men’s and women’s Rugby World Cup competitio­ns, we are setting new standards in equality in rugby.”

New Zealand won the 2021 hosting rights in November last year, when their bid was considered superior to Australia’s.

But it is understood that despite New Zealand winning with 25 votes to 17, Australia’s bid was focused on putting the women’s tournament on an equal footing with the men’s World Cup in terms of accommodat­ion, class of flights to the tournament and training facilities.

The need to improve basic standards around the Women’s World Cup

became a focus after the 2017 tournament was a massive broadcast success but some of the players such as Black Ferns star Portia Woodman voiced concerns that the tournament set-up required them to accept conditions that would be unacceptab­le at the men’s tournament.

The 2021 tournament has extended the allowed squad sizes from 28 players to 30 and the length of the tournament from 23 days to 25.

New Zealand Rugby Players’ Associatio­n chief Rob Nichol says the decision to make tournament­s gender neutral can only be considered a step forward if it is backed by substantiv­e initiative­s that support the name change.

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