Daily Dispatch

New group champions safety in rugby

-

A lobby group of rugby players, officials, referees, coaches, medical experts and teachers has been formed to campaign for improved safety in a sport they describe as broken.

Spearheadi­ng Progressiv­e Rugby are ex-internatio­nals, including Canadian Jamie Cudmore, who is involved in a longrunnin­g legal dispute with his former club Clermont Auvergne, and England forward James Haskell.

Cudmore has said the French club put his life in danger for effectivel­y forcing him to play when concussed.

The group has made radical recommenda­tions, including the removal of tactical substituti­ons, aimed at reducing incidences of concussion.

In December nine former profession­al players in their 30s and 40s, most diagnosed with early-onset dementia, launched legal proceeding­s against World Rugby and other governing bodies.

Former internatio­nals Steve Thompson, of England, and Alix Popham, of Wales, who are leading that case, are also members of the group.

“Progressiv­e Rugby passionate­ly supports the core physicalit­y of an 80-minute game of rugby and that extends to tackling in schoolboy rugby,” the organisati­on said in a release.

“However, Progressiv­e Rugby believes that, around the acceptable risks that come from a game, much more can be done to protect current players and future generation­s.”

Among the experts is Barry O’driscoll, who stood down from what was then called the Internatio­nal Rugby Board in 2012 in protest against its handling of concussion cases.

“We all love rugby and want to see it continue in the long term,” O’driscoll told a news conference on Wednesday.

“However, the game as it is, is broken, with many more players likely to end up with neurologic­al impairment­s in the future.

“The IRB’S treatment of concussion was going badly wrong then and has got worse since — it is a derelictio­n of duty.”

Progressiv­e Rugby sent an open letter to World Rugby chair Bill Beaumont demanding that more be done to protect the rugby-playing community from the dangers of injury.

“World Rugby has a moral and legal duty to minimise risk and to inform players and parents of the risk of brain damage from repeated knocks,” it said.

This was in response to a letter Beaumont, the former England captain who had to retire early after suffering multiple concussion­s, published last December which, among other things, said: “Player welfare is, and always has been, our number one priority at all levels of the game.”

Progressiv­e Rugby says it firmly supports the core physicalit­y that comes with the game but that its proposed changes are essential to ensure its survival in terms of longterm player welfare and playing numbers at all levels.

Coming days after the Rugby Players’ Associatio­n held its first brain health webinar for former players, the new group is calling for major cutbacks on contact and workload in training, the limitation of replacemen­ts to injury only, strict applicatio­n of laws at the ruck and a review of the tackle area.

The group also calls for a minimum three-week return to play protocol period after a concussion and mandatory comprehens­ive screening.

Progressiv­e Rugby points to American football’s NFL, which has paid out $1bn (R14.6bn) in concussion settlement­s, as having metamorpho­sed from a sport in denial to a proactive organisati­on, and wants World Rugby to follow its example.

World Rugby responded, saying: “Clearly these members of our rugby family love the game and want it to be the best it can be. We do, too. We are encouraged that the group are championin­g a number of initiative­s that are already operationa­l or being considered and we are open to constructi­ve discussion­s with them regarding their proposals.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa