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Rugby kicks off in India

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HAKING off the age-old perception that it is a game of the elite and not suited to Indian climes, rugby seems to be slowly getting a foothold in India and may well emerge as a popular sport for the masses.

Rugby aficionado­s say the game introduced by the British masters of colonial India in the late 19th century is gradually spreading to even rural areas.

“The last few years have been very good in terms of developmen­t, there’s been quite a lot,” Nasser Hussain, general manager of Rugby India, the game’s leading body in the country, told IANS.

“Earlier it was restricted to the major metros, but now it has spread to into rural India also. So we have about 22 or 23 states actively playing rugby.”

Already there are around 40 000 rugby players, and the number is set to increase, specially after the game’s introducti­on in schools through the School Games Federation of India (SGFI).

“A lot of the players are school kids. It was introduced last year in the SGFI, with which close to 90 to 95 percent of the country’s schools are registered,” Hussain said.

A look back shows Indian rugby is steeped in history.

The earliest mention of the sport in India can be traced to a couple of matches played in erstwhile Calcutta and Madras during the visit of the Royal Navy frigate HMS Galatea 1871.

The first recorded match was played on Christmas day 1872, at Calcutta Football Club (CFC) between England and a combined team of Scotland, Ireland and Wales, according to the Rugby India website. The match proved so popular that it was repeated a week later.

However, the game was on a decline in India by 1877, and CFC members decided to close the club. But to immortalis­e its name, they withdrew all the money from the bank in the form of silver coins, melted them and presented a trophy of high workmanshi­p called the Calcutta Cup to the game’s internatio­nal parent body – the Rugby F o o t b a l l Union (RFU) – for awarding the winners of r u g b y ’ s equivalent of the FA Cup.

The RFU, however, opted to present the Calcutta Cup to the winners of the annual contest between England and Scotland. And the tradition continues till today.

When the game was revived in India, the RFU reciprocat­ed by presenting to the CFC (now called CCFC – Calcutta Cricket and Football Club) in 1924 an exact replica of the Calcutta Cup.

This tourney was then titled “The All India and South Asia Rugby Cup” and has been played since.

Post-independen­ce, the Indian Rugby Football Union was formed in 1968. Thirty-one years later, it gained membership to the sport’s internatio­nal governing body – the Internatio­nal Rugby Board.

India still, however, doesn’t have a ground dedicated to rugby.

But Hussain, also a former India captain, said they are content sharing the grounds with other sports. “We do not have a dedicated rugby field. But we are not looking for it either.

“There’s no need for a dedicated ground, there’s not so much training that we have to use it 365 days a year.”

India recently hosted a pre- qualifier for the Olympics at Chennai’s Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium. “It’s a football field used for the Indian Super League and the I-League. Any football field would be okay for a rugby tournament,” Hussain said.

Though leagues like the Indian Premier League and the Pro Kabaddi League have been stunning successes in India, Hussain said their first priority was to create awareness and reach out to the masses.

“We are in discussion­s,” he said. “Something is in the pipeline, though nothing concrete as yet, but we do not want to jump into it.

“If you look at it, besides cricket, kabaddi was a success and football debatable. The other sports did not take off.

“We would rather look at a slow, gradual growth than something that happens overnight.”

Elaboratin­g on the “how to get to the masses” strategy, Hussain said India was implementi­ng the “get into rugby programme” that had been initiated globally.

“We are going out to most of the schools and districts and states where the sport is new,” he said.

The Rugby India board has decided to pump in money for developmen­t rather than splurging on marketing or promotions, he added.

He is hoping that the viewership generated by the Rugby World Cup currently being played could be leveraged and “tied to the developmen­t of the sport”.

Another challenge was to draw sponsors, despite rugby’s huge following as one of the biggest sports in the world.

“It is surprising a lot of corporates support rugby globally, but when it comes to India they don’t acknowledg­e it,” he said.

With rugby set to be part of the Olympics next year, the authoritie­s are looking for a long-term partnershi­p rather than “just a short add-on sort of thing”.

– DEBDOOT DAS

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