The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Medical chief praises rugby’s five-step plan

Professor Leitch impressed by ‘sensible’ approach to restarting game

- STEVE SCOTT Pichot quits WRC post stscott@thecourier.co.uk

Scotland’s chief clinical director Professor Jason Leitch thinks that restarting sport is “no different to getting coffee shops or garden centres back” and is encouraged by the “very mature and very sensible” approach on these shores.

Prof Leitch, who has become a public figure as a main part of Scotland’s public health campaign against the Covid-19 pandemic, also praised Scottish Rugby’s five-step plan to return to training and playing.

The clinical director was part of the meeting last week with the Minister for Sport and Health Joe FitzPatric­k and leading figures from the SFA, Scottish Rugby and representa­tives of horseracin­g in Scotland for initial discussion­s on resuming sporting events.

“It was a very mature, very sensible conversati­on about what would have to happen, and when, in order to get these sports back,” he said, speaking to Scottish Rugby’s podcast.

“All sports are slightly different in the way they are funded and financed – so for football we had to have a conversati­on about TV money and gate receipts, how much money is in the bank, what does for example Brechin do compared to Celtic?

“And then rugby the same, so what would be the plan to get elite rugby back but also what would be the plan to get touch rugby back or schools rugby back, whatever that might look like.”

The discussion­s were pretty much the same as opening other public facilities and spaces, he continued.

“It’s not that different from getting the coffee shops back or the garden centres back – it’s about safety of workers and safety of customers,” he said.

“Whether you are the oil and gas (industry) or Scottish Rugby, you have a responsibi­lity to do some of that work yourselves, to look across the world and see what’s happening in New Zealand or what’s happening in Dubai and think about what the best practice might be.

“Then the Scottish Government has a responsibi­lity to say here is the high level guidance, here is what we think it required for safety, for public health and eventually we’ve also got a responsibi­lity to give you times for that.

“We can’t do that yet, but eventually we’re going to have to do that. Then rugby and other sports will have to think what that looks like. I was very impressed with the plan, the provisiona­l plans your guys came with to that meeting last week covering five stages.”

That plan envisages players training solo at home, then isolated training at BT Murrayfiel­d, followed by a large group of players training at BT Murrayfiel­d, then players being able to play and to train in

Agustin Pichot has announced his resignatio­n from the World Rugby Council in the wake of his defeat to Sir Bill Beaumont in the election for World Rugby chairman.

The 45-year-old Pichot, who had served as Beaumont’s vicechairm­an for the past four years, will give up his respective roles as Americas Rugby president and the Argentine Rugby Union’s representa­tive.

Pichot said in a statement issued yesterday: “I cannot conceive of occupying a place just for the sake of occupying it.”

Pichot, whose stated plans included a shakeup of the World Rugby voting system, lost the ballot by 28 votes to 23 on May 2. a contact environmen­t, before matches were played against each other.

As for grassroots rugby, Prof Leitch – a regular attender at internatio­nals at Murrayfiel­d and Glasgow Warriors games – said clubs would have to be patient.

“I don’t have a great answer for them I’m afraid,” he said.

“We will absolutely do it as quickly as we can (allow sports to resume) and it will clearly be staged so individual training outdoors will come back before scrums.

“From today, people can individual­ly train. They can go out and train, go to the park and train and they can run, and they can cycle.

“Gradually that will increase, and you might be able to train with people outside your own household so that will be another developmen­t over the next few weeks, I hope. That would mean that you could bring people together.

“Then the next one might be that you could travel to train. That would be a big step for grassroots rugby. That would mean that you could travel to Scotstoun to train as a team – still individual­ly, still physically distanced and with alcohol gel on the way in and out. Maybe not using the changing rooms for a while.

“But contact is not going to happen next week. It’s a gradual step (in that direction) in the next few months.”

 ??  ?? Professor Jason Leitch held “very sensible conversati­on”.
Professor Jason Leitch held “very sensible conversati­on”.

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