The Phnom Penh Post

China’s ‘olive ball’ gets $100M boost to go pro

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CHINA will get its first profession­al rugby union competitio­n as part of a $100 million investment in the currently low-profile sport by e-commerce giant Alibaba, the firm and World Rugby said yesterday.

As well as profession­al men’s and women’s 15-a-side leagues, a national sevens program will be set up, the two said in separate statements. The money will be spent over 10 years.

But rugby has heavy handicaps to overcome in the world’s most populous country.

Fewer than 80,000 Chinese play the sport and it is far less popular among spectators than football or basketball. Its Chinese name translates literally as “English-style olive ball”.

World Rugby would not specify the size of the league, or when it would start, when contacted.

The chief executive of Alibaba’s sporting arm Alisports, Zhang Dazhong, said the game had “undoubted potential” to become a “mass-participat­ion sport” in China.

The two bodies plan to cultivate a million new players through school programs and train 30,000 coaches and 15,000 match officials in the next five years, according to the statements.

“We will work tirelessly to promote the developmen­t of rugby in China,” Zhang added.

In April, when Alibaba unveiled a tie-up with World Rugby to increase the game’s visibility through its internet video platforms, World Rugby CEO Brett Gosper said that China has ambitions to host the Rugby World Cup.

Gosper said yesterday that World Rugby’s “strategic mission is to grow the global rugby family. China is central to that mission”.

Rugby has increased its profile in Asia thanks to its inclusion in this year’s Olympics and the upcoming 2019 World Cup in Japan, as well as the growing world sevens series.

Alibaba has obtained the 2016-2017 broadcasti­ng rights to show internatio­nal matches including the southern hemisphere’s Rugby Championsh­ip and Europe’s Six Nations on its online video platform.

 ?? AFP ?? Vincenzo Nibali (left) has said that 2016 Tour de France winner Chris Froome (centre) should try next year’s centenary Giro d’Italia .
AFP Vincenzo Nibali (left) has said that 2016 Tour de France winner Chris Froome (centre) should try next year’s centenary Giro d’Italia .

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