Weekend Herald

Benefit of playing overseas enormous

- Alice Soper

During my playing career, I relocated to England for rugby. I wanted to prove to myself I could be selected on my form, not past reputation.

I wanted to expose myself to a different style of play and be immersed in a new club culture. I wanted the chance to test myself against some of the best players from the world stage.

My two-season jaunt helped establish what is now the top domestic women’s league in the world. The experience was worth every dollar I wasn’t paid.

It is perhaps more plain to see the raft of benefits on offer from overseas opportunit­ies in the women’s game as we are not distracted by the same pay offered to our male counterpar­ts.

It is true you can now make a living as a woman from your rugby prowess in England, Japan, Spain and alike, but you won’t be made rich. And yet players continue to book their flights.

Not everything to be gained from playing overseas is related to pay cheques.

On the individual level, there is much you can develop from exposure to different competitio­n.

One only need look at the tutelage Liv McGoverne received in her time in England. The quintessen­tially Kiwi midfielder, all big hits and line breaks, rounded out her game by slipping into the 10 jersey under coach Susie Appleby. A former pivot, Appleby guided McGoverne to hold her own against England first-fives, taking their team all the way to the Premiershi­p final.

McGoverne, who has been on the cusp of a Black Ferns call-up for years, gave up a dream of playing a home World Cup to head to England.

She is now returning to Super Rugby Aupiki and the New Zealand pipeline this season with a new set of skills to deploy.

Her team and Black Fern chances are better for this time away.

That’s on the individual level but the benefits are also there when we take a wider view.

The competitio­n McGoverne played in has become a beacon to aspiring athletes whose ambitions outpace their country’s offerings.

This is seen in the men’s game, too, where developing nations effectivel­y outsource their player developmen­t. Their internatio­nal stars regularly play in domestic competitio­ns overseas.

The best competitio­ns recognise this dual role they are playing.

The PWR takes a break for the Women’s Six Nations window to remove any conflict between club and country.

Men’s Super Rugby has a history of franchises such as the Sunwolves, Jaguares and more recently Moana Pasifika and Fijian Drua, paving the way for foreign nations’ ascension.

So we can understand that time spent overseas is good for women and those from developing nations but many are unable to see any benefit to the All Blacks.

Here we are overcome with fear and arrogance, questionin­g what a player could possibly learn from time away, as we believe ourselves the world’s best.

But we are also simultaneo­usly terrified that this position is so tenuous, in world rankings and our fans’ hearts, that it could be knocked over by allowing player movement.

It’s already happening, though. We have seen the introducti­on of midcareer exploratio­n in the form of sabbatical­s. Although almost exclusivel­y the right of first-fives and flankers, some players have negotiated a break to play abroad without breaking the system.

Surely a more uniform extension to this policy is worth exploring as we contemplat­e our domestic offering.

I went to England and learned a lot. About how to play the game and how to change it.

I would not be the player or pundit I am now had I never ventured beyond our shores.

There’s a wide world out there. One we need to embrace, individual­ly and collective­ly as a sport if we want to see how good we really can be.

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