BusinessMirror

AUSSIE WOMEN RUGBY TEAM LEADS WAY

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AUSTRALIAN players celebrate after winning the women’s rugby sevens gold medal match against New Zealand at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

LED by girls and young women, the ruck-and-maul and rougher-than-rough sport of rugby union is looking to regain its relevance in Australia. The Wallabies lost nine of their 13 test matches last year—the worst performanc­e in 60 years—and none of the Super Rugby franchises was a serious contender for the title.

Hit by dwindling attendance and poor performanc­es by its men’s teams, Rugby Australia has found one bright spot: an increase in female participat­ion after the women’s sevens team won the first Olympic gold medal offered in the sport at Rio de Janeiro in 2016. “We need to make sure that our female communitie­s are given the opportunit­y to be put forward and promoted, and to be talked about positively,” Rugby Australia Chief Executive Raelene Castle said in a recent speech. “Sport has really put Australia on the world map in so many ways. We really do punch above our weight and it continues to be a really important part of Australian society.” Castle herself is a pioneer in female executives leading sports teams or leagues. Before her appointmen­t as CEO of Rugby Australia, she led Netball New Zealand for seven years, then became the first female executive of a National Rugby League club, the Canterbury Bulldogs. She is one of the few female executives in charge of a major sport in Australia.

LEADING THE WAY

WOMEN’S rugby is indeed punching above its weight. Late last year, Castle said she was “energized and excited” by the growth of women’s rugby: Castle said more than 60,000 women and girls played some form of rugby in Australia, from noncontact sevena-side teams to the traditiona­l 15-a-side format. The number of females playing the game has more than doubled over the past three years, most noticeably in schools.

In 2017, more than 56,000 Australian students took part in Rugby Australia’s Get into Rugby program, with 40 percent of those girls. Castle said females make up around 13 percent of the total playing population in Australia, a figure that is projected to rise to 20-25 percent by 2021.

Last year, Rugby Australia launched the Super W league—the first national competitio­n for women’s 15-a-side teams.

Cobie-Jane Morgan was a member of the victorious New South Wales team in that inaugural competitio­n. She also played in two World Cup teams for Australia and spent four years on the World Sevens circuit, so she has seen the growth from both sides.

“The girls winning in Rio was huge for rugby,” Morgan told The Associated Press. “Ten years ago, touch footballer­s made up our women’s open side. From that growth a lot of young girls went on to learn spatial awareness, and from there to Sevens.”

Morgan also points out that although Australia won the sevens gold at Rio, it was another Australian, Cheryl Soon, now McAfee, who helped lay the groundwork for the sport’s inclusion on the Olympic program. Soon, who played on the Australian sevens team that won the 2009 world title, was a member of an Internatio­nal Rugby Board committee that worked with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee to have the sport added in Rio, and it will be there again next year in Tokyo. “It was a very special moment,” McAfee, who now lives in the US with her family, told CNN in an interview in 2016 after Australia won the gold. “I was overwhelme­d. We built the foundation seven years ago, and it was like this little piece of the house we have been putting together.”

WOEFUL WALLABIES

THE increase in female participat­ion and the success of its women’s teams have been a perfect antidote to the poor form of the Wallabies this past year. When the Wallabies lost to England at Twickenham in November, it was the Australian men’s team’s ninth test loss in 13 tests, a winning ratio of just 30 percent and its worst success rate since 1958. The loss also marked a sixth defeat in a row to England, which is coached by former Wallabies Coach Eddie Jones. It was the first time in 109 years the Australian­s have lost that many matches in a row to England. The losses also heaped pressure on Wallabies Coach Michael Cheika ahead of the Rugby World Cup, although he is expected to lead the team at the tournament in Japan beginning in late September.

CONTROVERS­Y ON FIELD AND OFF

ONE male player—probably its best—created controvers­y for the Australian men’s team. Israel Folau’s public antigay stance and opposition to same-sex marriage came in for heavy criticism. Among his comments were: “God’s plan for gay people was ‘HELL.’”

It hasn’t been all good news in women’s rugby, either. The captain of national team, Liz Patu, was banned for six weeks after admitting to biting an opponent on the arm during a domestic match earlier this month. AP

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