Daily Maverick

Pipeline is priority in women’s rugby rebuild

South Africa’s 2021 Rugby World Cup campaign in New Zealand will form part of a broader plan to develop the women’s game.

- By Jon Cardinelli

South Africa’s national women’s rugby team should be more competitiv­e by the time the World Cup rolls around in 2025 thanks to a revision of national and provincial structures as well as some key appointmen­ts. What’s more, it is hoped that interest in the women’s game will grow and that more girls will take up the sport in the coming years.

Rassie Erasmus, South Africa’s director of rugby, put the challenge into perspectiv­e recently when he revealed that only 3,000 women compete in the open division. By comparison, as many as 85,000 men play the game at the senior level. It’s little wonder that top men’s teams in the Super Rugby, Pro14 and Currie Cup competitio­ns can boast so much depth.

Since Erasmus returned to South Africa in 2018 and addressed the structural issues at national and provincial level, the Springboks have gone on to win the Rugby Championsh­ip and the World Cup. Ranked a lowly seventh three years ago, the Boks now sit at the top of the rugby pyramid.

The Springbok Women, however, currently languish at 13th on the World Rugby ladder. What will it take for the national side to climb the rungs and challenge better teams such as England and New Zealand on a regular basis? For the first time, SA Rugby appears to be tackling this complicate­d question in a serious manner.

Priority list

Erasmus says the Springbok Women have supplanted the Blitzboks as the second-most important rugby team in South Africa. Last week, SA Rugby appointed former Ireland internatio­nal Lynne Cantwell as its first high performanc­e manager for Women’s Rugby. The 2021 season may well be remembered as a watershed for the women’s game.

Cantwell played 86 Tests for Ireland and has served as an executive committee board member with Sport Ireland. She holds a degree in sports and exercise science as well as a masters in physiother­apy. It’s fair to say that she has an intimate understand­ing of how the women’s game is played and run at various levels.

What’s more, and perhaps most significan­tly, Cantwell also appears to share Erasmus’s appetite for a challenge.

“I wouldn’t have taken this job if I hadn’t seen such a commitment from the SA Rugby leadership,” Cantwell said at a recent media briefing. “The franchise CEOs also understand that we have a lot of work to do. As we put the structures into place, we will see the results.

“The World Cup in New Zealand is the immediate focus. That is something that is visible and is going to make an impression on 13- or 14-year-old girls across the country. We want to show there is an aspiration­al pathway.

“My role is a very strategic one that looks to the future,” Cantwell said. “Ultimately we want to build a team for the 2025 and 2029 World Cup tournament­s.”

While the national team will be a priority, SA Rugby aims to address the problems with the women’s pipeline. It’s a complicate­d issue as opportunit­ies at schools are limited to non-existent.

Erasmus expressed his disappoint­ment with the current state of affairs when he revealed that his nine-year-old daughter had no outlet for her rugby obsession. It begs the question, how many potential profession­als continue to slip through the cracks?

“We don’t have the correct pathways at school level,” admitted Erasmus. “We’re working closely with the South African Schools Rugby Associatio­n [Sasra] to address the matter.

“There are about 200,000 participan­ts – girls and boys – in the Get Into Rugby programme. The boys continue to have opportunit­ies as they get older. The girls unfortunat­ely do not. My youngest daughter is nine, and she’s so keen to play rugby, but she’s just falling in with the boys at her school.

“One thing we got right is the youth training programmes, which cater for girls of 14 years and older. We see the results from these programmes when the girls get to the U20 level or in the case of some in the Springbok Women’s group.

“But nothing is happening between nine and 14. That is something we will look into with Sasra to help create proper pathways. There’s a massive, massive gap there.

“The headmaster and the school decides whether rugby is offered to the girls,” Erasmus said. “Currently there are schools that don’t cater for girls’ rugby after the age of nine. That’s a massive challenge.

“It would be ideal to have the same pathway that boys have. Sure, there will be fewer numbers to start with, but we have to start somewhere. We’d love to get to the point where we have schools competing against one another.”

Generating interest in the women’s domestic tournament is another priority. Erasmus confirms that an increase in resources has led to an increase in Premier

Division fixtures.

Sponsorshi­p, as well as greater exposure and publicity will boost the competitio­n – and ultimately encourage more girls to take up the game.

“In the past, the ladies might only play three or four games in the Premier Division each season,” said Erasmus. “That’s not enough preparatio­n, especially when you consider that some of the players would go on to play

Test matches later in the year.

“I’m positive about the changes we’ve made this year, though, in the build-up to the World Cup.”

Cantwell has contracted 19 women to the national side. A group of 24 are currently in camp, and will be joined by a further 16 players in the coming weeks.

After the camp, they will return to their respective provinces. The six teams in the Premier Division will compete in a double round of matches.

More than 40 women have been identified as players of national interest across the two divisions. Again, steps need to be taken to ensure that the best players are exposed to a higher standard of competitio­n and conditioni­ng as much as possible.

“They only play a single round of matches in the second-tier tournament,” explained Erasmus. “Lynne is currently negotiatin­g for some of those players to be loaned to Premier Division teams.

“For example, if there is a hot prospect for the World Cup that is currently playing for Free State in the First Division, we will try [to] place them in a Premier Division team so that they can play a double round of games.”

The profile of women’s cricket has been boosted since the matches have been televised. The women’s game in South Africa would surely benefit from similar exposure.

Further sponsorshi­p and investment would fast-track the developmen­t of the game at junior and senior levels.

“We know SA Rugby has committed to this and we are moving forward with our plans,” Cantwell said. “It will take time.

“After the World Cup campaign we’ll have a barometer of where we are and what we need to do. The more visible the team is, the quicker that process will be.”

My youngest daughter is nine and she’s so keen to play rugby but she’s just falling in with the boys at her school

Rassie Erasmus

 ?? Photo: Shaun Roy/Gallo Images ?? It would be ideal to have the same pathway for girls that boys have, says Rassie Erasmus, South Africa’s director of rugby. While 85,000 men play the game at the senior level, only 3,000 women compete in the open division.
Photo: Shaun Roy/Gallo Images It would be ideal to have the same pathway for girls that boys have, says Rassie Erasmus, South Africa’s director of rugby. While 85,000 men play the game at the senior level, only 3,000 women compete in the open division.
 ?? Photo: Lee Warren/Gallo Images ?? Aphiwe Ngwevu in a 2019 Women’s World Cup qualifier.
Photo: Lee Warren/Gallo Images Aphiwe Ngwevu in a 2019 Women’s World Cup qualifier.

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