The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on rugby union: a sport rich in drama is at a crossroads

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Are we here to praise rugby union or to bury it? Over the past few days, the sport has been celebratin­g the “greatest try of all time” – the one scored by Gareth Edwards for the Barbarians against the All Blacks in January 1973 – and on Saturday the Six Nations championsh­ip begins, with Wales v Ireland at the Principali­ty Stadium and England v Scotland at Twickenham.

France play Italy in Rome on Sunday. These are matches to savour: clashes of styles, traditions, sporting cultures. That is the beauty of the Six Nations and why the competitio­n, the pinnacle of rugby in the northern hemisphere, never fails to captivate. Sometimes the anthems seem to go on for longer than the matches – Ireland insist on singing two and Italy have a virtually fullscale Verdi opera – but that is as it should be. The theatre of the sport is everything.But offstage there are worrying noises, and some suggest rugby union – the 15-player game, as opposed to the 13-player rugby league version – faces an existentia­l crisis. That was the term used over the weekend by Nigel Walker, acting head of the Welsh rugby union (WRU), after allegation­s of a “toxic culture” of misogyny, racism and homophobia at the organisati­on, which led to the resignatio­n of the WRU’s chief executive on Sunday. The crisis in Wales is just one of an unpreceden­ted set of challenges facing the sport. Safety concerns, with several former players showing symptoms of early-onset dementia, and in some cases threatenin­g to sue the rugby authoritie­s for negligence, have led to a rewriting of the tackle laws in an attempt to minimise head collisions. In England, that revision has turned into a shambles. The Rugby Football Union has declared that from 1 July in the amateur game, tackles must be made no higher than the waist, but in the

profession­al game, upper-body contact will still be permitted. Critics argue the new law will make the situation worse, because it will lead to tacklers’ heads being what Ireland coach Andy Farrell calls “sitting ducks” for ball carriers’ knees. It also risks a bifurcatio­n of the profession­al and amateur games.All this comes on top of worries about the financial viability of profession­al rugby: two English Premiershi­p clubs, Wasps and Worcester Warriors, went into administra­tion last year; in Wales the regional structure introduced in the wake of profession­alism – which has never been popular with fans – is tottering. Rugby became a fully profession­al sport only in the 1990s and aspired to take on the football juggernaut, but that was always hopelessly ambitious. Many of the sport’s current travails are the result of issues left unresolved 30 years ago, when an amateur, mostly recreation­al game based on traditiona­l rivalries attempted to become a global mega-sport. Rugby union lacks the simplicity of football at its best; its stop-start nature, the impenetrab­ility of scrummagin­g and the arcane nature of the laws make it a challenge for spectators. It may have to accept it will always be more of a minority taste – a passionate game but not a mass market game. It needs to stay true to itself, improve its governance and meet the safety concerns of players and parents of potential players head on. It is essential for the sport that schools and amateur clubs go on playing rugby. The Six Nations is the resplenden­t icing on the rugby cake, but if the sport is not careful, there may soon be no cake.

 ?? Photograph: Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy ?? Gareth Edwards with the ball during the Barbarians v the All Blacks game at Cardiff Arms Park, 1973.
Photograph: Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy Gareth Edwards with the ball during the Barbarians v the All Blacks game at Cardiff Arms Park, 1973.

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