Participation is obviously very important, and needs to be fostered.
But it’s interesting to look at what Cricket Australia is doing here. Whilst very different to rugby, their game is absolutely dying at a Senior participation level. People just don’t have the time to commit to a full season of 6-8 hour matches on weekends.
And yet with 20/20 they have found a new market, both in participation and at the top level. The Big Bash has changed the game, and interest in cricket is as healthy as it has ever been.
At a participation level the game is moving away from long-form Saturdays on turf pitches in whites (though that will always exist), and we are seeing big growth in midweek and weekend T20 matches. Some of these are 8-a-side, with an emphasis on speed and enjoyment rather than what you would call ‘pure’ cricket.
Now there are so many differences between cricket and rugby, so we can’t say this is how we will end up. But you can see cricket’s imprint on what the ARU are trying to do here, especially with 7s and Viva 7s.
And it also shows a game can survive, and even thrive, with reduced participation. Again we should be encouraging participation and helping it grow (as CA are doing too), but try to build up another route to the game that doesn’t involve slogging it out on a Saturday morning.
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My boys go to what has traditionally been seen as a "rugby nursery school" in Sydneys East, with quite a few Wallabies in the old boys.
The AFL has approached the school to take the boys for their PE classes once a week for 5 weeks, all expenses paid, which the school accepted with open arms (why wouldn't they?).
At the end of the 5 weeks the kids came home with a Sherrin and a years kids membership to the Swans, giving them free kids tickets to games for 2016.
I couldn't get that stuff out on my house fast enough.
Now that's a 5 year plan!
It's worth noting that AFL have also added a non-contact mixed version for adults in recent years. AFL Recreational Football is the game. It's not too bad. I played it for a couple of years.
Yeah AFL 9s is growing rapidly, they are having a national champs for the first time this year.
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I went to the round 1 Swans match against Collingwood and noticed that it was what they had at half time rather than the little kids running around playing Auskick.
There is very clearly a move to weeknight mixed social sport and rugby needs to be a part of that.
That's why they need to start pushing Viva 7s a lot more aggressively.
I went to the round 1 Swans match against Collingwood and noticed that it was what they had at half time rather than the little kids running around playing Auskick.
There is very clearly a move to weeknight mixed social sport and rugby needs to be a part of that.
Are you malcolm turnbull?
I agree.
Everyone moans and groans about participation numbers being boosted by these sort of things and primary school days where people pass a football once etc. but the reality is that every sport does it and it has an impact on terms of government investment etc. and ability to attract sponsors.
Clearly people playing XV a side rugby is the best participation we can possibly have but the reality is that those numbers are going to continue to drop because there is a widespread trend away from this level of participation across all sports (particularly for adult men) and the gaps need to be filled elsewhere.
When I was at school MANY moons ago we played rugby every Wednesday through winter. Now schools only play sport at "gala days". I'm not talking about the leather elbow patch boys, I'm talking a public school in South East Sydney that produced many a Wallaby including a captain.
Why do schools no longer compete weekly during school hours? Also the Waratah Shield was held in high regard. Even just playing in a preliminary Shield game was something special let alone a final! Now it'd like pulling teeth just to get a school to enter it.
If anyone wants to look at why rugby is going backwards look now further than Pulver and the ARU!
Are these schools still participating in regular interschool competitions in other sports?
I don't think the trends are confined to rugby and I think there is a clear effort now to help reverse the regression that has been happening for a long time with the implementation of an actual plan.
You seem to point a lot of anger at Bill Pulver and the ARU currently about programs that just didn't exist a few years ago.
Why (and when) did Rugby fall over?Wednesday afternoon rugby competitions in the CHS system have almost disappeared - replaced in this area by soccer and rugby league. Same goes for Friday afternoon PSSA primary sport - rugby has long gone, but league and soccer still go on every Friday.
I like the idea of reversing this, but I think that Bill underestimates the magnitude of the task ahead. League only got in (around here anyway) because rugby fell over and it was the logical replacement.
I agree.
Everyone moans and groans about participation numbers being boosted by these sort of things and primary school days where people pass a football once etc. but the reality is that every sport does it and it has an impact on terms of government investment etc. and ability to attract sponsors.
Clearly people playing XV a side rugby is the best participation we can possibly have but the reality is that those numbers are going to continue to drop because there is a widespread trend away from this level of participation across all sports (particularly for adult men) and the gaps need to be filled elsewhere.
Why (and when) did Rugby fall over?
Would recruitment/scholarships have been given by the private schools then?I can only speak of this area. PSSA rugby competition stopped as far as I can tell in the 90s. I'm not sure why, I do know that it was replaced by league, despite the fact that there are 4 junior rugby clubs in our PSSA zone and 1 junior league club.
CHS North Shore zone rugby competition ceased late 90s/early 00s. Availablity of coaches was a reason that I was told. Not sure if there were other reasons.
What I could say is that had rugby had the sort of programmes in that are now being talked about, then it's highly likely that neither would have fallen over. And I'm fairly confident is saying that getting them going again will take much more time, money and resources than trying to keep them going would have.
Would recruitment/scholarships have been given by the private schools then?
That's about the time the arms race really got started with the GPS schools in Brisbane