Apparently they were in quarantine in Sydney during their alleged wild weekend. Timelines don't match up, so still very unsubstantiated at the moment.
Apparently they were in quarantine in Sydney during their alleged wild weekend. Timelines don't match up, so still very unsubstantiated at the moment.
I heard third hand, that they were quite miffed they had to suffer the indignity of cattle class on the journey home, whilst the swimmers displaced them from their rightful place up the front.Not a great look for a program which is due for a review and failed badly, first reports of rugby and hockey players trashing their room, which they were reprimanded for. And now reports of drunken behaviour on the flight home.
https://www.smh.com.au/sport/rugby-...behaviour-on-flight-home-20210803-p58fkw.html
https://www.smh.com.au/sport/pretty...o-left-hole-in-room-wall-20210803-p58fgd.html
if true, then it should bet the nail in the coffin for the 7's program.. .
So a few players ALLEGEDLY got on the turps on the plane home, and we should disband the whole program? Feel like that's a slight over-reaction.
Meh. This happens every Olympics. It's an old trope, 'athletes go wild in the village'. There's no suggestion they did anything criminal. They should face the music for being a bit wild on the plane, but after everything they went through I am a bit sympathetic if they wanted to blow off a bit of steam.
I said prior to this little incident that the mens program should be scrapped with only the women retained, and if this incident is true then its the nail in the coffin i'm afraid. At best a handful of mens players should be retained(Longbottom etc), with the remainder of funding diverted to Super Ruby squads, come 7's World Series tournaments the handful of players should be supplemented with Club and Super Rugby players.
There's certainly a discussion to be had about how to use our (meagre) resources, and how/if the 7s program fits within that. But a couple of minor behavioural incidents shouldn't have anything to do with it.
Isn't it a case of working out how to fix the program going forward?
Clearly we're in a different space right now with COVID, but once the World Series returns, surely we want to try and be competitive.
It's both an Olympics and Commonwealth Games sport and is a fast growing component of the game, particularly for women.
Suggesting we scrap it due to bad behaviour of current players who overall aren't good enough doesn't seem like a good path forward.
I do think our longer term plan needs to be a greater link between 7s and XVs because there has to be a pathway from one to the other, particularly from 7s to XVs.
Personally, i think the men’s portion of that funding would see a greater return invested in U20s or divided up between the Super Rugby clubs.
A significant amount of the funding comes from World Rugby and the AOC so it isn't just a case where it can be redeployed elsewhere.
I think the path forward needs to incorporate it as more of a development pathway so we can use some of the better under 20s players coming through for a couple of years without it derailing their XVs career. It should be a mix of these guys with some career 7s sort of players (think Ed Jenkins). The career guys need to be top shelf and it can't end up a place where guys who are average and can't make it in XVs can still forge a reasonable professional career.
You would then hopefully create a situation where the 7s funding is helping keep more good rugby players in Australia.
most of the funding comes from the Fed Govt through Sport Australia and its specifically for Olympic events. Couldn't be relocated to 20s