Azzuri
Trevor Allan (34)
I'm now in a position in the junior rugby journey where I'm seeing some of the boys return to rugby clubs and can catch up with them and their parents. The reports are all very positive from both boys and parents (I also know a boy who didn't accept an irregularity, he didn't think it would suit him).
I think that the debate about the particular effects of these irregularities on the boys and their contemporaries misses the broader issue, and that is the damage to Australian rugby.
I was listening to Wendy Harmer on radio recently and she was going through the football codes ridiculing each (I thought all codes got equal shit put on them). When she got to Rugby it was a game played by "inbreed private school boys" where did the inbreed come from?
The problem is that rugby is perceived to be a game played by a handful of privates schools, run by private school old boys for the benefit of private schools. AND that if you haven't been offered an irregularity by 15 forget rugby and play one of the other codes, and they do.
This characterisation of rugby in Australia is extremely unfair. The current schools comp. is and will only reinforce the perception (the private schools want to reinforce the perception). And the irregularities further reinforce the perception.
The privates schools are not going to stop it is how they market themselves, SGS markets to a different market (i.e. we're not one of them).
The only way out that I can see is for the ARU to create an alternative that is competitive, through the JGC. e.g. State U18 and National U18 teams that can be competitive with Australian schools (which would then become Australian Private school boys, CHS and CCC are never going to undertake rugby development like GPS and CAS).
I find the current debate focussed on the individual benefits to the boys misses the bigger issue, and frankly the debate will never go anywhere whilst it remains down in the weed. Soccer addressed its' structural problems years ago and has now overtaken rugby in Australia, so has league and AFL, we need to do the same.
Well worth a read.....for those interested in a snapshot of the evolution of the various codes over the last 25 years including the impact of professionalism, MONEY, marketing and changing player demographics
http://www.convictcreations.com/football/battlerugby.html