Rugby makes move to get back into Olympics
By Paul LOGOTHETIS
OLYMPICS: BEIJING, Aug. 23: The International Rugby Board
doesn’t want a football-style club vs. country player row to affect its
chances of getting a seven-a-side version of the sport into the
Olympics.
IRB regulations state that clubs are obligated to release players for
international play, but those don’t mention the Olympics.
So the Dublin-based governing body will use a council meeting in
November to set a specific agreement to secure players’ release for the
Olympic Games period.
“It’s very important that the top players will be with us,” IRB
chairman Bernard Lapasset said Friday. “Everyone - the clubs, the
unions, the players, everyone - said that any updated version (of the
regulations) ... has to be carved out within that the players will be
released for the Olympic Games.”
Like football, the main concern for rugby in the player availability
situation would be the wealthy European clubs which contract players
from all over the world.
Some of Europe’s biggest football clubs won an appeal in the Court of
Arbitration for Sport against being forced to release star players for
the Olympic tournament.
Rugby is pushing for its condensed Sevens format - a regular side has
15 players - to be included in the Olympics.
The IRB said it had the full backing of the players and was in
continuous talks with the International Rugby Players’ Association over
issues including the rest period for international matches.
“All the top players are involved in this process,” Lapasset said.
“They support the sevens in the Olympic movement and we receive the
support of all the top level players.”
Rugby confident
Rugby is confident it can win one of the spots up for grabs for the
2016 Games, which will be held in either Madrid, Spain; Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil; Chicago; or Tokyo.
The International Olympic Committee will vote in October 2009 on
whether to add up to two sports to the 26 that will be played at London
2012.
Although bringing rugby back to the Olympics for the first time since
1924 would give Pacific Island nations like Tonga and Fiji a chance to
fight for their first ever medals, critics point to the sport’s narrow
market appeal. A report last month said that 97 percent of the 33
million people who watched last year’s World Cup final between South
Africa and England came from the eight so-called foundation countries:
England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, France, Australia, New Zealand and
South Africa.
But the IRB points to growing popularity in Asia, Africa and
especially in Spanish-speaking countries, with the sport being played at
the next Pan American Games.
“We’re seeing good support from a lot of people around the world and
I am surprised about that,” Lapasset said of the some 70 IOC members
that he had spoken with in Beijing.
“Probably it’s a good support now to rejoin the Olympics movement, to
be recognised apart of the family, which we are.”
Rugby’s proposed Olympic schedule - 16 teams playing over three days
- offers one major benefit that squash, golf, roller sports, baseball,
softball and karate can’t match: Capacity-like crowds at the Olympic
stadium over the first week of competition.
“You have a stadium that is empty for a week after the opening
ceremony.
We can fill that,” said Mike Miller, chief executive of the IRB.
The IRB hosts its regular World Cup, for the 15-a-side game, every
four years and stages an annual Sevens world series as well as a Sevens
World Cup. AP
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