Rugby in the 'hood
In some of the toughest neighbourhoods in
Tuesday, 20 January 2009
Rugby training in Crenshaw,
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Situated
in Crenshaw, one of the grittiest neighbourhoods in
On
a normal day, as one of the few bits of greenery in a concrete jungle, the park
provides a haven to the local homeless community, who put up with the 24-hour
din from police sirens and overhead flights into nearby LAX airport.
This
week, however, it bore witness to a more orderly scene that would perhaps be
better suited to the English Home Counties: 100 teenage boys and girls passing
oval-shaped balls backwards and forwards, during the gruelling first training
session of their new rugby season.
The
players, all aged between 14 and 17, are part of an extraordinary sporting and
social experiment. They are among thousands of youngsters, from some of
Few
Americans have heard of the game, but it was introduced to the
Today,
dozens of schools compete in the Inner City Rugby League, one of several
competitions that have sprung up across
"At
first, a lot of them found the sport confusing, but pretty soon they grew to
love it," says Dave Hughes,
Learning
rugby, which teaches values like hard work and team-building, can help improve
the students' self esteem, says Mr Hughes, and prevent them ending up on the
wrong side of the tracks. At
"Some
are even getting into universities like Berkeley and UCLA on the back of their
potential, because although it's only a minor sport, the coaches of the teams
there are able to make sure they get offered a place."
In
LA's
Now
inner-city rugby is starting to be taken seriously at the very highest levels
of the sport. Next month,
The
trip will form part of a week-long tour for the players – most of whom
have never left
Watching
the children prepare for their trip provides frequent reminders of sport's
potential to break down barriers. In normal circumstances, gang allegiance is
demonstrated by the colour of clothing they and their contemporaries wear: red
for the Bloods, blue for Crips.
But
on the field many of
Speaking
to them also reminds you how far they have come. "I hope to benefit from
the trip by learning better rugby skills, but my community and family will also
benefit from it by knowing that something good has come off these
streets," says
The
growth of inner-city rugby comes as American Football, which evolved from it
and is now the
Players
in the NFL, the professional league, were recently banned from celebrating
touchdowns and other on-field successes by making gangland gestures.
USA
Rugby, the sport's governing body, says the number of schools offering the sport,
particularly in disadvantaged urban areas, is increasing exponentially
"Traditionally, only a tiny number of high schools have played rugby, a
lot of them Irish Catholic schools on the East Coast. But that has roughly
doubled in the last five years, and now we know of roughly 750 schools,"
says Mark Griffin, the organisation's youth director. "Plenty of that
increase has been happening in the cities."
The
Yet
the most immediate benefits are on the streets. "
"It's
helping these children look at life differently because they are playing a
sport that originated overseas, and to start seeing themselves as part of a
global community. And in this day and age that has to be a very valuable
thing."
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Comments
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wales_09 wrote:
Tuesday, 20 January 2009 at 01:11 pm (UTC)
what a fantastic
use fo the sport that is in my eyes far beyond a game of 80 minutes. It brings
people from all walks off life together, you have 4-84 year olds playing the
game, in all parts of the wolrd. A game based on team ethics and values that
isn't the same in soccer, where the basis is on the individual and the scorer
is the celebrated.
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