[FYI] “Gender Equality and Women’s Rugby”

Februar 8, 2010 von nina

The main question is, “Is there such a thing at all?”. The answer is of course NO. This is one of the biggest obstacles for the development of the women’s game worldwide. The perfect example is the team from Tukkies. Despite their performances even on the international stage, they receive no support from the University rugby club, or from the Blue Bulls Rugby union. Even after finishing in the top four (official placing of equal third) in the International Invitational Women’s competition in Dubai in 2009, their budget is still the same as last year, ZERO. The only positive was that the University (not the University Sports Club), contributed a portion of the costs to allow the players to go to Dubai. (Even the US national women’s team had to contribute to their own air-fares!)

The women put in a lot of work and they don’t get rewarded for their efforts. In 2009 the Tuks ladies team started practice in early January. The girls had practice session of one and a half hours each, two or three times a week up to the beginning of December and none of that was rewarded the unions or the clubs. At the same time they also have no privileges regarding gymnasium work and it is only a few that can afford a gym membership. Which also means that the time they spend on the training pitch must include all aspects of conditioning, skills, strategy, etc. While these girls have to work to be able to live.

Every year the girls also hear the same empty promises from the union, that “conditions will change”, that they “will look after the players”, that they “will get something in return for the efforts they put in”. But the sad truth is clearly evident in the “Blue Bulls Strategic Plan – 2009-2013″, as taken “as is” from their website that there is no workable plan to actually address the inequality. The saddest part of this is that this “strategic plan” is supposed to be for the period up to 2013, which means we can expect absolutely no changes up to then. It is also clear that women are excluded from the “high performance group” and the only functioning high performance group in women’s rugby is actually run and funded by the coaches of the Tukkies Women’s team in their personal capacity. The coaches pay out of their own pockets for the players transport to and from practices. The coaches pay for other expenses that include training kit and equipment, and transport cost to and from events. If they are lucky the Tukkies women’s team receive ONE set of jerseys from the club in a year.

At the same time the IRB and national sporting bodies are making a huge hoo-haa about the sevens game being included in the Olympic Games in 2016, they appear to do very little to promote the women’s game. In the Las Vegas International women’s event, the women’s games are being played on a pitch to the side and only the final is played on the main ground! Even in Dubai, in the UAE, which is supposed to be a predominantly Islamic nation, the women get more exposure on the main pitch.

What is also very evident, is the general negative vibe from the men at the union and club after the achievements of the Tuks Ladies team. The fact that the team was able to perform, as a club team on the international stage, with a ZERO budget appears to be a huge problem in some quarters. What was actually amazing was the exact opposite and positive responses from the international men’s sevens teams in Dubai, where positive feedback came from the South African and the Fiji men’s teams.

So, we have to ask, “where is the problem then?”. As it appears that the public and the men’s players accept the participation of women readily. Why are the women then struggling to find support from the administrators. Does the problem lie with the clubs, or the provincial unions, or is it with the national union, or could the problem start at the top, with the IRB? At this stage however there is a lot of finger pointing, but not one single body prepared to take the responsibility. The club blames the union, the union blames the club and the national body, etc, etc… Maybe we should let an “Equality Court” decide?

Taken from the website of a top women’s rugby university team (Tukkies) in South Africa – http://www.tuksrugby.co.za/news.php

ENC: “Fixtures of the 2010 European Trophy are known”

November 27, 2009 von rugbyturniere

Fixtures of the European Trophy 2010 edition, women 15 competition, have been made official on Tuesday November 17, 2009. The tournament will gather eight teams together and will take place in France in the Alsace Lorraine region, from 7 until 16 of May 2010.

“The European Trophy is an important tournament for the development of women 15’s rugby within Europe. The European Championship takes place each four years (Note: next edition in 2012) but the FIRA-AER must propose games to emerging unions trough a serious competition and with the help of the big nations.” Here are the words of Jean-Claude Baqué, Chairman of the FIRA-AER, and which sum up the philosophy of the European Trophy.

After Sweden in 2009, it is France, and more precisely the Regional Committee of Alsace Lorraine who will host the event from 7 until 16 of May, 2010.

Pool’s composition

Pool A
France A
Netherlands
Spain
Belgium

Pool B
Italy
Sweden
Russia
Germany

Fixtures

Saturday May 8, 2010

Pool A
France A – Belgium
Netherlands – Spain

Pool B
Italy – Germany
Sweden – Russia

Monday May 10, 2010

Pool A
France A – Spain
Netherlands – Belgium

Pool B
Italy – Russia
Sweden – Germany

Wednesday May 12, 2010

Pool A
France A – Netherlands
Spain – Belgium

Pool B
Italy – Sweden
Russia – Germany

Saturday May 15, 2010

Final
1st Pool A – 1st Pool B

Match for the 3rd place
2nd Pool A – 2nd Pool B

Match for the 5th place
3rd Pool A – 3rd Pool B

Match for the 7th place
4th Pool A – 4th Pool B

Each half of matches will last 35 minutes playing times.

via http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com

kurzes update:

September 6, 2009 von nina

leider haben sich in satzung und satzungsanhang fehler eingeschlichen.

ist es im anhang wohl nur ein typo:
“2.2 Seitenauslinien
8er-Seitenauslinien sind die regulaere 5m Gasselinie vor dem Malfeld und die regulaere 10 m Linie dieser Spielfeldhaelfte” –
gemeint ist wohl die 5m linie, also jene linie, welche 5m zur mallinie eingerueckt ist….
so findet sich in der satzung folgendes:
“§ 12 Sicherheitsregeln
Die Sicherheitsregeln des DRV bezueglich des Gedraenges kommen nicht zur Anwendung.”

meines wisssens nach koennen die DRF das nicht entscheiden.
die drv-sicheheitsregeln sind da eindeutig:
“REGEL 20 – GEDRAENGE

In allen Spiel- und Altersklassen des DRV unterhalb der
2. Bundesliga kommen die U-19 Regelvariationen zur Anwendung.”

insofern sind diese unterlagen wohl eher eine art “anregung”, wie man das machen koennte, als eine ernsthafte spielordnung.

Ad Nauseam: die neuen 8er Ligen und kein Ende..

August 26, 2009 von nina

Nachdem man einen Moment durchatmen durfte angesichts der doch noch eingetroffenen Unterlagen geht es nun jeden Tag ein bisschen weiter:
aus mehreren Regionalligen haben sich schon Teams aufgrund der neuen Spielsysteme abgemeldet. Derzeit scheint die RL West die einzige “verlustfreie” zu sein.
Sehr schade, das es kurz vor Saisonbeginn noch so ein Chaos geben muss – ich finde, das haette nicht sein muessen.
Und als waere es nicht schlimm genug, das keiner genau weiss, welche Teams ueberhaupt noch RL spielen, so kam als Tuepfelchen auf dem i noch der dezente Hinweis, das zumindest §12 der RL Satzung (ausser Kraft setzen der Sicherheitsregeln) rechtlich und haftungsmaessig nicht haltbar ist.
Ich widerum frage mich, ob eine solche Satzung ueberhaupt von einem Interims-Gremium beschlossen werden kann und dafuer nicht eh eine ausserordentliche MV erforderlich waere….

Alles neu im deutschen Frauenrugby….

August 21, 2009 von nina

Endlich gab es nun doch offizielle Informationen ueber das neue Spielsystem der Regionalligen.

Die Informationspolitik der DRF halte ich weiterhin fuer ausbaufaehig.

Hier nun die wichtigsten Unterlagen im pdf-Format:

RLSatzung-8er
AnlageRLSatzung-8er
Spielplan09_10-RLen
Super7sSerie