Cape Argus

‘Players are falling through the cracks’

- WYNONA LOUW Comment

IS ENOUGH being done for the club rugby system in South Africa?

Only France has more registered rugby players than South Africa, and while that says enough about the talent pool we have at our disposal locally, it should also raise the question of whether there is much more to be gained from that wealth of player resources.

When it comes to rugby, I doubt there are occurrence­s more unfortunat­e than having talented players fall through the cracks and never fulfil their potential or play at the level they could. After all, not everybody gets to follow the ‘traditiona­l’ path. Not everybody plays Craven Week or lands a contract fresh out of high school. And for these guys, especially, club rugby can be a platform, it can be a net.

It’s a concept three guys who have spent some time in the club system – Nic

Groom, Demetri Catrakilis and Kevin Musikanth – understand.

“If you, for example, look at how soccer is played here in the UK, they’ve got so many leagues and some guys come from League Seven and end up playing for Liverpool or something, and it’s just good structures, it’s nothing fancy,” said scrumhalf Groom.

“If you’re a coach and you’ve had success at Varsity Cup level, there’s definitely something special about you because I honestly think it’s tougher than coaching a fully profession­al team. There are so many things you have to manage – some guys are there because they want to play at the highest level, some just want to drink beer afterwards, then you also have to deal with (academic) schedules.”

There is no doubt that the Varsity Cup competitio­n puts both players and coaches on the radar. The player turnout to higher levels, such as Super Rugby, is well-documented, also in terms of coaches, as currently Musikanth (UCT) and Jonathan Mokuena (NWU-Pukke) are the only two mentors to have won the premier university competitio­n not to have coached at Super Rugby level or higher.

But what about those guys – players or coaches – who don’t even get a televised platform on Monday nights?

“There needs to be focus on club rugby, but there needs to be nurturing and training to enable role players to succeed,” Musikanth added.

“Everybody, from management down to club unit specialist­s, need to be nurtured into doing their role correctly in the profession­al era, otherwise we end up in a situation where we stagnate and the rest of the world catches up as they focus on the details of profession­alism.

“Clubs are profession­al overseas, and in large they’re amateur in South Africa, unions are profession­al, and I think that’s a problem.

“Hong Kong and Germany almost made it to the World Cup, they lost out to Canada, and a large part of those teams were from the Cape Town club system … those two teams basically had half of their players consisting of ex-UCT, Villagers and False Bay players.”

Catrakilis, who recently retired after having played in South Africa and Europe, added: “To me the whole structure just doesn’t make any sense at all. You go to France and they’ve got 14 teams in the Top 14 and they’ve got 14 or 16 teams in the second division – which is also profession­al – and then they’ve got a league below that and one below that.

“I feel like a lot of guys, if they don’t crack it at a certain age, they just stop because they don’t want to go and play club rugby and risk getting injured and pay medical bills and whatever else comes with it.

“We need more profession­al clubs. Somebody seriously needs to look at the system because we don’t want to fall behind when we can be so far ahead. We’re missing out on so many good rugby players because our structures are poor.”

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