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IRB Sevens, World Cup & Premiership 7s
2016: Rugby Is Back In The Olympics!
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<blockquote data-quote="Prestwick" data-source="post: 282711"><p><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (An Tarbh @ Oct 10 2009, 09:36 PM) <a href="http://index.php?act=findpost&pid=416001" target="_blank"><{POST_SNAPBACK}></a></div></p><p></p><p>Probably as seriously as they take the whole Sevens series <em>period</em> I suppose. To be honest, when was the last time that you saw established nations rushing star players away from the 15s game to some Sevens Tournament in Hong Kong or San Francisco?</p><p></p><p>Sevens belongs in the Olympics as much as Golf does. If they can fit in Golf then they can fit in a fast paced and highly exciting sport which has already made itself a major part of the Commonwealth Games. I think it belongs in the Olympic family and the only question is why did it take so long?</p><p></p><p>People will logically make the distinction between 15s and 7s, almost to the point that they are desperate sports altogether. So, I'd probably say that the RWC and Olympics will not overshadow the other. People will be equally ecstatic to see their team lift the Webb Ellis trophy and grab gold for 7s.</p><p></p><p>And the best thing is that now that it is an Olympic sport, national sporting bodies can now/will now have to release funds for development of 7s rugby. For example, China actually has a very good Rugby system within the Peoples Liberation Army. Who holds the records at the Hong Kong 7s for points and tries? Zhang Zhiqiang.</p><p></p><p>But beyond the PLA, they can't get funding for the sport as it is outside of Military circles still a fledgling sport. Olympic sport status solves that problem. It has now changed everything.</p><p></p><p>The Rugby World is completely different after last Friday because now Rugby is now recognised as a sport played across the world and not just one which is the preserve of ten or eleven nations in the UK and Commonwealth. </p><p></p><p>That is why it fully deserves to be in the Olympics.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Prestwick, post: 282711"] <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (An Tarbh @ Oct 10 2009, 09:36 PM) [url='index.php?act=findpost&pid=416001']<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/url]</div> Probably as seriously as they take the whole Sevens series [i]period[/i] I suppose. To be honest, when was the last time that you saw established nations rushing star players away from the 15s game to some Sevens Tournament in Hong Kong or San Francisco? Sevens belongs in the Olympics as much as Golf does. If they can fit in Golf then they can fit in a fast paced and highly exciting sport which has already made itself a major part of the Commonwealth Games. I think it belongs in the Olympic family and the only question is why did it take so long? People will logically make the distinction between 15s and 7s, almost to the point that they are desperate sports altogether. So, I'd probably say that the RWC and Olympics will not overshadow the other. People will be equally ecstatic to see their team lift the Webb Ellis trophy and grab gold for 7s. And the best thing is that now that it is an Olympic sport, national sporting bodies can now/will now have to release funds for development of 7s rugby. For example, China actually has a very good Rugby system within the Peoples Liberation Army. Who holds the records at the Hong Kong 7s for points and tries? Zhang Zhiqiang. But beyond the PLA, they can't get funding for the sport as it is outside of Military circles still a fledgling sport. Olympic sport status solves that problem. It has now changed everything. The Rugby World is completely different after last Friday because now Rugby is now recognised as a sport played across the world and not just one which is the preserve of ten or eleven nations in the UK and Commonwealth. That is why it fully deserves to be in the Olympics. [/QUOTE]
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IRB Sevens, World Cup & Premiership 7s
2016: Rugby Is Back In The Olympics!
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