ChatterBank1 min ago
Playing Proper Rugby Is Against Kids 'ooman Rights.
62 Answers
Gawd Bilmey, you couldn't make it up!
What a load of nonsense.
http:// news.sk y.com/s tory/16 51698/s top-tac kling-i n-schoo l-rugby -doctor s-say
What a load of nonsense.
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No best answer has yet been selected by youngmafbog. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Youngsters normally have no way of opting out of school rugby so I think, on balance, I'd agree with this.
It doesn't appear to extend to designated youth teams at Rugby clubs, which is where we get our national and international squads and where those really interested in playing the game go to play properly.
It doesn't appear to extend to designated youth teams at Rugby clubs, which is where we get our national and international squads and where those really interested in playing the game go to play properly.
I was forced to play Rugby at school and it never did me any harm in the event, but arguably that was luck rather than judgement. At least one collision sent me spinning through the air and while it was hilarious at the time for anyone watching (and even me when I think back on it), it could just as easily have ended pretty unpleasantly.
I don't think kids tackling in rugby should be banned outright, but common sense should surely apply, no? People who aren't built for it and aren't interested enough should only be playing a minimal-contact version. Those who are interested enough in playing the game seriously, fair enough (and indeed banning it might backfire for those people's future professional prospects).
I don't think kids tackling in rugby should be banned outright, but common sense should surely apply, no? People who aren't built for it and aren't interested enough should only be playing a minimal-contact version. Those who are interested enough in playing the game seriously, fair enough (and indeed banning it might backfire for those people's future professional prospects).
Perhaps it should be framed as part of a wider debate about what sports children play at schools. It was pretty much always football and rugby -- I was fairly interested in badminton (and tennis and cricket, to a lesser extent), but the opportunities to play it at High School were close to non-existent. Instead, weedy kids like me ended up playing sports we didn't like and weren't really built for either. Which is dangerous, no matter how you dress it up, and while risk is a part of sport and a part of life there are risks worth taking and risks that are not. A slightly-built person being smashed into by someone twice his size is not a risk worth taking, particularly if the children aren't exactly playing by choice.
Yes....it can be dangerous.
Yes...there are many injuries including paralysis, but the latter is very rare.
The suggestion that schools should ban tackling is a non starter........boys of middle teenaged years do not want to play " touch rugby."
When they leave school and join a Rugby Club and have 18 stone props running at them on the angles, for the first time, that would be far more dangerous.
No, it won"t wash.
Yes...there are many injuries including paralysis, but the latter is very rare.
The suggestion that schools should ban tackling is a non starter........boys of middle teenaged years do not want to play " touch rugby."
When they leave school and join a Rugby Club and have 18 stone props running at them on the angles, for the first time, that would be far more dangerous.
No, it won"t wash.
in practical terms, schools giving up proper contact rugby will have much more to do with fending off litigation.
http:// howe.co .uk/stu dent-ru gby-pla yer-rec eives-d amages- for-inj uries/
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