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September 14, 2019

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Rise of barefoot rugby in rural Vietnam villages

Barefoot and muddied, a group of youngsters sprint across a makeshift pitch in rural Vietnam, passing a ball in a game of touch rugby in a country where few people have heard of the sport.

They belong to Vietnam’s only rugby program for locals, rolled out for kids in a remote commune where some players have to travel by boat to training sessions often held against a backdrop of rice terraces and curious onlookers.

Few knew anything about rugby when they joined the scheme, marveling at the egg-shaped ball, but are now keen fans planning to follow the Rugby World Cup in Japan, which starts this month.

With the first Rugby World Cup held in Asia, organizers are hoping to boost rugby’s popularity in backwaters like Kim Boi, where most kids count Lionel Messi as a hero but have never heard of New Zealand great Dan Carter.

Vietnam is one of the few countries in Southeast Asia with no rugby federation, and international games are not regularly aired on cable television.

That means the sport remains on the margins, making the rugby clinic in Kim Boi something of an oddity.

Launched in 2015, the ChildFund Pass It Back program is aimed at teaching youngsters life skills, with lessons on health or planning for the future interspersed with rugby training sessions.

The players aged 11 to 16 meet regularly on weekends to play touch rugby, which has none of the full-contact version’s heavy tackling.

There are more than 6,100 players and coaches in the program today, more than half of them female, in Vietnam, Laos, East Timor and the Philippines.

Some players will go to Japan in March with ChildFund — traveling by plane for the first time — for rugby training and life-skills sessions. Rugby wasn’t the obvious choice. Football, volleyball and sepak takraw (kick volleyball) were also floated as options when the program was piloted in Laos, but rugby was considered the most gender-neutral.

Coach Bui Thi Lan was told by her in-laws she should give up rugby after marrying and having a baby — in line with expectations women should avoid playing sports.

Lan would have none of it. She came back to coaching four months after giving birth and now teaches 60 kids four times per week. Battling inequality wasn’t the only hurdle.

There was no vocabulary in Vietnamese for the sport, and some terms were coined on the fly.

A scrum is “mai rua” which means “turtle shell” in Vietnamese, while the name for rugby is simply “bong bau duc,” which translates as “oval ball.”

Rugby was not always so foreign to Vietnam, though it has never been widespread among locals.

The French are believed to be the first to bring rugby to the country, and an excerpt from a 1933 phone book describing the Saigon Sports Stadium notes a rugby pitch with stands for 3,000 spectators.

Now Vietnam’s budding young rugby stars hope the sport will start to gain popularity.

“I really wish that Vietnam would participate in Rugby World Cup one day and I hope to be a member of that team,” coach Bui Van Nhan, 17, said.




 

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