Quote McLaren_Field="McLaren_Field"As you know, I'm involved in a small way at a local RU club which runs ten teams in all age groups and has a range of RU-qualified coaching staff from enthusiastic fathers helping out to dyed-in-the-wool ex-playing members, none of whom fit the mould of chinless wonder rah-rahs, all of whom use rugby league as the blueprint for set piece moves and defending.
There is a hell of a lot of respect for RL in the Union game and I have yet to hear anyone wish for its demise.
Not that any of that suits the arguments of the oppressed victims point of view of course.'"
I started coaching mini's this year at our local club as my boy plays, and the local rugby club is a great place for kids. It's safe, well managed and we keep it fun (but as I told the lads last week - "the Fruit Shoot tastes better after a win"). There are all sorts of people at the club, a complete cross section of society.
Wednseday night London Irish have invited all local coaches (they have a partnership with us and many other small clubs as part of their community commitments) for a free coaching session.
They work really hard on this and have at least one festival we will play in this year - it's good marketing - half the kids came back last year with London Irish shirts and their parents came back with tickets for the St Patricks day game.
I guess there will always be a cross section of any bunch of people who will dislike or like a sport. I can't blame anyone for not liking league (my wife can't watch it). It's personal preference. I played Union for a long time and I understand it, amybe that means I can appreciate scrummaging, contact skills, rucking technique etc. It always used to annoy me when people who knew nothing about league would stereotype the game, sometimes I feel the same about people who do the same with Union. And as for boring games? Well, I've seen enough League games to forget.