With exactly one year to go until the 2019 Rugby
World Cup kicks off, Japan 2019 is on track to be the most
impactful Rugby World Cup to date having already attracted 900,000
new rugby participants as part of World Rugby’s ambitious Asia 1
Million legacy project.
Japan 2019 marks the first time the world’s
third largest sports event will be hosted in Asia and every effort
is being made to maximise this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to
grow the sport in the region.
The opportunity to reach and
inspire millions of new rugby fans across the world’s most
populous and youthful continent was a key motive behind World
Rugby’s bold decision to bring the Rugby World Cup to Asia for the
first time.
The outstanding progress towards the Asia 1
Million target is testament to the huge opportunity that exists
for rugby across Asia, and thanks to the close partnership of Asia
Rugby and the Japan Rugby Football Union in delivering the
programmes.
The progress to date includes more than 230,000
new rugby participants in Get Into Rugby programmes across Japan
with a further 200,000 schoolchildren in Rugby World Cup host
cities introduced to tag rugby following its inclusion in the
physical education curriculum of 1,982 schools in the Rugby World
Cup host cities. Additionally, a total of 9,603 tag teachers were
awarded licences after completing their training and are now
skilled to lead tag rugby sessions.
In programmes
coordinated by Asia Rugby, Impact Beyond projects implemented by
Asian unions other than Japan, have so far attracted 470,000
participants, demonstrating the great enthusiasm and opportunity
for the growth of rugby across the continent that is being
stimulated by the catalyst of Japan hosting the Rugby World Cup in
2019.
Launched in 2013, Impact Beyond is a major strategy
in World Rugby’s mission to grow the game globally, providing the
platform for women and men, girls and boys to be introduced to the
game.
Creating a sustainable legacy is a central pillar in
World Rugby’s major event planning and the Impact Beyond programme
is playing a leading role in rugby’s global growth story.
World Rugby Chairman Bill Beaumont said, “Japan 2019 is shaping up
to be World Rugby’s most successful legacy programme to date and
with one year still to go, is already setting a gold standard for
engagement across the sporting spectrum. Creating a
sustainable legacy is a central pillar in our major event planning
and delivering a tangible, long term impact beyond the six-week
event is critical to the event’s success. Inspiring interest in
rugby across Asia was one of the core reasons for bringing the
Rugby World Cup to Japan and the Impact Beyond programme is right
at the heart of Rugby World Cup 2019. It is a truly
exciting time for rugby in Asia with fan-engagement, broadcast
audiences and player participation numbers growing year-on-year.
Impact Beyond 2019 is a project that Asia and the global rugby
community can be very proud of and one that will make a lasting
difference to millions of lives across the continent for many
years and many generations to come. Our gratitude and appreciation
goes to the many thousands of volunteers who regularly give their
time to support Impact Beyond programmes on the ground, they are
the unsung heroes of Rugby World Cup 2019.”
An important
element of World Rugby’s legacy programme is a focus on bringing
positive social change through the power of sport. Announced
earlier this month, the transformative partnership with ChildFund
Pass It Back will positively impact the lives of more than 20,000
disadvantaged children in Asia, thanks to the support of Rugby
World Cup fans who share in the values of the game.
World
Rugby Chief Executive Brett Gosper, said, “We awarded the Rugby World Cup to Japan because we
knew that it could be a powerful game-changer for sporting and
social change in Asia. As a transformational rugby for good
programme, ChildFund Pass It Back is the perfect embodiment of
that objective and we are excited about the impact rugby can have
on thousands of children within the world’s most populous and
youthful continent.”
The highly successful recent Rugby
World Cup 2019 Trophy Tour visits to India, China, Hong Kong and
Philippines ahead of the three-month domestic tour of Japan
have further highlighted the huge potential for the growth of
rugby in Asia. In India alone, the Webb Ellis Cup was greeted
enthusiastically by more than 18,000 young people across Delhi,
Mumbai and Bhubaneswar.
Asia continued to embrace rugby in
2017 with a total of 721,800 girls and boys taking part in the Get
Into Rugby programme. Asia Rugby boasted the highest number of Get
Into Rugby participants of all the regions, with an 18%
increase on 2016.
Asia is at the centre of rugby’s global
growth success story and Rugby World Cup 2019 will be a fantastic
celebration of the emergence of rugby across Asia. A recently
published Nielsen report found there to be more rugby fans in Asia
– 112 million – than any other continent, with China (33 million),
India (25 million) and Japan (14 million) all ranking within the
top 10 nations globally.
World Rugby and Asia Rugby are
also dedicated to growing the broadcast market in Asia and have
been working together to develop a sustainable broadcast strategy,
that will enable more people to access the game, free-to-air,
across Asia than ever before.
Rugby pictures:
Pictures from 2019 Cathay Pacific / HSBC Hong
Kong Sevens,
Pictures from 2018 Cathay Pacific / HSBC Hong Kong Sevens,
Pictures from 2017 Cathay Pacific / HSBC Hong Kong Sevens,
Pictures from 2016 Cathay Pacific / HSBC Hong
Kong Sevens,
Pictures of Cathay Pacific / HSBC Hong Kong Sevens 2015,
Pictures of the Asia Rugby Sevens Olympic Games Qualifier in Hong
Kong,
Pictures of Singha Thailand Sevens 2015,
Pictures from the 2013 British & Irish Lions Tour in Hong Kong,
Pictures of Hong Kong Sevens 2014,
Pictures of Hong Kong Sevens 2013,
Pictures
of Chartis Cup 2012 and
Pictures of
Cathay Pacific / HSBC Hong Kong Sevens 2012.
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