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Growing Rugby in Afghanistan

Afghanistan Rugby Team at the East London Sevens

Think of Afghanistan, and it’s a fairly safe bet that clichés like ‘war-torn’, ‘troubled’ and ‘failed state’ will spring first to mind.

The next thing you might associate with Afghanistan might be the rise of their cricket team to the status of Associate Member of the ICC; such is their progress that they are confidently expected to follow Bangladesh to take their place as a full test-playing cricket nation.

What this reveals is that Afghans have a healthy appetite for team sports, especially those at which they can compete internationally.

One of the positive results of ISAF involvement in Afghanistan is that the country’s football stadia are no longer places of public execution, as they were under the Taleban, but are once more being used for football – and not just soccer.

Rugby Union football has taken hold in Afghanistan, and the early signs are very promising indeed.

The Afghanistan Rugby Federation (ARF) is the newest member of the world rugby family.
Although the game was introduced from India during the Raj, it faltered when the British left, and whilst some of the ISAF forces were playing the game, this was in camps and bases where Afghan civilians could not spectate.

However, just over two years ago, a group of Afghans visiting the UK were inspired by the professional rugby they saw, and felt that it was the right kind of game to take back to their country.

Like many new rugby clubs, the start was perhaps inauspicious with just three players attending the opening session, but by the third session a full fifteen was showing up and growth in player numbers has continued steadily.

Initially confined to the country’s capital of Kabul, the club game is now slowly spreading across the country and founder club “Kabul United” has now played two fixtures – an opening draw against Khorasan RFC followed by a 49-5 win over Hindu Kush RFC.

On the international stage, the Afghan team has made a bright start with steady progress since their affiliation to the Asian Rugby Football Union (ARFU) in November 2011.

Coached by Mohammed Ashur, the team has an English technical adviser in Steve Brooking. A former Foreign Office worker now employed by the UN in Kabul, Brooking has also been involved in the development of cricket in Afghanistan, and is impressed by the locals’ appetite for rugby.

“[Rugby] would suit the Afghan people because it is a tough, physical and athletic sport which depends on good teamwork, strength and passion,” says Brooking.

Clearly he has helped get this message across with great success, as from that starting point of three players, the club was able to arrange an 8-team sevens tournament involving 120 players at the end of the year. The best players were chosen from this tournament to join the national side.

Initially playing against military teams in Kabul, by April the Afghans were ready to go overseas and headed to Dubai to take on the UAE Shaheen in a three match series played during the final stages of the Asian Sevens.

Although they lost the series 2-1, as this video clip shows they displayed great handling and running skills and in particular a keen eye for a counter-attack off turnover ball. Some of our readers might have been lucky enough to see them in the flesh at the East London Sevens recently where again their performances did them credit.

With all the basics in place, there is no reason why Afghan rugby cannot go from strength to strength.

As ARF chairman Mohammad Mansoor says, “Currently we have most of the qualities required for this game. The only things that we are lacking are experience and a technical knowledge of the game.”

It is my hope that Afghanistan continues to get the right amount and level of international competition to allow them to thrive and develop as a rugby nation.

One of the key figures driving Afghan rugby development is the chief executive of ARF, Asad Ziar. He works very hard trying to raise the profile of rugby inside the country and also worldwide, and has taken a hand in efforts to increase participation.

Taking the advice of coaches and administrators in major rugby nations, he has overseen the setting-up of a mini-rugby system in Afghanistan with the aim of attracting children into the game to create a pool of home-grown talent.

This is the final piece of the jigsaw for a sustainable development in Afghan rugby. If they can succeed in attracting young players in significant numbers, then in 10 years’ time their international players can take the field with the skills and experience needed to compete.

The birth of rugby in Afghanistan is a welcome positive news story from a land where usually only the bad is reported. It is hoped that people like Mansoor, Ziar, Ashur and Brooking, who have the courage and vision to progress rugby in Afghanistan, will see their efforts rewarded with international support and recognition for the sport in Afghanistan – and also more recognition through articles like this one in the western media to balance the usual diet of gloom.


About DB9

Dave Beal played rugby league and rugby union for schools, colleges and clubs in his native West Yorkshire, as well as in Nottingham, Dorset and France, before having to retire through injury at 27. For the last 9 years Dave has been a junior coach at National 3 North side Huddersfield where he is about to launch his new U9 squad into the world of contact rugby. A level 1 coach and ELRA 2 referee, Dave is passionate about passing on all that is good in the game of rugby to the young players in his care. To read more of Dave's thoughts about rugby, follow his blog at http://rugbymusings.wordpress.com . View all posts by DB9

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