Showing posts with label insurance for Rugby Teams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label insurance for Rugby Teams. Show all posts

Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Get involved in Rugby Union

With another great RBS Six Nations competition having been played, we’re seeing a spike in interest in Rugby Union as players both young and old are being inspired by the level of talent we witnessed on the pitches. Now, the RFU is calling all players to find a local club team and get involved. They have said that rugby is “a territorial, full-contact, team game, inclusive of all shapes and sizes, where 20-stone bulldozers are valued just as highly as small, pacey whippets”. And it could not be more true – we found ourselves cheering on 118kg ‘bulldozer’ prop, Joe Marler just as much as 92kg Chris Ashton, who was out there on the wing being a ‘pacey whippet’!

Rugby Union originated in England in the early 19th century and William Webb Ellis is often credited with its invention, running with the ball in hand in 1823 at Rugby School when he supposedly caught the ball while playing football and targeted the opposition goal. The first Rugby World Cup was held in 1987, taking place every four years, and annual competitions include The Six Nations Championship in Europe and The Rugby Championship in the Southern Hemisphere. As a major global sport, we’re urging everyone to give rugby a try if you haven’t already. The RFU website explains more about the various forms of rugby union and offers a club finder to help you locate a local team. 


Why is it good for you?

Rugby offers numerous benefits that all contribute towards a healthier lifestyle, from developing core stability to improving cardiovascular ability. Current guidelines recommend that adults should partake in 30 minutes of moderately intense physical exercise for 5 days a week, and as a high-paced sport, playing rugby certainly fulfils this criteria even at the most basic level. Every game involves sprinting, tackling, pushing, jumping and kicking, all of which involve fitness and endurance, upper and lower body strength, speed, agility as well as more precise ball-handling and kicking skills.

As a team sport, the social interaction and camaraderie associated with rugby also have significant benefits as it can encourage psychological well-bring, have positive effects on mood and behaviour, and maintain energy balance. This is especially true for boys since rugby is arguably the most economical of sports when it comes to manpower and inclusion; it can accommodate up to 30 players, welcomes the huge discrepancy between physical sizes, encourages intense exercise in an hour…all on one field more or less the right size. At the centre of the game lies the co-operation of all 15 players rather than the brilliance of one and though there are opportunities for individual flair, the success of the team pivots around ability of each team member to work with the others. This is valuable skill not only in sport but in life and an important one to impression onto boys. Similarly, both the laws enforced by the referee and the unspoken rules of conduct – to not bite, gouge, attack vulnerable areas – impart the importance of restraint and self-discipline, hence why rugby is used as the main team-building exercise for recruits for premier Army regiments.

The intense physical contact nature of the game means that rugby players are prone to injuries, including shoulder joint sprains, hamstring strings, ankle sprains and knee ligament injuries. The risk of these can be reduced when playing rugby by warming up and cooling down properly, developing core skills, employing the correct technique and using protective equipment. However, it is impossible to eliminate the risk of injury and the costs associated. If you’re looking to get into rugby, or are already a committed member of a team, make sure you protect yourself financially as well as physically. 

Find out more about our insurance policy, tailored to the demands of the game to make sure you’re protected: https://www.sportscoverdirect.com/insurance/rugby.html/




Tuesday, 4 February 2014

RBS Six Nations

The world’s oldest and largest annual premier rugby tournament began last weekend with victories from Ireland, Wales and a last-minute win from France over England . The competition began in 1871 when the first rugby union international was played between England and Scotland with the latter coming out on top. Over a century later, it has grown in popularity, tradition and competition, with six nations – England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, France and Italy – now challenging each other for the trophy, commissioned by the Royal Bank of Scotland in 2006.

Following 1871, annual and occasional friendly matches were played between England and Scotland until 1883, when the inaugural Home International Championship, comprising England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales was played. France officially joined in 1910 and the Championship became the Five Nations, remaining like this through its suspension during World War I and II (excluding France’s ejection 1931-1939), and it was not until 2000 that the tournament welcomed Italy, becoming the Six Nations as we know it today.  Over its course of play, the Championship has acquired a simple format which encourages millions of people to tune in annually worldwide. Each team plays every other team once, with home field advantage alternating from one year to the next. The winning team is awarded 2 points, a draw results in 1 and a loss gains nothing. Victory in every game awards that team the ‘Grand Slam’ while victory by any Home Nation over the other three Home Nations constitutes a ‘Triple Crown’. The current Championship holders are Wales, who denied England both this and their Grand Slam chances on the final weekend of 2013.

This year, England are looking to claim back the title they last held in 2011 and with the rising support, this is certainly possible. In 2013, over one million people attended the 15 matches, making it the best attended international rugby tournament in the world on a per match basis. The Championship which is completed over seven weekends in February and March is aired in over 160 countries, and it attracts an ever growing media focus. England hooker, Dylan Hartley has insisted that winning this year’s competition is crucial to the national team’s development, believing that the England squad have the ability to go all the way and that lifting the Six Nations would be the ideal way to start the countdown to the World Cup. “Win the World Cup?” he says, “Certainly we can”.

For some, the 6 Nations dream is over already. Rhys Patchell, the Welsh 20 year old fly-half sustained a knee injury while playing for his club side which a scan confirmed will require surgery. Out for a possible four months, it is unlikely that Patchell will play any part in Wales’ attempt to retain the Championship title. Ireland’s back rower Sean O’Brien is also in danger of missing the entire 6 Nations as he requires surgery on the dislocated left shoulder he suffered in a match against Ulster in December last year. The physicality of rugby means the level of injury sustained is high; physio treatment alone can be very expensive. Protect yourself against the physical and financial risks with a comprehensive insurance policy, like the one we’ve designed especially for rugby. Find out more here: https://www.sportscoverdirect.com/insurance/rugby.html/


Stay tuned this weekend to watch Ireland vs Wales and England vs Scotland on Saturday, and France vs Italy on Sunday! 

Monday, 20 May 2013

Rugby Fans Check This Out!

We spotted this on the BBC Sports site and thought it would interest all of our fellow Rugby fans! BBC Sport have created an ask Jeremy Guscot page on their website which gives everyone the chance to ask the former England Lions Centre a rugby related question. If you would like to ask Jeremy a question, click on the following link and follow the instructions.http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/rugby-union/22500650