Everything about Rugby Union In Scotland totally explained
Rugby union is a popular
team sport in
Scotland.
The national side today competes in the annual
Six Nations Championship and the
Rugby World Cup. The first ever international rugby match was played on
March 27 1871 at
Raeburn Place in Edinburgh, when Scotland defeated England in front of 4,000 people. Professional clubs compete in the
Magners League and the
Heineken Cup, while the
Scottish Hydro Electric League Championship exists for over 200 amateur and semi-professional clubs, as does a knock-out competition, the
Scottish Hydro Electric Cup. Today, the governing body, the
Scottish Rugby Union (SRU), is one of only ten first-tier member nations of the
IRB.
History
There is a long tradition of "football" games in Scotland, and many of these such as
Jeddart Ball bear more resemblance to rugby than
association football, since passing and carrying by hand play a large part in them. The
Kirkwall Ba game still takes place, and involves scrummaging. Scottish soccer enthusiasts also cite these games as ancestral to their sport.
There is evidence for schoolboys playing a "football" ball game in Aberdeen in
1633 (some references cite 1636) which is notable as an early allusion to what some have considered to be passing the ball. The word "pass" in the most recent translation is derived from "huc percute" (strike it here) and later "repercute pilam" (strike the ball again) in the original Latin. It isn't certain that the ball was being struck between members of the same team. The original word translated as "goal" is "metum", literally meaning the "pillar at each end of the circus course" in a
Roman chariot race. There is a reference to "get hold of the ball before [anotherplayer] does" (Praeripe illi pilam si possis agere) suggesting that handling of the ball was allowed. One sentence states in the original
1930 translation "Throw yourself against him" (Age, objice te illi). It is clear that the game was rough and tackles allowed included the "charging" and pushing/holding of opposing players ("drive that man back" in the original translation, "repelle eum" in original Latin). It has been suggested that this game bears similarities to
rugby football.
Contrary to media reports in 2006 there's no reference to forward passing, game rules, marking players or team formation. These reports described it as "an amazing new discovery" but has actually been well documented in football history literature since the early twentieth century and available on the internet since at least 2000. .
The world's oldest continual rugby fixture was first played in 1858 between
Merchiston Castle School and the former pupils of
The Edinburgh Academy.
Scotland was was responsible for organising the very first rugby international when a side representing
England met the Scottish national side on the cricket field of the Edinburgh Academy at their
Raeburn Place ground in 27 March 1871; Scotland won by one goal. The Scottish Football Union (SFU) - later to be SRU - was founded in 1873 and was to be a founding member of the
International Rugby Board in 1886 with
Ireland and
Wales. (England refused to join until 1890).
Since that time, Scotland have been regular winners of the
Calcutta Cup, the
Six Nations Championship, and have participated in every edition of the
Rugby World Cup. Many of the world's most famous players have worn the blue jersey.
In 1895, there was a schism within the game of rugby in neighbouring England which saw the sport divided into rugby union which remained amateur and
rugby league which permitted payments to players. However, no such split took place in Scotland where the clubs continued to play rugby union. Fourteen Scottish players would cross over and play rugby league in England before amateurism was be abandoned.
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Scotland has played a seminal role in the development of rugby, notably in
Rugby sevens, which were initially conceived by
Ned Haig, a butcher from
Melrose as a fundraising event for his local club in
1883. The first ever officially sanctioned international tournament of rugby occurred at
Murrayfield as part of the "Scottish Rugby Union's celebration of rugby" centenary celebrations in 1973. Due to the success of the format, the ongoing
Hong Kong Sevens was launched three years later. In 1993, the
Rugby World Cup Sevens was launched and the trophy is known as the
Melrose Cup in memory of Ned Haig's invention.
In 1924 the SFU changed its name to become the Scottish Rugby Union. International games were played at
Inverleith from 1899 to 1925 when Murrayfield was opened.
Governing body
The governing body of the game in Scotland is the
Scottish Rugby Union (SRU), who operate the
national team.
Competitions
» See also Scottish rugby union system
Historically rugby union was an
amateur sport, but the dawn of professionalism changed the way in which the game was structured. The game is now divided into professional and non-professional spheres.
Previously there had been a domestic league that covered the country, the top division of which was essentially the elite of club rugby in Scotland. This league was established in the early
1970s to replace the complicated "unofficial championship" that had been competed for previously. Starting in
1973-
74 season, the clubs were organised into a league of six divisions - what today comprises the
Premiership and
National League elements of the
League Championship. Originally, below the six divisions (but not connected by promotion or relegation) were a series of District Leagues, covering smaller geographical areas, organised by District Unions and sometimes involving 2nd XVs. Over a period of time, these District divisions have been reformed and integrated into the
Scottish rugby union system meaning that today, only four clubs don't have their first XVs in the interconnected league structure.
The entire system is currently sponsored by
Scottish Hydro Electric, making it known as the
Scottish Hydro Electric League Championship. This league contains Scottish rugby union's traditional big name clubs, such as
Melrose RFC and
Hawick RFC, as well as major city clubs such as
Boroughmuir RFC,
Heriots RFC and
Watsonians RFC from Edinburgh, and
Glasgow Hawks from Glasgow who were formed from an amalgamation of clubs in the 1990s.
Clubs
Traditionally, rugby clubs were very often formed by ex-pupils of
independent schools and large
state schools, and many clubs names still to this day include abbreviations such as:
However, with the introduction of the league system in the 1970s, and the resulting increase in competitiveness and standard of play, most of these clubs have had to loosen their participation criteria to include non ex-pupils, although in most cases the clubs squads do still comprise a large proportion of individuals with connections to the schools. Often the clubs will be part-financed, and their grounds maintained or even owned, by the schools themselves.
Amalgamations of clubs are also reasonably frequent, and when this occurs the clubs often combine names, as in
Hillhead/Jordanhill RFC,
Hillfoots/Alloa RFC or
Waysiders/Drumpellier RFC.
Other leagues
Scotland is also home to the oldest organised rugby union league in the world, the
Border League, which was formed in
1901. The Border League doesn't take part in the pyramid structure of the National League, but all its clubs participate in it (and thus the Border League is now effectively a supplementary competition). Two small 'independent' leagues remain outside the system, the
Highland Alliance League and the
Grampian Alliance League but they've only four clubs between them (the remaining membership being 2nd XVs of clubs in the
League Championship) and are not likely to remain in existence for much longer.
Aside from the schools, the other 'traditional powerhouse' of rugby in Scotland was the universities, and to this day the Scottish universities have their own
league system independent of the
BUSA system which covers the rest of Great Britain. However, the BUSA Scottish Conference comprises divisions of 4 or 5 teams, and therefore not many fixtures each season, so unofficial Saturday University Leagues are organised (somewhat informally) between the universities.
Due to the social and amateur nature of the game, most clubs try to run as many teams as possible so that all their players get games on most weekends, and therefore a large system of what are effectively
reserve leagues operate. Known as 2nd XV, 3rd XV, 4th XV etc. depending on the quality of the players making up each team, their competitive activities were formally all supervised by
The Scottish 2nd XV League - however in recent years disputes and breakaways have led to the formation of independent 2nd XV leagues in the
Scottish Borders and in and around
Edinburgh.
See
University Leagues in Scotland and
2nd XV Leagues in Scotland for details.
Changes for the professional era
When professionalism was introduced into rugby union in the 1990s, and the
Heineken Cup created for clubs across
Europe, the SRU decided that the existing clubs operating in the Scottish leagues were not competitive enough. They were predominantly amateur, or at best paid small wages; they'd low supports and small old-fashioned venues; and the quality of their play was, by the nature of these factors, comparatively low versus new professional clubs and super-teams in other countries. As a rule their players trained only two nights a week.
After a short spell using District teams (effectively
select teams drawing together the best amateur players from clubs in a given area), the SRU decided to create professional clubs to compete in the
Celtic League, a competition which grew out of an Anglo-Welsh league (and for a time had a cup competition, the
Celtic Cup. It is now known as the
Magners League and consists of Scottish, Welsh and Irish sides. The aim of creating these 'pro-teams' or 'super-teams' was ensure that Scotland had fairly competitive sides operating in the European competitions, the
Heineken Cup and
European Challenge Cup (as well as the
European Shield during its short existence), and to drive up standards of rugby in the country.
Originally, before the
Celtic League started, the SRU created four pro-teams, based roughly on the old districts: the
Border Reivers based in Galashiels (with occasional matches elsewhere), the
Caledonia Reds based in Aberdeen and Perth,
Edinburgh and
Glasgow.
From four teams to two
However these proved a disaster in European competition and for the formation of the
Celtic League they were amalgamated into
Edinburgh Reivers and
Glasgow Caledonian Reds playing in Edinburgh and Glasgow respectively, and later renamed simply
Edinburgh and
Glasgow.
After a few seasons with two teams, the SRU then reformed a Borders team, initially known as
Border Reivers, then renamed
The Borders, before reverting to
Border Reivers again. At the time of this last change the other two sides were renamed
Edinburgh Gunners and
Glasgow Warriors. However, the SRU's extreme financial difficulties (they were, and still are, over £20M in debt) forced yet another re-think (especially when the Border Reivers and Glasgow were rooted to the bottom of the
Celtic League season after season) - at the end of season 2005-2006, Edinburgh Gunners were sold to a private consortium led by
Alex Carruthers, and renamed
Edinburgh Rugby.
Continuing difficulties
However, even with the running costs of two instead of three teams, the SRU were still struggling. Many attempts were made to find private backers for Glasgow or the Borders (although the only investors interested in the latter wanted to move it to Falkirk, Stirling or Aberdeen) but in the end neither of the teams could be sold. As a result, at the end of 2006-2007 the SRU yet again disbanded the
Border Reivers, leaving Scotland with two pro-teams, one under private and one under SRU control.
However, the relationship with
Alex Carruthers and his ERC Group which owned
Edinburgh Rugby proved to be very uncomfortable. The SRU defaulted in a number of payments of competition prize money to ERC, requiring the consortium to invest their own additional funds, and the SRU refused to share bar takings from
Edinburgh Rugby matches at Murrayfield with ERC - at the same time, the SRU was unhappy about the signing policy and the unavailability of players for international team training.
Following a bitter dispute in the press and media during 2007, in which legal action was started, and for a time
Edinburgh Rugby was banned from participating in matches, the SRU agreed to buy back
Edinburgh Rugby from
Alex Carruthers. This caused much unrest in the Scottish Borders, as their team had been wound up only months before, when the SRU insisted it couldn't finance two pro-teams on its own.
The SRU announced shortly after its buy-back that it intends to re-name Edinburgh Rugby as
Edinburgh RFC at some point in the future.
Popularity
Unlike in
Wales,
rugby union isn't the
national sport in
Scotland, although it's extremely popular in the
Borders region. It is likely to come second, far behind
football, although it has recently come under threat from the increasingly popular sport of
cricket, at least in terms of adult male participation.
Rugby union is far more widely played than
rugby league which despite being very popular in the North of
England, hasn't found wide popularity north of the border - there being only 8 minor clubs, who participate in the
Scotland Rugby League.
Rugby is most popular in the
Borders region, where it's played widely, and this is probably the only area of Scotland where rugby is the most popular sport - although again here ground is being lost, particularly to
football. In the rest of the country rugby tends to be the preserve of private schools, although not exclusively so. Despite not being so popular in the West of Scotland, the domestic league has been dominated in recent years by a
Glasgow based club, the
Hawks. The sport of
shinty is also popular in the Highlands, where few rugby clubs exist.
Whilst attendances at club matches in Scotland are fairly poor (certainly by comparison to football or to the attendances at club matches in neighbouring
England or
Wales) the national team draws a sizeable crowd, especially for the
Six Nations matches. Indeed, despite football generally being more popular than rugby in Scotland, Murrayfield is considerably larger than
Hampden Park, the
Scottish national football team's home ground, with space to hold around 15,000 extra spectators.
Aside from Murrayfield, there are few major rugby stadiums in Scotland. Many clubs in the
Scottish Borders have grandstands, notably
Melrose RFC,
Hawick RFC,
Jed-Forest RFC and
Gala RFC. Major city sides, including
Boroughmuir,
Heriots RFC,
Stewart's Melville FP and
Watsonians RFC in Edinburgh, and
Glasgow Hawks in Glasgow also have seated, covered stands. Of these, Boroughmuir and Hawks have very new stands, the remainder being pre-World War II in origin. Few if any clubs have floodlighting, and undersoil heating is virtually unknown.
The Edinburgh-based pro-team, currently based at
Murrayfield, has in its previous guises played at the athletics arena,
Meadowbank Stadium, and at the football ground at
Easter Road. The Glasgow-based pro-team played at various club rugby grounds, including
Hughenden and
Old Anniesland, as well as the athletics stadium at
Scotstoun before moving to the football ground at
Firhill. The Borders and Caledonia teams played at various club rugby grounds in Galashiels, Perth and Aberdeen.
Statistics
According to the
International Rugby Board, Scotland has 242 rugby union clubs; 350 referees; 54,000 pre-teen male players; 10,000 teen male players; 10,000 senior male players (total male players 74,000) as well as 23,000 pre-teen female players; 500 teen female players; 750 senior female players (total female players 24,250).
Demographics
Rugby union is particularly popular in the
Borders region. The towns of
Hawick,
Galashiels,
Jedburgh and
Melrose, amongst others have produced large amounts of national success and international players. Ironically the Borders currently lacks a professional side, while Glasgow the home territory of Scottish football has its own team.
Current trends
The national team
The first international rugby union match in the world was played between England and Scotland in Edinburgh in
1871. Scotland won 4-1. The national side is considered by the IRB to belong in the top tier of nations, although they're not as competitive as the elite sides such as
New Zealand or
South Africa. They usually play their home matches at
Murrayfield Stadium in the West End of
Edinburgh.
Scotland contest the
Calcutta Cup with England as part of the
Six Nations Championship.
Every four years the
British and Irish Lions go on tour with players from Scotland as well as England, Ireland and Wales. Scottish players are also regularly selected to represent
Barbarians F.C..
Further Information
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