BOP community rugby: Poor side-line behaviour

The Bay of Plenty Rugby Union is addressing the abuse, violenc, threats and other poor behaviour seen on the side-line over the last three weeks. Photo: File.

Re-accruing and unacceptable behaviour by a small number of Community Rugby players coaches and supporters has left a black mark on what has otherwise been a fantastic start to Baywide rugby, says the Bay of Plenty Rugby Union.

Abuse, violence, threats, and other poor behaviour has been reported to the BOPRU at a frequent and concerning rate, and the union has consequently found it necessary to address this publicly to the community.

In just three weeks of Community Rugby, the BOPRU has been made aware of multiple counts of coaches entering the field of play which has inflamed or instigated poor behaviour, an elbow from a senior club player to an opposition player resulting in a broken jaw, two counts of physical abuse on different referees, and two counts of verbal abuse towards different referees.

There are also confirmed reports of thirteen red cards in senior rugby alone this season - eight of which being dished out for fights/punching.

"Weekends of this nature are usually out of the box, maybe once per season. We have now had two such weekends where this sort of behaviour has occurred," says Referee Manager Cameron Russell.

"More concerning is the nature of the incidents, which have ranged from moderate to extreme in their severity. We have not had physical abuse of a referee for many years and have now had two in two weeks.

"Poor behaviour has no place in the Bay of Plenty," says Cameron.

"Rugby is a game meant to bring us together. We implore our community to rally together and stamp out abuse and violence in our rugby community. That way, everyone can feel safe participating in our regional game to their fullest potential."

Record it. Report it.

Bay of Plenty Rugby aims to create a 'Positive Rugby Environment” at all levels of the game, for all our participants whether they be a player, coach, referee, administrator or spectator. We try to strengthen the community game by the retention and attraction of players, coaches and referees and in order to do that we all must ensure that we provide a positive rugby environment for that growth to take place.

To do that we need to educate all of our stakeholders on what is and isn't acceptable behaviour whilst participating or observing our great game. We also need to provide a method for our stakeholders to notify us of behaviour that doesn't fit within the framework of, 'Positive Rugby”.

The Poor Behaviour Form on the Bay of Plenty Rugby website provides an easy way for anyone to make us aware of an incident that makes our rugby environment a negative place to be. To view the Poor Behaviour Form click here.

2 comments

Just play rugby

Posted on 26-05-2022 18:43 | By Get our roads

Far out, that's disturbing, what are we teaching our kids, violence is OK, talk about a Community going backwards, the rugby community, this is why rugby is not a game I fo)ow anymore, there is no need for that behaviour, players need to grow up.


I love Rugby (and most sports).

Posted on 30-05-2022 18:14 | By morepork

"Poor behaviour has no place in the Bay of Plenty," It has no place ANYWHERE on EARTH. I remember a time when we all played sport for the love of it. Winning was important, but more important was to enjoy the game and recognize skill by your own team OR your opponents. It was character building. You learned to accept being beaten by a better team and resolving to raise your own standards for a better result next time. Parents taught kids about "Sportsmanship" and they were examples on the sidelines. Opposing teams and supporters got together afterwards, sharing their love of the sport with goodwill over a few beers. And then it became Professional. Large sums of money were available to young men who could never earn that in normal life. WINNING became the ONLY important thing, to the exclusion of all else. We let it happen.


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