Tag Archives: Blind Rugby

Visually Impaired Rugby 26 Nov!

Vision Impaired Rugby in East London

Metro Blind Sport is providing an exciting new sport, Visually Impaired Rugby in East London.

We are very pleased to announce that we have been working in partnership with East London Community Sports Association and The Change Foundation to provide an exciting new sport, Visually Impaired rugby.

For those who may not have heard of VI rugby or would like to know more you can do so by following these two links here:

The sessions will be led and coordinated by two experienced rugby coaches who will offer supportive guidance and coaching to those who take part.

The sessions will also take place on an all-weather pitch outdoors. These sessions will reflect the current sessions which exist in West London, Teddington and organised by The Change Foundation.  The first session starts in November and will then continue to run every month in East London.

And to celebrate the beginning of the VI rugby sessions, East London Community Sports Association will kindly be providing post-session food and drinks which we are sure will make everyone feel welcome.

Event Details
Dates:  26 Nov, 17 Dec 2019 , 21 Jan 2020  Times: 5:30 pm – 7 pm  (Monthly)
Location: 71 Holland Rd, London E15 3BP
Cost: FREE
Contact: lucy.simper@metroblindsport.org or call on 07966 260 089

For the first session we will require a pre-completed register, please contact Charlie Raven by phone or email to confirm your attendance and he will register you to take part.

Meet and Greet available at West Ham station, 30 minutes before the session starts. The following lines run at West Ham Station – District, Hammersmith and City, Jubilee and DLR.

To sign up to the FREE monthly sessions, please email lucy.simper@metroblindsport.org or call on 07966 260 089 to indicate your availability for session a week in advance. It is important to notify us beforehand to help us effectively plan for the session delivery.

 

 

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Visually Impaired Rugby in Japan!

Visually Impaired Rugby in Japan

The image above: Si Ledwith carries against the ‘Blind Blacks’ in 2017, the series that launched VI rugby (QBE)

Visually impaired rugby joins the World Cup party as England face Japan in Kumagaya

original article by  www.rugbyworld.com

Fancy a bit of rugby? Then close your eyes and picture this: the smell of freshly cut grass; the roar of the crowd; running full pelt down the field; the touchline almost in reach; your winger just to your right; the heavy footsteps of the opposing defender bearing down on you.

Now, open just one eye slightly, squint tightly, and try your best to catch that ball hurtling towards you while avoiding that other defender coming at you headlong even faster!

That may give you an inkling of an idea as to what teams playing visually impaired rugby face each time they take to the field. And on Monday, visually impaired (VI) rugby will hit the world stage as part of the Rugby World Cup in Japan.

In recent years, The Change Foundation (TCF) in the UK, with its visually impaired coaches and players, has developed VI rugby as a seven-a-side touch version, played with an adapted ball that makes a noise to help players locate it when it’s moving.

In partnership with the Wasps Legends Charitable Foundation, TCF established the first VI rugby teams in England and launched the game with a series between the ‘Blind Lions’ and the ‘Blind Blacks’ in New Zealand during the 2017 British & Irish Lions tour.

On 14 October, which is a National Holiday of Sport and Health, the Visually Impaired Rugby Festival will feature a three-match series between England and Japan at Kumagaya Stadium.

England VI team. Top (from left): Si Ledwith, Jack Pearce, Dan Linekar (coach), Ryan Jones, Christopher Styles. Bottom: Gareth Davies, Alex Bassan (head coach), Mathew Lancett (TCF)
Ready to go: the England VI team. Top (from left): Si Ledwith, Jack Pearce, Dan Linekar (coach), Ryan Jones, Christopher Styles. Bottom: Gareth Davies, Alex Bassan (head coach), Mathew Lancett (TCF)

The Change Foundation will also be showcasing VI rugby as part of the Festival of Rugby that is running throughout the World Cup. The finale is a match between a combined Japan and England Visually Impaired team and a Wasps Legends team captained by former England and Lions lock Simon Shaw and including ex-France flanker Serge Betsen.

“I’m delighted to be able to support this brilliant cause by putting the boots on in Japan,” Shaw says. “The Wasps Legends Charitable Foundation have done a great job supporting the development of this new form of the game. It’s brilliant that the rugby family is reaching out to players who up to now thought they could never play our great game.”

The England VI team includes a Welshman, Gareth Davies, who was diagnosed in his teens with retinitis pigmentosa, a genetic condition that causes tunnel vision. He now has just 10% vision in his left eye. “I was born in Wiltshire but my dad Dwyfor is a Welsh speaker from Ystalyfera and my late mum was from Clydach and I’ve lived in Wales for more than 20 years,” he told the BBC last year.

Also in the team is Si Ledwith, who was instrumental in creating the sport, as Rugby World reported two years ago. He told us then: “Our overall goal was to make the game look and feel as much like mainstream rugby as possible whilst still being accessible. So we have scrums and lineouts but they’re uncontested. We still create the patterns and scenarios of rugby but take away some of the danger.

“We’ve not reinvented the wheel. It’s based around rugby sevens, two-handed touch, but we’ve developed a ball that has some sound, both in hand when running and in the air when passed. We simply filled it with a thousand ball bearings so that it rattles.”

New Zealand’s Cory Herberley in action.
Blind ambition: New Zealand’s Cory Herberley in action. Now VI rugby will be played in Japan (QBE)

to play rugby at school on account of his visual impairment – he was born blind in his left eye and very short-sighted in his right. His sight was restricted still further by an accident on the cricket field in 2015, the ball hitting him in the eye and causing a brain haemorrhage that rendered him totally blind for two weeks.

“Fortunately the blood drained away but I can’t see anywhere near what I used to. I’m one of the lowest-sighted in the team and I was on the left wing because I can only see out of my right eye. You might have one of the tunnel-vision guys slightly wider so he can look across the line and communicate to those who aren’t seeing the line as well. It’s an interesting dynamic and the referee is key because he’s kind of a commentator.”

VI rugby ambassadors Andy Robinson and Ian McKinley have helped prepare the team for Japan. Robinson’s father was blind and had matches audio described while McKinley lost an eye following injury in 2011 but went on to play for Benetton and Italy. McKinley plans to take the field at TCF’s showcase event in 2020, the VI Rugby Six Nations demonstration event.

Throughout next year, TCF will work with each of the Six Nations teams to develop the sport in their countries. In England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales, TCF will work with the home unions to select a ‘Blind Lions’ team to travel to South Africa to play the ‘Blind Boks’ during the 2021 British & Irish Lions tour.

 

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