Saturday, November 26, 2005

Madagascar rugby inspires new passion

Partly that is because they have never excelled on the international stage.

That changed three weeks ago with a surprise 33-31 home victory against a strong South African amateur side, in the semi-finals of the African Top Nine cup.

Captain Noe Mboazafy

On Saturday, the Madagascar Makis, named after the island's national animal, a species of the legendary lemur, face Morocco in the Top Nine final.

The team is rated one of Africa's best, with several players in the French league.

Though it looks like a bit of a David and Goliath contest, the Makis have surprised so far.

Favoured game

In the game against the South African side, their quick backs consistently broke through a lacklustre defence.

About 40,000 people packed into the national stadium to watch. Those who could not afford tickets hiked up to the top of Queen's Palace on a cliff-face that overlooks the stadium to get a bird's eye view.

Captain Noe Mboazafy kicked a spectacular drop goal from the half-way line that visibly delighted President Marc Ravalomanana, who turned up especially.

The Malagasy people are really behind us - I think that gives us a good chance," Mr Mboazafy said.

"Rugby is more popular than it's ever been."

Coach Berthin Rafalimanana thinks the Makis' recent successes were down to a change of psychology.

He has been using tales of Madagascar's bloody past to harness their aggression when faced with a rival national team.

"I tell them war stories, especially from the colonial period under the French," he said.

"There are anecdotes from the liberation struggle which I can use to charge up their aggression to defend their country," he said.

This new aggression, added to their already remarkable speed, is what enabled Madagascar to beat Ivory Coast and South Africa in this year's cup.

"Any foreign team that faces us become like soldiers attacking Madagascar," he said. "Rugby is like war - you might lose a battle one day, but there'll be more."

Rough contact

If that is so, then where are the patriots rallying around Madagascar's cause to be found?

A short walk around Antananarivo's burgeoning slums tells the story of where rugby comes from in Madagascar.

On this island of 17 million people - one of the world's poorest with three-quarters living below the poverty line - rugby is popular above all in deprived urban areas.

Children in filthy rags can be seen doing lineouts and scrums using a screwed-up plastic bottle as a make-shift rugby ball.


Children in Madagascar play Rugby

They play rough: children as young as five are rarely afraid to get tackled into the hard, dry earth.

"Rugby is mostly popular in poor areas because it's a contact sport," said Patricia Rajariarison, a life-long rugby enthusiast.

"The elite didn't want to have that rough contact against each other."

Ms Rajariarison said that, traditionally, it was only the lower caste of society that played and watched rugby. But this is rapidly changing with the Makis' ascent to semi-stardom.

"The people who played rugby were the descendents of slaves," she said.

"But that's changing: the rugby team is doing so well, whereas in the football, Madagascar didn't even qualify for the Africa Cup of Nations."

New horizons

National Rugby Federation board member Tina Lalaina thinks a win against Morocco in France in the final could prove inspiration for Antananarivo's poor.

"It's a dream for them," she said. "Every player in the Makis is a star in his home quarter. [The children] are so proud of these players."

Madagascar's rugby team

As well as getting used to near-freezing temperatures of the Paris winter, Madagascar will have to play a team whose speed and technical prowess has already got them into the final five times before and won it for them in 2003.

But full-back Hary Nirina thinks it much depends on the day.

"Each team has their strong and weak points. Our strong point is our speed: we run quickly, both the forwards and our backs," he said.

"Our weak point is that we're too small. The Moroccans play that French style of rugby and are very confident. But I think we can still show them a good game."


Madagascar is not the first country that springs to mind when you think of rugby.

By Tim Cocks

Thursday, November 24, 2005

Aussies back into top three

The improvement by the Wallabies, at the expense of France and England, is the only change to the Top 10 on the IRB rankings.

But there is plenty of movement below the Top 10 - where the biggest movers Romania, who improved from 18th to 15th after their 22-20 triumph over Canada at the weekend.

Current World Ranking:
(As at 21/11/2005 - last week's standing in brackets)
1 (1) New Zealand 93.32
2 (2) South Africa 89.96
3 (5) Australia 84.98
4 (3) France 84.90
5 (4) England 83.27
6 (6) Wales 81.49
7 (7) Ireland 80.03
8 (8) Argentina 78.16
9 (9) Fiji 74.08
10 (10) Scotland 73.60
11 (11) Italy 71.44
12 (12) Samoa 70.97
13 (14) USA 68.31
14 (13) Canada 67.42
15 (18) Romania 66.47
16 (16) Uruguay 66.27
17 (15) Portugal 65.93
18 (17) Japan 65.93
19 (19) Georgia 63.88
20 (20) Tonga 62.04
21 (21) Morocco 61.51
22 (22) Korea 60.44
23 (23) Russia 59.25
24 (24) Chile 59.22
25 (25) Czech Republic 58.78
26 (26) Namibia 58.52
27 (28) Spain 55.80
28 (27) Germany 55.60
29 (29) Hong Kong 54.08
30 (30) Paraguay 53.63
31 (31) Ukraine 53.08
32 (32) Netherlands 51.86
33 (33) Poland 51.82
34 (34) Tunisia 51.32
35 (35) Brazil 50.98
36 (36) Croatia 50.87
37 (37) Belgium 50.84
38 (38) Kenya 48.97
39 (40) China 48.79
40 (41) Switzerland 48.70
41 (42) Ivory Coast 48.57
42 (43) Arabian Gulf 48.31
43 (44) Chinese Taipei 48.28
44 (39) Moldova 47.76
45 (45) Madagascar 47.70
46 (46) Sri Lanka 47.52
47 (47) Zimbabwe 47.32
48 (48) Singapore 46.70
49 (49) Denmark 46.41
50 (50) Kazakhstan 46.33


Wallabies move past France, England
Australia's first win in eight attempts, a 30-14 away victory over Ireland, sees them leapfrog France and England into third place in the International Rugby Board (IRB) World Rankings.

Thursday, November 10, 2005

Madagascan march

Madagascar are rapidly emerging as one of rugby's unheralded success stories. Last week they claimed a shock 33-31 win over South Africa Amateurs to secure a place in the final of the Confederation of African Rugby's Top Nine competition, where they will meet Morocco.

Playing in front of yet another 40,000 capacity crowd at the Stade Municipal De Mahamasina in the capital Antananarivo - which could become a familiar name on the rugby map if the Madagascans continue to improve - they again produced the fluid "Fijian-style" game they have developed in recent years to overcome heavier and stronger opponents.

Though enjoying an unprecedented surge of popularity at present, rugby has long been established on the large Indian Ocean island, indeed the union are celebrating their centenary season.

The Moroccans, meanwhile, continue to improve steadily and outclassed an under-strength and dispirited Namibia 49-0 in Casablanca, scoring eight tries, to establish themselves as favourites to qualify from the African pool next year for the 2007 World Cup.

Morocco and Madagascar will now travel to Paris for the final, which will be staged as a curtain-raiser to France's final autumn international, against South Africa at the Stade de France on Nov 26. Hats off to the French, and the International Rugby Board, for their splendid initiative on this front in such a simple but obvious way of helping expose the smaller rugby nations to the big time.


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Tick the Boks

Thanks to our friends at Invesco Perpetual this column again has a pair of tickets to give away for a Wales home game, this time the sell-out match against South Africa on Nov 19. First-class rail travel to Cardiff from your home - assuming you live in Britain, as we had entries from the United States and Israel for last week's competition - will also be paid for. But first you must exercise the grey matter. Nothing in life is free. Who was the Wales captain in June 1999 when Wales recorded their only win over the Springboks? And who were the Welsh points scorers on that momentous occasion? Entries should be e-mailed to me - Brendan.Gallagher@telegraph.co.uk - by 3pm next Tuesday.


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Age no barrier

There is no substitute for experience, certainly down at Pershore, where the club's third XV - who have amassed 154 points in the past three games - believe they can boast the oldest second-row combination in the country. Jim Booth, a trim 70, and Hugh Gibbon, a ridiculously youthful 67, have been seeing off opponents a third of their age in the line-out and still have the energy to contribute elsewhere.

There was consternation in the changing rooms when Jim, a retired vet, failed to appear one Saturday recently until they remembered he had taken the week off to compete in the Malvern Beacon run. Hugh, a retired teacher, has only recently given up groundsman duties at the Pershore club.

A bottle of something bubbly will be winging its way to these gentlemen unless any other regular "boiler house" combination in Britain can provide evidence of exceeding their combined age of 137. Minimum qualification is three matches together in the second row this season.


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England step up

The vaunted women's Super League series will kick off on Nov 20 and is seen as a key component in England's attempt to topple New Zealand at the World Cup in Canada next summer.

Around 90 players eligible for England will step out of the club season to compete in one of four teams in a two-round league tournament. The 44 members of England's elite squad will play only Super League and representative rugby this season.

The four sides - Stormers, based at Gloucestershire's Hartpury College, Tornados, from St Mary's in Twickenham, the Hurricanes, at Harpenden RFC and Thunder, based at Nottingham University - will all be looked after by the England women's coaching team.

"Super League is exactly what we need in our season," England coach Geoff Richards said. "It will provide good quality games for our elite players as well as providing decent rest and recovery periods and consistent coaching with the England set-up. We hope Super League will make a big difference to our World Cup preparations."


By Brendan Gallagher

Madagascar lights the way for Africa

When Madagascar overcame the South Africa Amateur XV to reach the final of this year's CAR Top Nine championship last weekend, the President of the African Rugby Confederation (CAR) Aziz Bougja was an extremely happy man.

Not because he thought that his native Moroccans would fare better in the final against the men from Antananarivo than against the hardened South Africans, but rather because the win is exactly what CAR has been striving to achieve: Marketable fruits of its labour.

>> LISTEN TO AZIZ BOUGJA ON TOTAL RUGBY (FRENCH)

>> ECOUTEZ AZIZ BOUGJA SUR TOTAL RUGBY (VERSION ORIGINALE, FRANCAIS)

Thirty-two of the 50 countries on the African continent now play rugby and, while South Africa's professional elite is obviously still light years ahead of the nearest continental challenge, the ground between them and the rest is being eaten away with excessive appetite.

Make no mistake: Amateur or not, the bunch of South Africans beaten on Saturday combine to make a very strong side. The serious end of amateur rugby is serious - ask the French XV - and international amateur sides are not to be sniffed at. The plain facts of this confrontation though - South Africa has 500,000 rugby players to Madagascar's 11,000 - scream from the rafters the significance and of this win for African rugby.

"As President of the African Confederation, I can only be delighted by what has happened," Aziz Bougja told Total Rugby Radio. "I have to admit that I am surprised that Madagascar have reached the final, but when you work hard you get all that you deserve. Madagascar have taken this very seriously, they have put everything behind it, and have achieved.

"They also held on in the second half after leading at the break, which takes a lot of doing against an experienced side, but with 40,000 people supporting them they were able to do that."

Neither is the win over the South Africans a one-off; barely a month ago the side overcame Rugby World Cup veterans the Ivory Coast, at which point head coach Joseph Bertrand Rafalimanana admitted that his men needed another such victory to confirm their status as a rugby power to be taken seriously in Africa. An affirmation they now have.

Rugby has enjoyed a fascinating up-surge in Madagascar, but the sport's roots are buried deep enough that the weekend's success also marked the country's centenary of the sport. Only a handful of countries anywhere in the world call rugby the national sport, but Madagascar is one of them.

Jean-Luc Barthes, IRB Regional Development Manager for Francophone Africa, admits to feeling humbled by the people's attitude to the game in the country.

"There is a crazed infatuation with rugby among the people of this wonderful country. The strength of feeling is almost beyond comprehension."

And now onto Paris and the splendour of the Stade de France for the final against Morocco on 26 November. What greater stage for an African final than to raise the curtain to a match between the two 'god parents' of African rugby - France and South Africa.

"The two most significant allies to rugby's development in Africa have, along with the IRB, been South Africa and France," said Bougja. "The South African union has greatly helped us and now this gesture from the French Rugby Federation (FFR) in inviting us for the final is the latest act of generosity from them."

On paper, Morocco are ranked 21 in the world and should beat 43rd-ranked Madagascar, but the 'Makis' have more centenary celebrations in mind, and a fairytale ending to cap a remarkable year.



By Seb Lauzier

Monday, November 07, 2005

France move into world's top three

France moved past the Wallabies after beating them 26-16 in Marseille at the weekend.

New Zealand's 41-3 win over Wales in Cardiff sees them extend their lead at the top of the rankings.

Wales's loss by more than 16 points also see them drop one place to sixth, behind England.

South Africa's victory over Argentina in Buenos Aires keeps them in second, although neither team gained or lost any ranking points.

The Czech Republic move up two to 23rd after their impressive 47-8 away win over Ukraine.

The biggest risers of the week are Sweden and Malta, who both move up five places. Sweden are in 52nd, following their 16-14 victory over Scandinavian rivals Denmark. Denmark, who were 45th before kick-off, drop five to 50th.

Malta, meanwhile, recovered from a home defeat against Germany last weekend to defeat Serbia & Montenegro away in their latest Rugby World Cup 2007 qualifier. They are now in 53rd.

The current Top 50 on the official IRB Rankings (last week's ranking in brackets):
1 (1) New Zealand 92.57
2 (2) South Africa 88.99
3 (4) France 84.90
4 (3) Australia 84.08
5 (6) England 82.81
6 (5) Wales 82.46
7 (7) Ireland 82.14
8 (8) Argentina 75.66
9 (9) Scotland 74.20
10 (10) Fiji 73.47
11 (11) Italy 72.78
12 (12) Samoa 71.52
13 (13) Canada 68.42
14 (14) USA 68.31
15 (15) Uruguay 67.11
16 (16) Japan 65.93
17 (17) Portugal 65.57
18 (18) Romania 65.48
19 (19) Georgia 63.38
20 (20) Tonga 62.04
21 (21) Morocco 61.51
22 (22) Korea 60.44
23 (25) Czech Republic 60.18
24 (23) Chile 59.85
25 (24) Namibia 58.52
26 (26) Russia 57.85
27 (27) Germany 55.60
28 (29) Hong Kong 54.08
29 (30) Spain 53.86
30 (31) Paraguay 53.63
31 (32) Netherlands 53.11
32 (28) Ukraine 53.08
33 (33) Poland 52.70
34 (34) Tunisia 51.32
35 (35) Brazil 50.98
36 (36) Croatia 50.87
37 (37) Belgium 50.84
38 (38) China 49.73
39 (39) Kenya 48.97
40 (40) Switzerland 48.70
41 (41) Ivory Coast 48.57
42 (42) Chinese Taipei 48.28
43 (43) Madagascar 47.70
44 (44) Moldova 47.57
45 (46) Arabian Gulf 47.37
46 (47) Zimbabwe 47.32
47 (48) Kazakhstan 47.06
48 (49) Sri Lanka 46.79
49 (50) Singapore 46.70
50 (45) Denmark 46.41

Australia and Wales drop down the rankings

France have broken the Southern Hemisphere stranglehold on the top three positions on the official International Rugby Board (IRB) world rankings, when they overtook Australia in third place on Monday.

An historic victory for Madagascar

As this was the semi-final of the Confederation of African Rugby's Top, Madagascar now go into the final in which they will play Morocco at Stade de France on 26 November ion a curtainraiser to the Test between South Africa and France.

On Saturday Morocco beat Namibia 49-0. Namibian rugby is in the midst of serious squabbles. Earlier in the competition they failed to fulfil an away fixture with Côte d'Ivoire but then scored over 50 points in beating Madagascar. The team they took to play the Moroccans, all of whim play professional rugby in France, was a much weakened team because the core of the country's players did not play.

The South African team is chosen by the convener of selectors Peter Jooste, and the team's coaches,. André van Wyk and Dali Ndebele from players who do not play in Super 12, Currie Cup or Vodacom Cup.

The Mahamasina stadium in Antananarivo was packed with enthusiastic spectators for a match of exceptional emotion. The president of the Malagasy Republic, Marc Ravalomanana, was at the match and introduced to the teams beforehand.

Cliffie Booysen of SARU was at the match and said: "Our boys were overawed but I don't want to take anything away from Madagascar. They were the better team on the day and deserved their victory."

In patricular he was impressed by the flyhalf Sidoni Rakotoarisoa, lock Tolotra Ramaromiantso and wing Alain Rakotonirina in the home side.

Berthin Rafalimanana the Madagascar coach said after the match: "The result proves that Madagascans have talent in Rugby. The victory of Makis over the South-Africans is a great first in the history of Malagasy Rugby .

"The success is based on the unity between the players and the coaches with the support of the public."

At the end the South Africans formed a guard of honour to applaud the Madagascans from the field.

The South African captain, Yongama Mkaza said afterwards: "The Madagascans played very well. They carried out their gameplan on attack and reacted well in defense.

"We were better in the last ten minutes but it was too late even if we could have drawn the match in the last second."

After five minutes the South Africans led 14-0 through tries by left-wing Elvin Hugo and 35-year-old prop Hakkies Swart, and the crowd was expecting the worst but the home side fought back with a try by Alain Rakotonirina which encouraged a fightback that gave the home side a big 27-17 lead at half-time.

Penalties were exchanged in the second half and with the score at 33-26 to the home side, the South Africans scored as Theo Becker went over in the last move of the match. The crowd held its breath abut the conversion was missed and the pent-up excitement burst into gleeful noise.

Afterwards the Makis coach Jean Marc Louvel: "Wow, it's good!"

Scorers:

For SA Amateurs:
Tries: Elvin Hugo , Hakkies Swart, Theo Becker
Cons: André Williams 2
Pen: Williams 4

For Madagascar:
Tries: Alain Rakotonirina, Tolotra Ramaromiantso, Mito Randriamamitiana
Cons: José Rakoto Harison 3
Drop: Rakoto Harison
Pen: Rakoto Harison 3

Referee: Steven Paul Ojambo (Uganda)
Touch judges: Raymond Oruo, John Maina Gachoya (both Kenya)
Match Commissioner: Jean-Luc Barthes


'The Makis beat the Springboks'

Madagascan rugby is celebrating its centenary and did so in style on Saturday when its team, the Makis, beat the South African Amateur team 33-31 before 40 000 people in Antananarivo in Saturday.