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Up,up,up Ukraine

CC_Roosters

First Grade
Messages
5,221
Good stuff some financial assistance from the ARLC would be nice around the globe. After all whats the point in a future fund if it doesnt promote the grandest future of all a prospering international sport
 

crimpo

Juniors
Messages
549
Given the circumstances in the Ukraine and Crimea - it is little short of incredible how good a job Artur Martyrosyan and his team are doing. Like the Serbs they deserve all the help that can be given to them.
 

miguel de cervantes

First Grade
Messages
7,474
http://www.rlef.eu.com/news/article/954/ukrainian-federation-sets-out-ambitious

UKRAINIAN FEDERATION SETS OUT AMBITIOUS EXPANSION PLANS


18th November 2014
Moving into its ninth year, the Ukrainian Federation of Rugby League has revealed ambitious plans for an extensive expansion in 2015 which will see more teams than ever before play the sport, despite the political situation that continues to affect the country.

At a meeting in Lviv, western Ukraine, UFRL president Artur Martyrosyan mapped out next year’s competition structure which will see eight sides compete in the flagship Championship of Ukraine, underpinned by a second division, a new national cup competition and continued junior development at U21, U18, U16 and U12 level, which will see over 200 full and modified matches take place in total.

The Championship will encompass two four-team groups, with Group A formed by Sokil (Lviv), UzhNU (Uzhgorod), Rivne (Rivne) and Roland (Ivano Frankivsk) in the west of the country, which represents a strategic push outside of the UFRL’s traditional geographic base. Group B will feature five-time Ukrainian league champions and three-time cup winners Legion XIII (Kharkov), Kryvbas (Kryvy Rog), Atlant (Dnipropetrovsk) and CEPU (Simferepol) in the east and south.

Sokil is one of the country’s oldest rugby union clubs which has now opened a rugby league section. UzhNU, or Uzhgorod National University, was founded by a former Kryvbas player from the city. Both have excellent facilities, including training venues in the Carpathian mountains. Rivne and Roland are specialist union sevens clubs that feel more suited to adapt to 13-a-side rugby league. Atlant had been pencilled in to participate this year but the on-going hostilities forced them to postpone their activities.

League 2 will see four Kharkov-based university teams compete and, combined, they contributed the players and management that made up the first ever Legion XIII team eight years ago.

An eight-team Ukraine Cup will give the top clubs more competition and introduces Khmelnytsky, one of the best union sevens sides, to rugby league in place of Crimea-based CEPU for this tournament.

At youth level, an U21 9s competition – the Ukraine Youth Cup - will feature six clubs including Restruct from the capital, Kiev, while 13-a-side competitions will take place at U18 and U16 age groups, both with six-team competitions.

The UFRL will also continue its five-a-side, mini-mod league at U12 level throughout 24 schools. Kryvbas is the first club to able to field a junior team at every level, illustrating the growing depth of talent, while the sport’s entry into the government sport school system, confirmed in January 2014, is already paying dividends, with several previously rugby union-only schools now fielding league sides.

“Despite the difficulties, the UFRL has continued the development of rugby league in the centre and west of the country, especially through a programme of training the game in sports schools,” said Martyrosyan. “That has had a significant impact in growing our footprint.”

Also at the meeting in Lviv, the UFRL staged a cup competition featuring six clubs, including the four that will make up Group A in 2015 – won by Legion XIII - and ran a level 1 coaching course which qualified 11 new coaches who came from the host city, Kiev, Uzhgorod, Ivano-Frankivsk, Rivne and Kherson. The UFRL also announced that its next coaching course will be in Ternopil on 7 February 2015.

Amazing stuff.

Though it is not surprising that growth occurs more readily in non-union or non-rugby countries.
 
Messages
2,364
They have RU in the Ukraine. :?

Even if they didn't, is there any evidence for his statement anyway? Rugby league has grown in lots of countries where rugby union is established...

Tbh if it was me, speaking from ignorance, I'd have thought it would be easier to build a basic grass roots foundation in a country where RU is already known.
 

Evil Homer

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
7,178
^ It depends, on one hand there's already a player base but on the other hand the RU authorities might be hostile towards RL and the players might not be as committed. TBH I always thought the best approach would be to build RL from scratch and allow Union players to join in if they wish (Serbia, Ukraine, Lebanon) rather than straight-up piggybacking on RU teams during their off-season (Ireland, Germany), and history suggests that to be the case as well.
 

The Partisan

Guest
Messages
1,936
Wonder if Ian Rubin - the Ukraine born former Roosters and Russia representative - has any contact with the current organisation ?

Would be a handy assett i would think.
 
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