FESTIVAL FEEL is what you get across two days at the Howden Rosslyn Park National Schools Sevens. And that’s not just because the sun hammers down on the Thursday and then Wellies are a must on the Friday (rest in peace, trusty old trainers). No, it’s for all of it – the on-field entertainment, the colour palette of stalls and the continual murmur of sound. And, of course, the volume of human traffic here too.
According to the organisers, the 2024 edition of this schools sevens event was “nudging 15,000” participants across a week. From U14s right up, the action comes thick and fast. And so over two days we stopped by to see what makes an event like this tick, but also to try to understand why this sevens event has such enduring appeal... And what the future should hold for something of a rugby institution in this country.
It’s hard not to bump into people here. If you track Mark Durden-Smith walking one way, your eye will be pulled in another direction as Martin Offiah and son Tyler – who has just signed a first deal for Bath – mill around the main pitch. Sam Warburton is over there somewhere, as is sevens star Amy Wilson Hardy and Nolli Waterman. Alex Dombrandt is spotted; Jason Robinson hands out prizes. At one point we swear we even see a former Chelsea and England centre-back on the sidelines.
But the main attraction is the rugby. And with players aplenty strutting their stuff on the grass, you can understand why recruiters and talent scouts from unions and Premiership clubs swing by.
Denne historien er fra June 2024-utgaven av Rugby World.
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Denne historien er fra June 2024-utgaven av Rugby World.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
"I remember getting eating guidelines for Christmas Day!"
CHRISTMAS, the most wonderful time of the year? Not if you’re a professional rugby player it’s not.
Rugby firsts
FIRST RUGBY match you went to? I would have gone to RODNEY PARADE to watch a Newport game when I was about six years old, so around 1992 or 1993.
THE JOHN FISHER STATE SCHOOL RUGBY FESTIVAL
The inaugural John Fisher Rugby Festival hopes to Send state-school rugby players into the stratosphere.
The Making Of Robbie Henshaw
How this small-town boy went On to become a big-time player
RG SNYMAN
The giant Springbok is enjoying the best of both worlds since joining Leinster
BENHARD JANSE VAN RENSBURG
Bristol's South African centre has one eye on an England call-up in 2026
RUGBY RANT
Jessica Hayden, author of The Red Roses, says the women’s game can handle criticism
WHAT IT'S LIKE TO ...GO ON TOUR WITH EMERGING IRELAND
Munster's Ben O'Connor tells RW about the eye-opening trip to South Africa
"Welsh rugby treats players like pieces of meat, not assets"
THEY’VE BUILT the women’s game around the men’s game in Wales but it has to be its own thing.
"I don't believe in dinosaurs – the boys think it's nuts!"
The Exeter Chiefs hooker talks Tarmac, time travel and Tyson Fury