High profile scandals bring more scrutiny to rugby

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TOKYO (AFP) – World Rugby chief Bill Beaumont said yesterday the sport’s “high profile” means it is coming under more scrutiny than ever before, with a series of scandals rocking Europe’s elite teams.

The Six Nations kicks off today with several of the participating nations’ reputations having taken a battering in recent months.

The Welsh Rugby Union has been accused of a “toxic culture” of misogyny and homophobia, while racism reared its head in Italy when a team-mate gave Treviso prop Cherif Traore, who is black, a rotten banana as a holiday present. Officials in England, Scotland, and France have also come under fire for issues that included player welfare and corruption.

Beaumont, who is in Tokyo with World Rugby CEO Alan Gilpin, acknowledged there had been “quite a few issues” surrounding the sport.

“I just think that the challenges that we have to face as a sport, we are far more of a high-profile sport than we ever have been,” he told reporters. “I think the people concerned within those unions have taken action. It’s not for me to comment on those actions that individual unions have taken.”

Beaumont said “hopefully we’ll be talking about what’s happening on the pitch rather than what’s happened off the pitch” when the Six Nations begins.