Rugby: Rugby World’s Small Fry Have Big Dreams

RUGBY: RUGBY WORLD’S SMALL FRY HAVE BIG DREAMS

New Zealand Herald, New Zealand
Aug 27 2007

PARIS – Who will be the World Cup’s leading fly-half? Daniel Carter,
Stephen Larkham, Jonny Wilkinson, Frederic Michalak?

But Emil Vartazarian? Definitely not this time, but maybe 2011.

Vartazarian tried in vain to steer India to what would have been an
unlikely place at the World Cup.

He was just like 86 other fly-halfs from rugby’s outposts who started
out on the long qualifying road which kicked off at humble Molt
Illustre Conseille General on September 4, 2004 with Andorra running
out 76-3 winners over Norway.

Two years, six months and 21 days later, that qualifying series
finished at the Estadio Parque Central del Club Nacional in Montevideo,
where Uruguay were pipped for the final place in France by Portugal.

In that time, 191 matches were held over 932 days to determine which
12 teams would join the eight automatic qualifiers in France.

Vartazarian’s India were one of the teams to fall by the wayside but
they managed to secure a first win on home soil in the process when
they defeated Malaysia 48-12.

That brief success highlighted the very different worlds that
Vartazarian and the likes of All Blacks superstar Carter inhabit.

"I arrived in Calcutta in 1987 from Iran when I was 10. In the Armenian
college every individual had to play rugby as it was like a religion
for us, so I started playing," said Vartazarian.

India’s loss to Kazakhstan and a draw with Guam sealed their fate as
far as 2007 was concerned. The Kazakhs eventually lost to Sri Lanka
who lost to Hong Kong who then lost to qualifiers Japan.

Another team not in France are China and the game’s money men are
probably wishing it were otherwise.

China were never in the hunt in qualifying with an opening 22-19 win
over Taiwan followed by defeats to the Arabian Gulf, Sri Lanka and
Hong Kong.

That woeful record hasn’t stopped the Chinese from thinking big with
officials having drafted in the likes of England’s 2003 World Cup
winning skipper Martin Johnson for coaching clinics.

"I saw the Chinese national team play in Dubai, and I didn’t really
know what to expect, but was very impressed with them," said Johnson.

Rugby union is still very much an infant sport in China.

The first club was started only in 1990 at China’s Agriculture
University with the CRFA being formed six years later and becoming
affiliated with the governing International Rugby Board in 1997.

China are currently ranked 45 in the world while India are 84.

Propping up the IRB world rankings is Bosnia and Herzogvina who
played two qualifiers and lost both to Austria (29-12 and 10-7)
and have only been playing as a national team since 1992.

PARIS – Who will be the World Cup’s leading fly-half? Daniel Carter,
Stephen Larkham, Jonny Wilkinson, Frederic Michalak?

But Emil Vartazarian? Definitely not this time, but maybe 2011.

Vartazarian tried in vain to steer India to what would have been an
unlikely place at the World Cup.

He was just like 86 other fly-halfs from rugby’s outposts who started
out on the long qualifying road which kicked off at humble Molt
Illustre Conseille General on September 4, 2004 with Andorra running
out 76-3 winners over Norway.

Two years, six months and 21 days later, that qualifying series
finished at the Estadio Parque Central del Club Nacional in Montevideo,
where Uruguay were pipped for the final place in France by Portugal.

In that time, 191 matches were held over 932 days to determine which
12 teams would join the eight automatic qualifiers in France.

Vartazarian’s India were one of the teams to fall by the wayside but
they managed to secure a first win on home soil in the process when
they defeated Malaysia 48-12.

AdvertisementThat brief success highlighted the very different worlds
that Vartazarian and the likes of All Blacks superstar Carter inhabit.

"I arrived in Calcutta in 1987 from Iran when I was 10. In the Armenian
college every individual had to play rugby as it was like a religion
for us, so I started playing," said Vartazarian.

India’s loss to Kazakhstan and a draw with Guam sealed their fate as
far as 2007 was concerned. The Kazakhs eventually lost to Sri Lanka
who lost to Hong Kong who then lost to qualifiers Japan.

Another team not in France are China and the game’s money men are
probably wishing it were otherwise.

China were never in the hunt in qualifying with an opening 22-19 win
over Taiwan followed by defeats to the Arabian Gulf, Sri Lanka and
Hong Kong.

That woeful record hasn’t stopped the Chinese from thinking big with
officials having drafted in the likes of England’s 2003 World Cup
winning skipper Martin Johnson for coaching clinics.

"I saw the Chinese national team play in Dubai, and I didn’t really
know what to expect, but was very impressed with them," said Johnson.

Rugby union is still very much an infant sport in China.

The first club was started only in 1990 at China’s Agriculture
University with the CRFA being formed six years later and becoming
affiliated with the governing International Rugby Board in 1997.

China are currently ranked 45 in the world while India are 84.

Propping up the IRB world rankings is Bosnia and Herzogvina who
played two qualifiers and lost both to Austria (29-12 and 10-7)
and have only been playing as a national team since 1992.