Rwanda Referees, Coaches, and Silverbacks benefit from Penguin Internationa RFC train

 Rwanda Referees, Coaches, and Silverbacks benefit from Penguin International RFC training

Experts from the UK-based Penguin International Rugby Football Club over the weekend started a four-day Level 2 rugby clinic for referees and coaches as well as the men’s national rugby team, the Silverbacks.

Three Penguin rugby experts Tony Penn, a former New Zealand prop-forward,  Colin Brett, a referee manager from Scotland and James Wade a coach development officer for Scottish rugby are in Kigali to share tips and their experiences with the trainees in order to help grow the sport in Rwanda.

Livingstone Muhire, the RRF Chief Executive Officer, said this is a great opportunity for local rugby referees, coaches, and the Silverbacks to gain the required experience so they can improve on their skills in rugby.

“We now have 9 newly qualified level 2 match officials and 10 coaches qualified for level 2. This will be invaluable for the eight-team national championship in the country,” he said.

On the first day, Brett focused on technical content on scrum, lineout, advantage and the breakdown.

Former All Blacks player Tony, who is on his second trip to Rwanda, is training the Silverbacks.  The training involved tips on position play, ball handling skills, beating the defenders, basic set skills, and other fundamentals of rugby.

“We are here on behalf of Penguin and our goal is to grow and develop the game across the world. Rwanda is special and close to our hearts. We just want to keep developing the relationship and rugby players in Rwanda,” he added.

“We are glad to have these experts with us here, we hope to have learned a lot by the end of the training which will help us to be able to play at the top level,” David Bimenyimana, a Silverback player and president of Lion de Fer Rugby club, noted.

Penguin International Rugby Football Club’s ties with Rwandan rugby date back to 2010.

 

Rwanda Rugby

The Rwanda Rugby Federation (RRF) as the umbrella organisation that unites the entire rugby fraternity in Rwanda. RRF has been administering, developing and generally organising all rugby activities for 13 years now, not only through out Rwanda but on the continental level as well. The RRF has since grown further countrywide with over 600 active players, 60 female players, a robust fun club, ardent well wishers and intensive involvement in the development of the game in over 70 schools from all districts in Rwanda not to mention the RRF’s participation in community projects.

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