I am a physician who is a past president of the
American College of Sports Medicine; I am the author of over 200
scholarly journal articles on sports medicine (including the first-ever
published study of rugby injuries in the United States); in my practice
I have treated athletes of all ages from sports as varied as figure
skating and football; and I am the chairman of the Massachusetts
Governor’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports.
A popular sport worldwide
Rugby is a dynamic contact sport that is played all over the
world by men and women of all different classes, creeds, and races. It
fosters friendship and camaraderie between players. To celebrate one
recent Christmas, men from the American and New Zealand research
stations in Antarctica played a game of rugby against each other on
those southernmost frozen wastelands. Most rugby players have played
with and against people from other nations.
Rugby is played in over 100 countries and is the most popular
team sport in nations such as Japan, Fiji, and Wales. This sport could
not be as popular as it is among the peoples of so many different
cultures if it were dangerous! In fact, the risk of injury in rugby is
relatively low compared to sports Americans embrace – such as football,
ice hockey, and lacrosse - a fact borne-out by numerous studies to
ascertain the risk of sports injury in different activities. The
reasons for this are quite straightforward to those of us who study
sports medicine.
Why rugby is a safe sport – paradoxically
The main reason rugby players have a relatively low risk of
injury compared to football players is paradoxical – rugby players
don’t wear protective equipment. Thus the rugby player doesn’t have the
same disregard for the safety of his or her head, neck, and shoulders
when tackling or trying to break through a tackle. The other reason is
that unlike football, rugby is a game of possession, not yardage.
Consequently rugby players don’t tackle by “driving through the
numbers,” as football players are taught to do with their heads when
tackling a player. In rugby, players are taught to use their arms to
wrap a player’s legs and let the momentum of that player cause him to
go to ground. Furthermore, in rugby there is no blocking, and so
players who don’t have the ball don’t get hit when they’re not
expecting it.
One of the reasons rugby has a reputation for being “dangerous”
in the United States is because when the average American sees rugby
being played, he or she sees a free-flowing contact sport. Because it
doesn’t have the familiar stop-and-start character of football and
other TV-shaped sports, to the uninitiated rugby can appear confusing
and “scary.”
Furthermore, while the bumps, bruises, and scrapes you see on
the elbows, knees, and faces of many rugby players can appear alarming,
they are of considerably less concern than the anterior cruciate
ligament ruptures, finger fractures and dislocations, and chest
contusions characteristic of a sport such as football in which heavy
protective equipment is worn.
Injury rates
I performed one of the first studies of rugby injuries in the
United States, which showed that compared to football, the incidence of
injury in rugby is quite low (10 percent in American club rugby
compared to 52 percent in NCAA college football). My study was
published in the peer-reviewed American Journal of Sports Medicine.
Subsequent studies have supported my results.
It would be disingenuous to suggest that rugby players never
get injured. However, based on the numerous studies that have been
done, the scientific conclusion we must reach is that rugby is not as
injurious as certain other contact and collision sports that most of us
believe deserve NCAA status, and is a relatively safe sport in the
panoply of athletic endeavors available to our young men and women.
Since the early study I did, sports medicine has grown as a
specialty and there has emerged a considerable body of literature on
the safety of all sports, including rugby. If you review the literature
you will find no evidence to suggest that rugby should be denied a
legitimate place in high schools and colleges around the world.
For all the reasons outlined above, I have no hesitation based
on my personal and professional experience to declare that rugby is
worthy of a place in American colleges and high schools.
Dr. Lyle Micheli is director of the Division of Sports
Medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital and an Associate Clinical
Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Harvard Medical School. He is a
past president of the American College of Sports Medicine and currently
serves as chairman of the Massachusetts Governor’s Council on Physical
Fitness and Sports. Dr. Micheli is chairman of USA Rugby’s Medical
& Risk Management Committee.