Zürcher Nachrichten - Georgia's rugby dreams built on wild folk game

EUR -
AED 4.229036
AFN 79.842001
ALL 98.112186
AMD 437.919812
ANG 2.060889
AOA 1054.812094
ARS 1361.096922
AUD 1.77343
AWG 2.072774
AZN 1.961905
BAM 1.954996
BBD 2.30859
BDT 139.722509
BGN 1.954408
BHD 0.434206
BIF 3404.147127
BMD 1.151541
BND 1.470859
BOB 7.900818
BRL 6.37747
BSD 1.143359
BTN 97.827747
BWP 15.3071
BYN 3.741825
BYR 22570.207191
BZD 2.296695
CAD 1.574174
CDF 3312.983995
CHF 0.940717
CLF 0.028031
CLP 1075.666068
CNY 8.283381
CNH 8.280045
COP 4811.714834
CRC 580.901337
CUC 1.151541
CUP 30.515841
CVE 110.219649
CZK 24.786925
DJF 203.609758
DKK 7.460283
DOP 67.45693
DZD 150.970461
EGP 57.007732
ERN 17.273118
ETB 156.038481
FJD 2.588376
FKP 0.85255
GBP 0.848093
GEL 3.155375
GGP 0.85255
GHS 11.777256
GIP 0.85255
GMD 81.187744
GNF 9907.267664
GTQ 8.786385
GYD 239.88338
HKD 9.038383
HNL 29.837537
HRK 7.536834
HTG 149.95481
HUF 400.402548
IDR 18708.456256
ILS 4.012154
IMP 0.85255
INR 98.376538
IQD 1497.835725
IRR 48479.883947
ISK 143.609103
JEP 0.85255
JMD 182.845881
JOD 0.816469
JPY 165.77815
KES 149.109001
KGS 100.702471
KHR 4588.311304
KMF 493.437864
KPW 1036.386861
KRW 1569.09956
KWD 0.352176
KYD 0.952841
KZT 582.350613
LAK 24679.274018
LBP 102447.425966
LKR 341.785304
LRD 228.677893
LSL 20.375763
LTL 3.400202
LVL 0.696556
LYD 6.247592
MAD 10.512402
MDL 19.717401
MGA 5178.139189
MKD 61.489408
MMK 2417.31418
MNT 4112.433627
MOP 9.243698
MRU 45.210538
MUR 52.37194
MVR 17.739488
MWK 2000.227319
MXN 21.782579
MYR 4.8739
MZN 73.640685
NAD 20.381071
NGN 1765.231828
NIO 42.07415
NOK 11.576881
NPR 156.535466
NZD 1.911484
OMR 0.44276
PAB 1.14333
PEN 4.184125
PGK 4.703228
PHP 64.263484
PKR 322.898056
PLN 4.251592
PYG 9123.404511
QAR 4.170084
RON 5.026468
RSD 117.239793
RUB 91.540426
RWF 1622.431054
SAR 4.318911
SBD 9.608322
SCR 16.823821
SDG 691.502074
SEK 10.978471
SGD 1.477283
SHP 0.904931
SLE 25.362688
SLL 24147.243087
SOS 653.470844
SRD 43.003733
STD 23834.57754
SVC 10.005231
SYP 14972.274185
SZL 20.341337
THB 37.357728
TJS 11.433795
TMT 4.030394
TND 3.4036
TOP 2.697024
TRY 45.118424
TTD 7.760941
TWD 34.230726
TZS 3011.28003
UAH 47.462956
UGX 4100.348465
USD 1.151541
UYU 47.37092
UZS 14491.163261
VES 115.40078
VND 29963.101587
VUV 138.316092
WST 3.036094
XAF 655.727053
XAG 0.031694
XAU 0.000341
XCD 3.112097
XDR 0.815486
XOF 655.704284
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.22741
ZAR 20.379458
ZMK 10365.252412
ZMW 28.327836
ZWL 370.795791
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Georgia's rugby dreams built on wild folk game
Georgia's rugby dreams built on wild folk game / Photo: Giorgi ARJEVANIDZE - AFP/File

Georgia's rugby dreams built on wild folk game

Hundreds of men went charging through the Georgian village of Shukhuti as they grappled for control of a wine-soaked leather ball -- a frenzied folk game locals say is the bedrock of the Caucasus country's prowess on the modern-day rugby field.

Text size:

Held every Easter, the fierce contest pits the village's upper and lower halves against each other in a bruising effort to drive the ball into a river.

Victory goes to the team that manages to hurl the ball -- stuffed with earth doused in locally made wine and weighing a hefty 16 kilograms (35 pounds) -- into the water.

Known as Lelo, the game was first played in Shukhuti in western Georgia more than 150 years ago to commemorate a historic military victory against Ottoman Turkish invaders.

Georgians see Lelo as a wild cousin of rugby, a game that has surged in popularity over the last few decades.

Fittingly nicknamed the Lelos, Georgia's national rugby team has dominated the second-tier Rugby Europe Championship, clinching the title eight years in a row.

"This is where Georgian rugby draws its passion for victory -- from the intense energy rooted in the ancient tradition of Lelo," said local mayor Alexandre Sarishvili.

National team head coach Richard Cockerill shares that sentiment.

"We're a small country with small numbers, but we're still able to put a team out that can compete with Fiji and Japan and Wales and Italy and win Rugby Europe every year," he told AFP at the squad's Tbilisi training ground.

- 'Jeopardy' -

With just 8,000 registered players -- a fraction of the numbers seen in Tier One nations -- Georgia have managed to beat the four sides mentioned above in recent years.

Their Under-20s team defeated England ahead of the 2023 World Cup.

Yet Georgia remain locked out of the Six Nations, a closed competition that hasn't welcomed a new team since Italy joined in 2000.

Former England hooker Cockerill wants meritocracy to trump tradition when it comes to the Six Nations line-up.

"We deserve an opportunity to play-off against the bottom team, to prove that we are good enough," he said, referring to Wales's ongoing dismal losing streak.

"If a team's lost 17 Test matches on the bounce and is bottom of the Six Nations two years in succession, surely at some point there's got to be an opportunity for Georgia.

"We're above Wales in the world rankings... But the gate's shut, isn't it?"

Though he admits the push for inclusion is a long shot, Cockerill argues a promotion-relegation playoff would introduce both incentive and risk -- benefitting the sport.

"There's a realistic chance that whoever wins Rugby Europe would actually put huge pressure on whoever finishes bottom of the Six Nations. If we're going to grow the game... then I think there should be some jeopardy."

- 'Containment' -

With enthusiastic public support and strong government backing, rugby is thriving on a grassroots level in the capital Tbilisi and beyond.

But Cockerill warns growth will stall without greater competitive exposure.

"We need to learn how to lose, and play as Italy have, as France did when they joined the Four Nations to make it Five Nations, as Fiji have done when they've joined Super Rugby."

He envisions a similar trajectory for Georgia, and laments that all the country's best players move abroad to play in competitive club competitions.

For now, Georgian rugby is stuck in a holding pattern.

The new Nations Cup format, which groups them with other Tier Two sides, offers no path for promotion until at least 2030.

"We're being told to wait five more years," Cockerill said. "That's not growth, that's containment."

In Shukhuti on Sunday, after hours of punishing scrums, torn shirts, and battered bodies, the men of Upper Shukhuti finally broke through and claimed a hard-won victory.

"Lelo captures the combative spirit of Georgians," said local doctor Nanuli Khalvashi, 64, who came to cheer for the Upper Shukhuti team.

"With a sporting tradition like this, it's no wonder Georgia have become a force in rugby."

J.Hasler--NZN