Their struggle is my struggle â Kolisi on backing womenâs game
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South Africa captain Siya Kolisi says he and other male stars have both a moral duty and a personal interest in growing the womenâs game.
Kolisi attended matches and helped out in training during South Africaâs WXV campaign in Cape Town over the past few weeks.
He wore the Springbok womenâs shirt, posed for photos with them and opposition players and spoke to Walesâ squad at their hotel after prop Sisilia Tuipulotu contacted him over social media., external
âWhere I come from when someone struggles, you help,â he told The Good, The Scaz and The Rugby podcast., external
âThe girls are playing the same sport as me and they need help right now, so I go and help. That is how I was raised.
âWithout my community I wouldnât be here, without my grandmother and my aunt I wouldnât be the person I am today.
âSo when you have a platform, it is how many people can you take with you? It is not just about you.â
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South Africa are playing in the second tier of WXV and will complete their campaign on Saturday against Italy, following a win over Japan and defeat by Australia.
Crowds for some matches have been disappointing, with only a few hundred spectators in the 55,000-capacity DHL Stadium for Walesâ game against Australia on the opening weekend.
However, attendances have been better for the hostsâ games with Kolisi estimating that he was one of 4,000 spectators for the 33-26 defeat by the Wallaroos.
Kolisi says the tournament has provided the teams with valuable playing time and exposure that can help the whole sport.
âWXV is so important â it creates more opportunities,â he added.
âFor us as men, we have three games in June or July, then the Rugby Championship and then another three or four at the end of the year tour â it might be 13 games.
âThe more time we spend together, the better we get, and that is what they [Springbok women] need.
âIf we help the womenâs game grow, it means rugby is growing, more are playing and exposed to rugby â we are all benefitting and eating out of that.â
Kolisi also urged corporate sponsors to consider the mutual benefit they can create by investing in the growing womenâs game.
âIt is easy to give to someone who has already made it, that everyone knows about,â he said.
âBut imagine being the sponsor who has backed the women from the beginning â when they make it and you can talk about the journey you have travelled.â
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Published4 days ago
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