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English rugby to air on Chinese TV

By Conal Urquhart in London | China Daily | Updated: 2017-12-23 15:06
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Leicester Tigers Manu Tuilagi in action. An English rugby game will be broadcast on Chinese TV on Christmas Eve. NIGEL FRENCH/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Chinese viewers will be able to watch English club rugby, complete with commentary in Mandarin, for the first time on Christmas Eve when the Leicester Tigers host the London-based Saracens on CCTV5+.

The game will be followed in future weeks by at least 25 other games from the Aviva Premiership and the semifinals and final of the competition.

Rugby is primarily played in former British colonies, as well as France, Italy, and Argentina, but it is growing elsewhere. Japan, in particular, has had recent international success, defeating several established rugby powers.

Japan will host the 2019 Rugby World Cup and the 2020 Olympics, which will again feature a rugby medal, competed for by teams of seven, rather than the traditional game played by teams of 15.

World Rugby has invested more than $100 million in making the sport more popular in China. In 2015, there were 76,000 players in China. In 2016, the number had ballooned to 136,000. World Rugby hopes to have 1 million players in China by 2022. The governing body hopes the sport will become increasingly popular as leisure becomes more important to Chinese people.

Rugby has much more physical contact than soccer and can maintain a high level of tension throughout the course of an 80-minute game.

The number of potential players in China will not necessarily give it an advantage. The sport has been dominated by New Zealand for decades despite the country having a population under 5 million.

Dominic Hayes, commercial director at Premiership Rugby, said the signing of the broadcast deal was a significant day in the history of Premiership Rugby.

"Launching on free-to-air TV in China is part of our strategic goal of increasing the global impact of Premiership Rugby and helping to grow the game in more countries around the world," Hayes said.

"CCTV5+ reaches 400 million households and this will lead to a huge increase in rugby's exposure, in a new and very exciting market."

The 2015 Rugby World Cup was the only rugby union tournament to have been broadcast in China.

conal@mail.chinadailyuk.com

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