I agree on most of your points but its still a mostly elitist sport.
Even your mate ended up in a fee paying school to further his career
That is true when i played it was during the 90s and early 00's though, i kind of played through when the game became professional, there was a significant change around this time when money started to flow into the game, in my opinion it gradually became less elitist definitely then it was, the academies became interested in elite players and talent as opposed to the easy win of just looking through the schools system, which is weird because the more popular it has gotten more elitist in the mindset of society got toward Rugby in my opinion.
Im thinking there is definitely more access now and less to do with class then it was, we have lads from everywhere now, in every back water and by way of representing Ireland and at provinces, rather then whats fed by the school system, the school system is still there for sure still but more with tradition and priority and is an easy win for scouts. But i definitely feel if you are good at Rugby the provincial scouts will find you and has very little to do with class then it did, i played for a rural low key club just made up of the local community lads about 15 mins from the Dublin border, wouldn't be an elites't area in anyway and i know there are scouts there all the time from all the provinces scouting the underage these days. I would say it was elitest oin the main in the past in Dublin, Cork and Limerick and the urban centers and scholls were the best routes, but by god it was dog rough everywhere else and outside those scholls playing locally and open to everyone, we used to love playing against the school teams. You tended to need like everywhere else a community that had a strong rugby club and interested volunteers though.
The IRFU have done terrific work with the structure of rugby, doing away with the club game largely and making representative provinces where other coutries have stuck to their club system, the provinces themselves have brilliant scouting networks and academies and development programmes, while they have the advantage of being the only professional pathway in term sport to make a living and stay in Ireland. That the crux of why Irish rugby has really taken off and been so successful.
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