Berliner Boersenzeitung - Canada's women tilt for World Cup thanks to 'incredible' crowdfunding

EUR -
AED 4.371967
AFN 77.96724
ALL 96.488757
AMD 447.445981
ANG 2.131021
AOA 1091.049708
ARS 1686.293235
AUD 1.682726
AWG 2.14283
AZN 2.010293
BAM 1.955572
BBD 2.390321
BDT 145.043099
BGN 1.999225
BHD 0.448782
BIF 3511.690795
BMD 1.190461
BND 1.506025
BOB 8.218042
BRL 6.183852
BSD 1.186762
BTN 107.589011
BWP 15.640178
BYN 3.420401
BYR 23333.041082
BZD 2.386822
CAD 1.614682
CDF 2636.871372
CHF 0.912367
CLF 0.025773
CLP 1016.451184
CNY 8.240971
CNH 8.227338
COP 4372.659517
CRC 588.331444
CUC 1.190461
CUP 31.547224
CVE 110.25169
CZK 24.242256
DJF 211.335374
DKK 7.471341
DOP 74.711294
DZD 154.161137
EGP 55.804663
ERN 17.856919
ETB 185.11203
FJD 2.609616
FKP 0.871086
GBP 0.871257
GEL 3.203018
GGP 0.871086
GHS 13.060478
GIP 0.871086
GMD 87.493695
GNF 10418.82969
GTQ 9.103901
GYD 248.291068
HKD 9.306478
HNL 31.349347
HRK 7.535382
HTG 155.631865
HUF 377.719071
IDR 19997.368577
ILS 3.670609
IMP 0.871086
INR 107.784242
IQD 1554.718834
IRR 50148.181596
ISK 144.986303
JEP 0.871086
JMD 185.628369
JOD 0.844062
JPY 184.791699
KES 153.447467
KGS 104.106084
KHR 4786.442253
KMF 492.851202
KPW 1071.418786
KRW 1740.570689
KWD 0.365579
KYD 0.988985
KZT 586.091705
LAK 25505.027988
LBP 106629.710152
LKR 367.317198
LRD 220.74335
LSL 19.021583
LTL 3.515123
LVL 0.720098
LYD 7.503126
MAD 10.854035
MDL 20.157651
MGA 5210.392851
MKD 61.635066
MMK 2500.144183
MNT 4250.572
MOP 9.554487
MRU 47.126509
MUR 54.379774
MVR 18.404276
MWK 2057.860205
MXN 20.467345
MYR 4.670775
MZN 75.903568
NAD 19.021583
NGN 1613.003636
NIO 43.674911
NOK 11.330066
NPR 172.142941
NZD 1.969779
OMR 0.457729
PAB 1.186762
PEN 3.985836
PGK 5.163398
PHP 69.668766
PKR 331.85523
PLN 4.213548
PYG 7825.08817
QAR 4.326178
RON 5.091368
RSD 117.319694
RUB 91.96356
RWF 1732.698095
SAR 4.465111
SBD 9.589021
SCR 16.471854
SDG 716.062345
SEK 10.624486
SGD 1.507159
SHP 0.893154
SLE 29.196065
SLL 24963.376932
SOS 677.021109
SRD 45.203599
STD 24640.144958
STN 24.497145
SVC 10.38479
SYP 13165.995682
SZL 19.012785
THB 37.099564
TJS 11.114258
TMT 4.166614
TND 3.428186
TOP 2.866345
TRY 51.940418
TTD 8.040063
TWD 37.518613
TZS 3078.648294
UAH 51.158839
UGX 4224.507733
USD 1.190461
UYU 45.504506
UZS 14601.175925
VES 458.078084
VND 30815.090225
VUV 142.617931
WST 3.230545
XAF 655.880573
XAG 0.01452
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.217281
XCG 2.138851
XDR 0.815705
XOF 655.880573
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.746032
ZAR 18.957384
ZMK 10715.574506
ZMW 22.436386
ZWL 383.328046
  • CMSC

    0.0150

    23.6

    +0.06%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.82

    +0.08%

  • BCE

    0.2150

    25.835

    +0.83%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.97

    0%

  • BCC

    1.2200

    90.24

    +1.35%

  • RYCEF

    0.5300

    17.41

    +3.04%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.2200

    88.17

    -0.25%

  • RIO

    -0.6400

    96.21

    -0.67%

  • GSK

    -0.4900

    58.52

    -0.84%

  • BTI

    -1.4100

    59.74

    -2.36%

  • VOD

    -0.1080

    15.372

    -0.7%

  • BP

    -2.7300

    36.49

    -7.48%

  • RELX

    -0.0300

    29.45

    -0.1%

  • AZN

    5.3100

    193.32

    +2.75%

Canada's women tilt for World Cup thanks to  'incredible' crowdfunding
Canada's women tilt for World Cup thanks to 'incredible' crowdfunding / Photo: Adrian DENNIS - AFP/File

Canada's women tilt for World Cup thanks to 'incredible' crowdfunding

It's not quite David taking on Goliath as Canada challenge England in Saturday's Women's Rugby World Cup final but the financial gulf between the two teams is vast.

Text size:

While the world number one hosts can wallow in the riches of a full professional set-up, the second-ranked Canadians resorted to crowdfunding to raise the extra one million Canadian dollars ($720,000) that they felt they needed to launch a serious tilt at the tournament.

Thus far, it seems to have worked. They stunned holders New Zealand in the semi-finals last week with a dazzling performance to set-up a decider at a sold-out 82,000-capacity Twickenham. They now stand one pace away from a first World Cup title.

Their preparation for the competition, however, started a year ago when Rugby Canada chief executive officer Nathan Bombrys met with head coach Kevin Rouet to discuss their plans.

"He worked out a plan, given our circumstances, for what it would take to send the team well prepared," Bombrys told the Canadian Press on Tuesday.

"And then we priced it up. As an organisation we put (Canadian) $2.6 million behind the team -— probably the most Rugby Canada's ever put behind a team -— but we identified a gap of a million bucks, so we said 'OK, let's go try to raise that money'.

"People laughed at me when I said 'we're going to raise a million bucks'," Bombrys added, but "that's what we did."

In March, the crowdfund was launched, with the title "Mission -- Win the Rugby World Cup" and 48 hours before the surprise last four victory over the Black Ferns, they had reached 95 percent of their goal.

"Even if we're the second-best team in the world, it's incredible," scrum-half Justine Pelletier told CBC Sports in June about the crowdfunding.

"Just to get to a match, it takes more effort for us.

"At times it's tiring to have to adapt, sometimes we'd like to be able to breath a bit," she added.

- 'Bigger than fame' -

In the country of 41.5 million people and a total land and water mass only beaten by Russia, rugby union, and women's rugby specifically, has to fight for attention and coverage.

Ice hockey reigns from Quebec to Vancouver via Toronto but Saturday's game will be broadcast on the sports channel TSN and CTV, and mercifully avoids a clash with the NHL, with the new season not starting until early October.

Even so, there appears to be limited appetite, although at least one pub, McLean's in Montreal, will be opening earlier than usual to screen it.

But then Pelletier and Sophie De Goede are hardly global names with the pull of someone like Ilona Maher from across the border in the USA. Not yet anyway.

Ten of Canada's starting XV at Twickenham have contracts with English or French clubs but the squad is far from being fully professional, unlike their opponents on Saturday who are all full-time rugby players.

"In Canada, it's not professional," former international wing Frederique Rajotte told AFP.

"If you look at England, they have a budget of millions of dollars a year for this programme. It's completely professional.

"But Rugby Canada couldn't provide that amount of money, which is crazy. And that's where crowdfunding comes in."

Their march to Saturday's showdown has been led by Saracens lock De Goede, who has been nominated for the World Rugby women's player of the year award having unusually kicked 58 points from second-row -- evoking memories of John Eales when he led Australia to the 1999 men's World Cup.

"What we are doing is bigger than just winning the World Cup," Saracens back-rower Laetitia Royer told RugbyPass this week.

"We're doing it for rugby in our nation. Putting rugby on the map in Canada and opening up the possibilities for our future as professional athletes.

"Our way is so much bigger than fame."

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)