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RLWC2021

13 Jul 2023

Final call for RLWC legacy funding

Final call for RLWC legacy funding

Saturday August 5 will mark the end of the most successful and significant programme of investment into grassroots facilities in the history of Rugby League, and one which can rarely have been matched across English sport.

Since it was launched as a key part of England’s successful bid to host Rugby League World Cup 2021, with funding from Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, Sport England and The National Lottery, the CreatedBy Grants Programme has driven investment of more than £26m into all areas of Community Rugby League.

The majority has been allocated to a total of well over 30 Large Scale Grants, from Hemel Stags in the South-East, who were awarded more than £90,000 to develop their changing facilities with a specific focus on women and girls, to Wath Brow Hornets in the far North-West, who now train at a purpose-built indoor training facility thanks to an initial grant of £100,000.

But there have also been dozens of Small Scale Grants, covering all manner of items essential to the successful operation of Community Rugby League, whether boilers or rugby balls, lawnmowers or tackle pads – and of course Wheelchairs, allowing the development of new teams and clubs to capitalise on the breakthrough success of England’s thrilling triumph in the Wheelchair RLWC tournament last autumn.

The CreatedBy programme was singled out for praise in the report published last week by UK Sport highlighting the long-lasting social impact of RLWC2021 – which was postponed by 12 months until 2022 because of the Covid-19 pandemic New report shows long-lasting social impact of Rugby League World Cup (rugby-league.com)

Tony Sutton, the Chief Executive of the Rugby Football League, said:

“With only a few weeks until the closing date for new applications for the CreatedBy Small Scale Grants, this is a good time to reflect on the transformative impact the programme has had on our sport.

“Rugby League’s greatest strength has always been the depth of its roots in the communities in which it is played. Partly because many of those communities are in less wealthy parts of the country, it has often been a struggle to fund the facilities which Community Rugby League deserves.

“Thanks to the significant financial commitment of Government, Sport England and The National Lottery since the RFL’s successful bid to host RLWC2021, and an immense amount of work by the many people involved in delivering the grants programme, dozens of clubs up and down the country, and especially across the North of England, are now significantly better-placed to serve their communities.

“We have been delighted to welcome a number of Government Ministers to some of those facilities, including Oliver Dowden visiting Victoria Park in Warrington in 2021 – and conducting the Challenge Cup draw! – during his tenure as Culture Secretary, and Nigel Huddleston and Stuart Andrew welcomed as Sports Ministers to Blackbrook and Leigh Miners Rangers respectively.

“On behalf of the RFL and the sport of Rugby League, our thanks go to DCMS, to Sport England, to the National Lottery – and to the stalwarts of Community Rugby League, who are the bedrock of our sport.”