Planet Rugby: An Interactive Information Service for Rugby Union Football

Rónán O’Beirne (Bradford Training Access Points)

Online Information Review

ISSN: 1468-4527

Article publication date: 1 August 2002

99

Citation

O’Beirne, R. (2002), "Planet Rugby: An Interactive Information Service for Rugby Union Football", Online Information Review, Vol. 26 No. 4, pp. 285-286. https://doi.org/10.1108/oir.2002.26.4.285.13

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited


This is a site where useful statistical information cohabits with a blaze of advertising. The reference enquirer may, at first glance, find the flashing text to be greatly off‐putting. However, beneath the spin there is a unique and well‐structured information base on the game of Rugby Union.

As one should expect, the advertising, which uses the technique of pop‐up windows to sell everything from a rugby shirt to a mobile ’phone, can become tiresome. Yet, thanks to the clear design there are some conventions that, once understood, allow the user to ignore parts of the site that may be of low relevance. For example, advertisements are allowed in some areas of the screen, while other areas are reserved for news items of a serious rugby nature.

Among the resources is a complete fixture listing for future games in the various tournaments such as the Six Nations. This is complemented by the results section that has a search facility to enable the user to find matches from as long ago as 1871. Once found, match results can be further explored through the match report link. The match report gives final score and half‐time score, full team sheets, official attendance figure, types of score, names of scorers and names of officials.

The facility to search for players’ details is particularly impressive. The enquirer can submit a player’s name into a search box, which then returns a full record. It is also possible in the player search to use other criteria for retrieval, such as career date, position played, nationality and tournament. Having carried out a test search for Gareth Edwards, the Welsh and Lions scrum‐half from the 1970s, there was much detail returned. This included date of birth, age, place of birth, date and opponent of first and last cap, number of points scored, broken down into number of tries, drop goals and penalties. The record also includes a paragraph giving the highlights of the player’s career.

Another search facility available is a venue search, providing details of all the grounds used to play rugby. This returns information on the ground, such as full postal address, telephone number and capacity. Some of the more famous grounds have a short written description along with a photograph.

The coverage is comprehensive, its main strength lying (not surprisingly) with details of home nations rugby. There is plenty of coverage of the Southern Hemisphere scene too, giving a year‐round interest. I was pleased and encouraged to see the rugby endeavours of many of the smaller rugby nations such as Romania, Russia and Canada mentioned in more than just passing detail.

This site is a good starting point for any investigation into rugby; it is particularly strong on the record books which, through the electronic searching facility, are rendered most useful. In the clubhouse bar, during a post‐match pint of bitter, the endless questions about the finer points of rugby (such as against which team did Gareth Edwards score his only international penalty) will be answered by this Web site.

This review was first published in Reference Reviews Volume 16 Number 4 2002.

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