The Signpost

WikiProject report

'In touch' with WikiProject Rugby union

Contribute  —  
Share this
By SMasters


WikiProject news
News in brief
Submit your project's news and announcements for next week's WikiProject Report at the Signpost's WikiProject Desk.
The All Blacks perform Ka Mate before a match against France in 2006. New Zealand are the current holder of the Rugby World Cup.
Rugby School in Rugby, Warwickshire, is reputed to be where rugby was started in 1823
This is the only known portrait of William Webb Ellis, circa 1857, who is famous for allegedly being the inventor of Rugby football
A rugby scrum is a way of restarting the game after an accidental infringement
A giant rugby ball was suspended from the Eiffel Tower to commemorate France's hosting of the 2007 Rugby World Cup

The recently concluded 2011 Rugby World Cup on 23 October saw New Zealand's All Blacks crowned world champions after defeating France 8–7 in a nail-biting finish. Rugby union is a full contact team sport which originated in England in the early 19th century. It is one of two codes of rugby football. This week, we took time out to speak with members of WikiProject Rugby union. Started by DaGizza in December 2005‎, the Project is home to over 9,700 articles, with 7 Featured articles, 1 Featured list, 14 Good articles and a Featured portal. The Project has 166 participants. The Signpost interviewed project members MacRusgail, FruitMonkey, Bob247 and Aircorn.

MacRusgail is a Scottish Wikipedian, and has been editing since April 2005. A rugby fan and former player, he was motivated to join WikiProject Rugby union because: "I felt that the coverage at the time was poor, and the articles in general were not well written/non-existent. American sports and association football are already well covered, but many others are not." FruitMonkey has been a Wikipedian since October 2006, and works on many Welsh articles: "Although I was well aware of the sport, I was not a huge rugby fan. After a few low level edits on Welsh articles I got into a heated debate when a Welsh rugby club was flagged for deletion by an editor who was unaware of the nature of 'amateur' within rugby union. That set me on a little crusade and I started building articles on Welsh Victorian players, which has now spiraled into all things rugby." Bob247 is another Scottish Wikipedian, editing since July 2005: "I was contributing to other articles and came across the rugby ones while searching for information on the [Six Nations] and was surprised to see how little there was on rugby union compared with other major sports." Aircorn is a New Zealander and has been on Wikipedia since December 2009. He says that his "religion" is rugby union: "I played rugby until a broken knee turned me into a referee a couple of years ago. Rugby union was one of the first subjects I started editing when I joined Wikipedia in late 2009. Like many, I started editing on my favourite players and now contribute to a range of articles within the project."

Your Project has over 9,700 articles associated with it. How does the Project keep all these up to standard, and what are its biggest challenges?

WikiProject Rugby union has 7 Featured articles, 1 Featured lists, 14 Good articles and a Featured portal. How did your Project achieve this and how can other Projects work toward this?

Does WikiProject Rugby union collaborate with any other WikiProjects?

Your members have been heavily involved with updating articles related to the recently concluded 2011 Rugby World Cup. Can you share with us your experience of working on a live sporting event such as this?

What are the most pressing needs for WikiProject Rugby union? How can a new contributor help today?

Anything else to add?

Next week's Report will be about the SysRq button. Until then, read zeros and ones in the archive.

+ Add a comment

Discuss this story

These comments are automatically transcluded from this article's talk page. To follow comments, add the page to your watchlist. If your comment has not appeared here, you can try purging the cache.



       

The Signpost · written by many · served by Sinepost V0.9 · 🄯 CC-BY-SA 4.0