Home NEWS Canada’s Rugby World Cup team helps clean up flood damage caused by Typhoon Hagibis | CBC News

Canada’s Rugby World Cup team helps clean up flood damage caused by Typhoon Hagibis | CBC News

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Canada’s Rugby World Cup team helps clean up flood damage caused by Typhoon Hagibis | - News

Canada had to leave the Rugby World Cup tournament in Kamaishi, Japan, without a win Sunday, after their last game was cancelled due to Typhoon Hagibis. But they still managed to turn the experience into a rewarding one by helping clean up flood-ravaged areas of Kamaishi. Members of Team Canada cleaning mud out of the streets of Kamaishi, Japan. (Rugby World Cup – World Rugby)Canada had to leave the Rugby World Cup tournament in Kamaishi, Japan, without a win Sunday, after their last game was cancelled due to Typhoon Hagibis. But even though the cancellation of their Pool B game against Namibia was disappointing to the men’s rugby team, they still managed to turn the experience into a rewarding one by helping clean up flood-ravaged areas of the city. World Rugby issued a statement Oct. 12 saying an evacuation order remained in place in the Kamaishi area and there had been landslides and flooding in the vicinity of the Kamaishi Recovery Memorial Stadium.  “We decided to offer up anything we could do to help the community,” said Gareth Rees, media manager for Rugby World Cup. カナダ代表の誠意と思いやり溢れる行動に心から感謝します。Heartfelt thanks to @RugbyCanada🇨🇦 for supporting the people of Kamaishi in the cleanup efforts following Typhoon Hagibis! ✨#RWC2019 #RWC釜石 #NAMvCAN pic.twitter.com/PjhDllcT9L—@rugbyworldcupjp The Canadian team, which incudes several athletes from B.C., went to nearby areas hit badly by flooding and mudslides — places where they had made friendships during their time in Japan. “They literally picked up shovels in some cases and swept the dirt out of the streets,” said Rees, who describes the experience as humbling for the team.   “Others were going into the homes of these elderly ladies and cleaning out all those straw mats, the bedding and all the belongings of these poor women that had literally four or five feet of water in their house the day before.” A goalpost and debris are swept downstream from the overflowing Tamagawa river, following the aftermath of Typhoon Hagibis on Sunday in Japan. (Franck Fife/Getty Images) Disappointing tournament The Rugby World Cup happens every four years, and 2019 marks the first time the tournament was held in Asia. It runs from Sept. 20 to Nov. 2 and has been tough for the Canadians. For the second straight World Cup, they’ve lost every game they’ve played.  Cancelled matches are logged as 0-0 ties, and teams get two competition points each. Canada, ranked 22nd in the world, had targeted the game against No. 23 Namibia as its best chance at a victory. Rees said the cancellation was “bitterly disappointing.” “It was probably the most important match for the Canadian players at this tournament,” he said. “It was devastating and they were disappointed that something they had worked for for years was not going to happen.” The team may have walked away from the World Cup without a win, but they were able to help the community following the typhoon, says its media manager. (Rugby World Cup – World Rugby) Rees said there have been several weather and typhoon warnings throughout the tournament, but Sunday’s was the biggest.  The team is flying back to Vancouver. Its members will rejoin their professional rugby clubs. “And recovering a little bit, to be perfectly honest,” he said.

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