I know rugby has a serious problem with concussion. We all see what’s happening. This is a global problem for modern sport. Rugby Union is not American Football but it is moving in that direction.

That makes the problems encountered by the NFL pertinent to our game, So we can’t ignore them.

What concerns me though is the survival of amateur rugby. There has been no amateur club game in America for 50 or 60 years. It was wiped out by professionalism. From what I see as a guest speaker travelling to all corners of Ireland and Britain, that will happen to rugby unless an amateur charter is introduced.

My issue, and it relates to concussion, is if the clubs in this part of the world don’t embrace an amateur charter, as we had in place before 1995, the game will die a death below the professional ranks.

There are so many strands to this. Our teenagers, who view only the professional model, are taking supplements with plenty of schools in denial about their widespread use. They mimic their heroes knowing that power and size is essential if they are to be competitive.

There is no testing below underage representative level, so if you are taking A, B and C why not cross the line and ingest X, Y and Z. Sure who will find out? We don’t know what our children are taking. That’s an issue that must be addressed before we can get near concerns about concussion at schoolboy level. Because they are directly related.

Chalk and cheese

The talented players who miss out on academy contracts wander around the clubs seeing what money they will be given to play under-20s and eventually for the First XV. Not every single 19-year-old, mind, just the most ambitious players. The clubs are saying they will not pay players but some emphasise the foul over the fair means of recruitment.

That’s another problem.

There are a set of rules about non-payment of players and the amateur clubs are expected to implement them. This is extremely difficult to police. There is no paper trail to find the money that is being doled out. So it does not exist? You bet your life it does.

I have tried to address this but it’s a full-time job to get out among all the clubs. A large majority of the clubs agree with me but these volunteers are stymied by the same time constraints.

All these problems go into the same melting pot – paying amateur players, supplement use, the growing size of players and increased number of concussive blows.

If not addressed the amateur game will slowly but surely sink into oblivion.

50% decline

I get invited on occasion to club dinners and lunches. The average age can be up around 65. I made a quip at one recently that there will be nobody attending these functions in 15 to 20 years time. On returning to my seat the host of the event, an old friend, looked at me angrily and stated: “How dare you suggest such a thing! There will be nobody at this lunch in three years time!”

In my experience people play amateur team sports for two reasons: what happens on the pitch and what happens afterwards – the friendships made with the man you just tried to beat up.

That was always the spirit that drove the game. Once money comes into it, like in any other aspect of life, it is no longer about camaraderie – it’s only about what happens on the pitch.

Tours, once the lifeblood of rugby union, are now a rarity, weekly club games are no more and the craic synonymous with the club house is barely in existence.

I went to New Zealand with the Lions in 1971 while my club, Blackrock, went on a tour of East Africa. They played Uganda in front of 12,000 people (Idi Amin was a rugby man) but that touring culture is almost entirely gone.

What we are seeing, at all levels of the game, is plenty of what I call door-bashing rugby. That’s not sustainable, certainly not below the professional ranks.

An amateur charter, in agreement with the IRFU, is not a magic wand but the beginning of a long, hard struggle for survival. It would provide the tools to examine how we begin to protect the club game, and how we begin to protect our players.