Senegal is a founder member of the
Confederation of African Rugby (CAR), which was launched officially in January 1986, in
Tunis,
Tunisia. Rugby officials from
Tunisia,
Morocco,
Ivory Coast,
Tanzania,
Kenya,
the Seychelles and
Madagascar attended. Senegal has a long-established union and players come from all walks of life. Rugby has been played in Senegal by French colonialists since the 1920s, and they created a union in 1960. For 20 to 30 years rugby was a game only for the French colonists and the military. Rugby was largely unknown among the Senegalese until the 1990s. In the late 1990s, the Fédération Sénégalaise de Rugby increased the visibility of the game among the Senegalese, with a new policy aiming to develop rugby in the schools. Rugby took off in 2005 when Senegal participated in their first Rugby World Cup qualifying and played six international games. In 2005, the national Rugby championships comprised just five clubs, all of them made up of French immigrants. Eight years later, there were 12 clubs, and all but one of them was fully Senegalese. In 2014, 18 clubs came to at least one of the national championships, whether it be men’s, women’s, Fifteens or Sevens. This has led to the International Rugby Board increasing its development grant every year. The Senegalese federation has been growing rugby in Senegal. The Senegalese federation receives technical and training support from the IRB and the Confédération Africaine de Rugby (CAR), where professionals come to Senegal and deliver short, intensive courses. ==National team==