VALPARAISO, Chile — At first, the tackles, rucks and mauls were merely survival tactics within the harsh world of prison. But what began as a workshop behind barbed wire has transcended the walls of the Valparaíso Penitentiary Complex to become Chile's first official rugby team formed behind bars.
The routine is intense. Three days of field training, two days in the gym, and matches every weekend. It mirrors the schedule of a professional league, but this is Rugby Unión Libertad — a sports club officially registered in mid-January with a mission that goes far beyond the pitch: preparing inmates for social reintegration after they serve their sentences.
"Rugby freed me; it healed my soul," Alex Javier Silva, 48, who has been incarcerated since 1999, told The Associated Press. ''Here you have no heart, no mind — you're not at peace with anything. You're like an animal."
Rugby Unión Libertad began to take shape in 2016 as part of a workshop inside the prison walls. Led by the Addiction Treatment Center, the classes initially sparked the interest of around 50 inmates, who began to play with the ''pill'' — rugby's oval ball — as a way to ease the weight of their time inside.
Over the years, the workshop evolved into Rugby Unión Libertad, a club that gained enough momentum to face the Chilean national team, Los Cóndores, in 2024.
Off the field, the team became the cornerstone of the Fundación Libertad, or Freedom Foundation. The nonprofit was established in November by a collective of former inmates, educators, psychologists and coaches, and it supports released prisoners through a mix of rugby, training, counseling and therapy.
Rugby as anger management
Three times a week, two coaches enter Valparaíso prison — about 120 kilometers (75 miles) from the capital Santiago — to lead training sessions for Unión Libertad. For two hours, the team's 27 players practice the strategies, passes and kicks that characterize the sport.