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Saved from the dark side: how Hong Kong’s rugby ‘Pigs’ are giving Philippine street kids a chance

Star-in-the-making Lito Ramirez is living proof of the impact the game is having, thanks to the Pot Bellied Pigs

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Lito Ramirez after scoring a try in Hong Kong. Photo: Philippine Rugby Football Union
Sam Agars

Changing lives – and savings lives – has become the norm for a group of Hong Kong rugby fanatics known throughout Asia for their outlandish dress sense.

The Pot Bellied Pigs, who held their annual Fatboy 10s in Clark last weekend, are a social team in Hong Kong doing good things in the region and in the Philippines in particular.

Lito Ramirez, a shy 21-year-old, and hundreds of other young Filipinos and Filipinas have been given new lives thanks to the Piggies, as they are affectionately known.

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Abandoned as a child and at times hanging over the precipice of life’s point of no return, Ramirez progress since he was introduced to rugby has been remarkable.

Lito Ramirez playing for the CBRE Mavericks. Photo: Philippine Rugby Football Union
Lito Ramirez playing for the CBRE Mavericks. Photo: Philippine Rugby Football Union
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The versatile speedster became the first homegrown player to represent the Philippines at last year’s Olympic sevens qualifiers in Hong Kong.

He even scored a try at Hong Kong Stadium, having worked his way through the country’s grassroots programmes and national age-grade ranks to earn a berth for the Philippine Volcanoes.

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