Isle of Man Rugby is in the process of restarting following the enforced break brought on by the coronavirus pandemic back in March.

The new league season will get underway properly on October 3, but in the run up to the restart there is a series of ’kickstart’ events currently happening around the island.

These began on Peel Beach a few weeks ago before the tour moved to Castletown one week later and was in Ramsey last weekend.

This Sunday the show moves to Southern Nomads’ new ground at Ballakilley, the Field of Dreams. The action begins with an under-16s game between the hosts and Ramsey at 12.30pm and, when that has finished, there will be some regional rugby.

For the regional games, the island had been divided into four sections: north, south, east and west. Players are assigned to each area based on where they live rather than where their club is and this should produce some interesting match-ups.

Clearly the eastern team, which includes the Douglas area, is likely to be the strongest, but the other regions will be giving it a go.

The regional format worked very well in the New Zealand professional game last Saturday and it will be nice to see how a similar process pans out here in the grass roots amateur game.

New-look Manx Trophy and Bowl competitions start on October 3

Ramsey and Vagabonds were destined for local competition before Covid-19 struck, after their northwestern leagues disintegrated in early March.

Subsequently, Covid halted the remaining two Manx sides, Douglas and Vagabonds Ladies, and this was quickly followed by the RFU cutting the travel budget which has left Douglas and the women somewhat stranded.

To try and salvage something for everyone, the Manx executive committee set up a strategic group to look at senior fixtures and these two competitions are the work of the new group.

The Manx Trophy will feature Douglas, Ramsey, Southern Nomads, Vagabonds and Douglas Celts, and will be played as a mini-league on a first past the post basis.

Douglas, given their lofty position in level six of the English Clubs Championship, look set to dominate the competition, but to make the games meaningful for everyone it seems likely they’ll be shuffling their squad.

The Celts were of course fairly dominant last season in any case and, assuming little or no player migration, they’ll be right there in the mix too.

The Manx Bowl fixtures are still being finalised at the time of writing, but the competition itself will feature Castletown, Emerging Nomads, Ramsey B, Vagabonds Hornets, Western Vikings and rather uniquely, Vagabonds Ladies.

With the latter being stuck out on a limb, the Isle of Man clubs have agreed to allow them to join the Bowl competition. While the exact rules of play are yet to be determined, games involving the women will be on a non-contact basis.

Both Douglas and Vagabonds Ladies continue to monitor RFU guidelines for returning to rugby in England. This will give them their best indications as to when league matches may restart and at that stage both will need to determine whether they can afford to compete.

It seems increasingly likely that this could be as late as after Christmas and these two domestic competitions are designed to run until December 12 which will provide a natural break if league matches are to continue.