Rugby has never enjoyed much popularity in the U.S.—especially in Texas, the land of Friday Night Lights and Longhorn football culture.
That may be changing. A 2009 study identified rugby as the nation’s fastest-growing sport—and it will be played in the 2016 Olympics for the first time since 1924.
Those are big wins for rugby on the national and international stage—and the sport is on rise in Texas, too.
Yes, UT has a rugby team, and a really good one, too. This marks
their 26th year on campus, and it may just be their biggest yet.
Texas Rugby is currently riding
high at an undefeated first place in the Southwest Rugby Conference (the
season goes from fall to spring). Only three more matches lie between
them and a trip to the national championships in April.
Last summer, the team placed fifth out of 16 teams in another national competition: the invitation-only College Rugby Championships, which was televised nationally on NBC. UT will play in the same championships again this June.
In
addition to these successes on the pitch, the Texas Rugby Alumni
Association has started a scholarship endowment with the Texas Exes. Its
goal is to award the first scholarship this year.
For a club team staffed by volunteers and funded by players,
scholarships will be a vital recruitment tool, says assistant coach and
fundraising chair Mickey Johnson.
“We’ve raised about $8,000 toward an initial goal of $25,000,”
Johnson says. “We have players who are international and out-of-state
students. This will help them put school first.”
“The guys are really passionate, really positive, and are working
really hard,” says head coach Butch Neuenschwander. “My team captain
last year graduated with a 4.0, and he was pre-med. So these are smart
guys. I’m damn proud of them.”
Neuenschwander says rugby’s reputation as a bloody, brutal game belies its true culture—one he calls chivalrous and fun-loving.
“Rugby is intense and full-contact, yes, but not dangerous,”
Neuenschwander says. “And you’ll never see yelling or a brawl break out
at a rugby match. The players even call the referee ‘sir.’”
Mickey Johnson, an assistant coach with the team, calls rugby “human
chess” because, he says, the game requires so much mental acumen.
“In football, you have one play and then that’s it,” Johnson says.
“The strategy involved in rugby is more intellectual. You have one play,
and then another, and then another, and you have to plan all of those
strategically.”
The team plays two very different versions of rugby: 15s and sevens.
The more traditional 15s is played with 15 men on each team, and the
match lasts for 80 minutes with no time-outs and one five-minute
halftime. Sevens has seven men on each side, and the game only lasts 14
minutes: two seven-minute segments with a five-minute break.
“Sevens is fast-paced, perfect for TV,” Neuenschwander says. “Rugby
has everything. It’s fun to watch and fun to play. Our team is going
places.”
Photos courtesy Mickey Johnson
Source: The Alcalde

4 wisely commented |:
Look at those Snazzy OU Jerseys sponsored by RuckingInsurance.com!
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Well spotted! All we need now is some sponsorship for UT and you will be all over the place, all the time!!
Is there any scholarship for overseas plyaers? I’m from guyana and I’m a national sevens player. U can contact me on facebook or yahoo.com My email vallonadams@yahoo.com
Hi there! The best for you would be to visit the website (http://www.utrugby.com/) and reach out directly to them. All the best!
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