Friday, June 17, 2011

The Conferences are Set

A slow week for rugby news. The one noteable announcement from the league office is that following a productive league meeting, WGR decided to continue building its high school leagues with two divisions of play.

A five team conference composed of top programs will compete for the State Championship and Wisconsin's two seeds to the Midwest Championships. The six remaining programs elected to vie for the Division II title.


Division I: DSHA, Kettle Moraine, Brookfield, Catholic Memorial, and Vernon


Division II: Oak Creek, Muskego, Northshore, Wauwatosa, Fond Du Lac, and Menomonee Falls.

Monday, June 13, 2011

The MVP

The National All-Star Championships were this past weekend. The Midwest Thunderbirds defeated the USA u20 team in the final 26-25, in a thrilling match.

Brittany Houston, of UWM and Vernon, earned MVP honors for her play over the course of the tournament. Our editor here thought this worth a shout out because she's the first WGR alumn to earn such recognition. Just let that sink in a little. That means she was selected as the most outstanding player out of all the all-star players at the selectside tournament. Pretty cool.

An excerpt from Rugby Magazine's match report gives readers an idea as to why she is so deserving of recognition:

"She's a field general," Riley said of the tournament MVP. "She had a marvelous game. Brit is about to graduate but won't be a full-time student next semester, so there's a lot of talk about where she's going to play her club rugby."

A longtime scrumhalf, she's been a widely respected player for many years now, first playing for the USA u20 team and after aging out, continuing to play selectside rugby with the Midwest.

It's also nice to see her giving back to the game, as she's an asst. coach for the Wisconsin u19 selectside, set to play this summer. Best of luck!

While rosters have been hard to find, word on the street is that CMHS alumn and Grand Valley State scrumhalf Emma Pesci was also on the Midwest all-star roster. Congrats on the championship!

Monday, June 6, 2011

Wisconsin Selects

WI Select Info

Will Traber, the Vernon coach for the last number of years has been named as the WI Girls Selectside Coach.

Here's this summer's info:

Seniors that just graduated can still tryout. If you or any of your players have anyquestions feel free to contact me. Please spread the word to all your players.
Thank you.
Will

Camp 1 - 6/11 - Vernon Town Park, Big Bend, WI
9:15-1:00 -
No Cost

Camp 2 - 6/18 - Dretzka Park, Milwaukee, WI
9:15-1:00 -
No Cost

Tournement - 6/25-6/26 -
Will travel down there on the 24th
St. Charles, Ill
Cost is still being determined but looks like very minimal.

Update 6/13: Former Vernon and UWM players Lyndsey Fickau and Brittany Houston are also on the coaching staff.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Book Review: Miracle in the Andes


Nando Parrado's nonfiction story of survival, Miracle in the Andes, was a book I'd been meaning to read for a long time. One of those I'd never found time for, until a late Easter Break and a short rugby season opened a brief window of freetime. You might be familiar with his story: a team of Uruguayan ruggers from the Old Christian Brothers Rugby Club board a plane for a tour of Chile. They never make it, crashing deep in the Andes Mountains. For 90 days they struggle to survive. A lack of food leaves them with no choice but to turn to the bodies of the dead. With no other hope, Nando and two teammates trek over the Andes to find help: no winter clothes or climbing gear ... just some rugby cleats.

I'd known that Nando Parrado had played rugby, but it wasn't until i found myself immersed in the pages of his personal story that i'd discovered how much rugby was a part of this story. Much of the first chapter is about how rugby's influence helped him survive. In a land dominated by soccer, the Christian Brothers from Ireland sent missionaries to Uruguay and brought with them rugby, insisting the boys learn the game through the mission school because in their words "no other sport taught so devoutly the importance of striving, suffering, sacrificing in the pursuit of a common goal," fundamentals inherent in living a Chrisitan life. Nando would draw on these lessons daily in the mountains.

Another great passage captures why many play and coach youth rugby. Playing with the same group of guys for eight years, Nando says: "We had grown up as teammates, drawing from each other's strengths, learning to trust one another when the pressure was on. But the game of rugby had not only shaped our friendships, it had shaped our characters, and brought us together as brothers."