May 14, 2008

Temple Rugby's Out On The Piss Again!

Temple Rugby's Out On The Piss Again!

THESE YOUNG BOYS PLAYING RUGBY THESE DAYS. What they could learn from the old boys, even if those old boys are just a couple of years or 20 removed from their playing days at Temple University Rugby Club. The annual Temple Alumni Game was played Saturday at Memorial Hall field in Fairmount Park, and I'm pleased to say that the old boys in red jerseys had their way with Temple's current squad of players.

Unlike last year's 25-22 squeaker won by the Alumni, this year's spanking was closer to 48-22. I can't say exactly because even the referees weren't keeping score. But the alumni tacked on eight of nine splendid tries to the young boy's four. It was a great turnout and a terrific party afterwards that continued late into the night at the Temple Rugby house near campus on 16th Street near Oxford.

Five of my former players from Temple RFC 1989 when I coached showed up for the game and acquitted themselves with distinction, if not blazing speed. Like athletes in any sport, the first thing to go is the legs, but the last rugby skill to desert an old boy is the cunning. And the extra pounds don't hurt in applying the cunning to action.

Now, if we could only teach these young boys to sing.

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May 04, 2008

Brandywine survives late Media rally

Brandywine survives late Media rally

IN A MATCH FILLED WITH UPS AND DOWNS for both rugby clubs, Division II playoffs-bound Brandywine RFC allowed a 20 point lead to evaporate late in the second half but held on to defeat Division I Delaware County rival Media RFC 36-32 Saturday afternoon at Media's home field in Bridgeport. Pride drove both teams in a match that swung back and forth in a first half with four lead changes. Brandywine, which heads to Texas in two weeks for the sweet sixteen playoff round in the Division II national tournament, took over in the second half with a hatrick of tries to take a 33-13 lead.

With 10 minutes remaining in the match, Media found its offensive afterburners and rallied to within a single point. of the suddenly vulnerable red and black jersies. Brandywine turned away the yellow peril with a nifty drop kick between the uprights with two minutes to play, eliminating Media's possibility of winning on a penalty kick or a drop goal of their own (they had two in the match).

The boys from Brandywine are 15-1 on the season, their only loss being a 51-10 spanking at the Maryland Exiles.

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April 12, 2008

Kutztown defense allows easy late try to UConn

Kutztown defense allows easy late try to UConn

WHAT DOES A WORLD CLASS THUMPING look like? Well, it looks a lot like this, even though this doesn't accurately reflect the hurtin' that Kutztown University's rugby club put on the University of Connecticut this afternoon in Berks County under apocaplytically gray Grantland Rice skies that turned into sugary April sunshine by the end of a match that gave new meaning to the losing team's "99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall" songfest on the miserable five-hour bus ride home.

I chose this photo to illustrate today's column because it is both representative and ironic. Representative because it illustrates Kutztown's "in your face" defensive pressure that thwarted the Huskies at every bark. Ironic because it is one of the few photos I have of the game without the ball in Kutztown hands. And you have to have a lot of ball possession to score as many points as the Fightin' Amish poured upon The English from Yankeeland.

How many points? Well, I've watched, seen, played, refereed, coached or run touch in thousands of rugby matches since I was first blooded in 1968, and I never saw one team score as many points as Kutztown did against UConn. It was like New Zealand vs Namibia. I've read about matches with scores like this but I've never seen one live. What's impressive, before I tell you the score, is that UConn never gave up. Kutztown has it's ticket punched to the dance next week in Albuquerque, N.M. where the NCAA collegiate rugby Sweet Sixteen playoff tournament has Kutztown seeded number four. But UConn, a solid, but on this day, undermanned, side, showed up to play. In fact, they scored their only try late in the second half.

That's why I have that headline on this piece.. Not because I'm being nice to UConn, but because it's an opportunity to bust Gregg Jones balls. And Gregg, my former Whitemarsh teammate, is Kutztown's well-known rugby coach the same way Joe Pa is the well known football coach of another state-supported college in Pennsylvania. The only difference between the two is that Paterno looks younger.

So let me pick up the story on the sideline of today's match shortly after the final whistle. I had walked over to congratulate Coach Jones on his team's fine "tuneup" for Kutztown's national championship run, but he was muttering testily while pouring over a scorecard that looked harder to figure out than Chinese arithmetic. So many fives, so many twos. And they didn't add up to the number he wanted. He gave me a look like I knew what he was talking about. "Do you believe these guys? Six lousy points and they couldn't do it.." It reminded me of the Superman movie sequel where evil mastermind Robert Vaughn complains to Richard Pryor, "One little thing I ask you to do and you couldn't kill Superman."

What was the final score, I asked? "Ninety. . .eight. . . no, four! Ninety-four."

"To five," I added helpfully.

"To FIVE!" he repeated in disgust.

That's it for now, guys. Wake me when Kutztown scores a hundred.

Continue reading "Kutztown defense allows easy late try to UConn" »

April 02, 2008

As likely a bunch of welshmen as you'd expect

As likely a bunch of welshmen as you'd expect

THIS GUY I KNOW WHO TALKS A LOT to me and anyone else who hasn't run for cover -- let's call him Jim -- comes up to me at a bar we share. Jim enjoys reading the Daily DeLeon and reminds DeLeon when it isn't daily. Jim measures his words before speaking and yet always speaks the wrong words at the right time. "Enough with that rugby already," says Jim. He's tired of reading about rugby.

He's tired of reading about rugby. He's tired. . .of reading. . .Certain people can say just the right words to effect the opposite result they sought.. So I should shut up about rugby, is that what I'm hearing Jim? You say this on the same day that Bucky the Cat disses Rob Wilco in Get Fuzzy "Now you Pinky. What's your favorite type of entertainment?" the scheming cat says to his human uber-underling. "Rugby," replies the slacker chested Rob in a backwards baseball cap. "No, not rugby," says the black faced one-fanged Bucky with paw to chin. "Nobody cares about stupid rugby." And Rob Wilco says what any human would say in response to an insulting comment by a cat. "Dude, you're like the meanest media consultant ever."

If Jim is tired of reading about rugby, just imagine how tired he'd be. . . nah. That's unfair. That's apples and bowling balls. Point is, I have failed to amuse Jim with my rugby yarns. I have failed to reach his heart of oakness. So I've decided to call out the cavalry. I defy anyone to read what follows without laughing out loud at the wit and in awe of the language. This was written by actor Richard Burton, a Welshman who bedded both Cleopatra and Elizabeth Taylor, after hanging up his rugby boots.

The guys in the photo above remind me of the "sub-Welshman I submitted myself to that cruel afternoon" in Burton's reminiscece of his last match. This game was played in 1953 or thereabouts and I am stealing it wholsale and spreading it around the internet. This is Richard Burton writing. Note the second sentence. Awesome.

By Richard Burton

IT'S DIFFICULT FOR ME to know where to start with rugby. I come from a fanatically rugby-conscious Welsh miner's family, know so much about it, have read so much about it, have heard with delight so many massive lies and stupendous exaggerations about it and have contributed my own fair share, and five of my six brothers played it, one with some distinction, and I mean I even knew a Welsh woman from Taibach who before a home match at Aberavon would drop goals from around forty yards with either foot to entertain the crowd, and her name, I remember, was Annie Mort and she wore sturdy shoes, the kind one reads about in books as “sensible,” though the recipient of a kick from one of Annie's shoes would have been not so much sensible as insensible, and I even knew a chap called Five Cush Cannon who won the sixth replay of a cup final (the previous five encounters, having ended with the scores 0-0, 0-0, 0-0, 0-0, 0-0 including extra time) by throwing the ball over the bar from a scrum ten yards out in a deep fog and claiming a dropped goal. And getting it.

What's more I knew people like a one-armed inside half – he’d lost an arm in the First World War - who played with murderous brilliance for Cwmavon for years when I was a boy. He was particularly adept, this one, at stopping a forward bursting through from the line-out with a shattering iron-hard thrust from his stump as he pulled him on to it with the other. He also used the misplaced sympathy of innocent visiting players who didn't go at him with the same delivery as they would against a two-armed man, as a ploy to lure them on to concussion and other organic damage. They learned quickly, or were told after the match when they had recovered sufficiently from Jimmy's ministrations to be able to understand the spoken word, that going easy on Jimmy-One-Arm was first cousin to stepping into a grave and waiting for the shovels to start. A great many people who played unwarily against Jimmy died unexpectedly in their early forties. They were lowered solemnly into the grave with all match honours to the slow version of Sospan Fach. They say that the conductor at these sad affairs was noticeably one-armed but that could be exaggeration again.

As I said, it's difficult for me to know where to start so I’ll begin with the end. The last shall be first, as it is said, so I'll tell you about the last match I ever played in.

I had played the game representatively from the age of ten until those who employed me in my profession, which is that of actor, insisted that I was a bad insurance risk against certain dread teams in dead-end valleys who would have little respect, no respect, or outright disrespect for what I was pleased to call my face. What if I were unfortunate enough to be on the deck in the middle of a loose maul… they murmured in dollar accents? Since my face was already internationally known and since I was paid, perhaps overpaid, vast sums of money for its ravaged presentation they, the money men, expressed a desire to keep it that way.

Apart from wanting to preserve my natural beauty, it would affect continuity, they said, if my nose was straight on Friday in the medium shot and was bent towards my left ear on Monday for the close-up. Millions of panting fans from Tokyo to Tonmawr would be puzzled, they said. So to this day there is a clause in my contracts that forbids me from flying my own plane, skiing and playing the game of rugby football, the inference being that it would be all right to wrestle with a Bengal tiger five thousand miles away, but not to play against, shall we say, Pontypool at home. I decided that they had some valid arguments after my last game.

It was played against a village whose name is known only to its inhabitants and crippled masochists drooling quietly in kitchen corners, a mining village with all the natural beauty of the valleys of the moon.. and just as welcoming, with a team composed almost entirely of colliers. I hadn't played for four or five years but was fairly fit, I thought, and the opposition was bottom of the third class and reasonably beatable. Except, of course on their home ground. I should have thought of that. I should have called to mind that this was the kind of team where, towards the end of the match, you kept your bus ticking over near the touchline in case you won and had to run for your life.

I wasn't particularly nervous before the match until, though 1 was disguised with a skull-cap and everyone had been sworn to secrecy, 1 heard a voice from the other team asking “Le ma'r blydi film star 'ma? (here's the bloody film star here?) as we were running on to the field. My cover, as they say in spy stories, was already blown and trouble was to be my shadow (there was none from the sun since there was no sun - it was said in fact that the sun hadn't shone there since 1929) and the end of my career the shadow of my shadow for the next eighty minutes or so. It was a mistaken game for me to play. I survived it with nothing broken except my spirit, the attitude of the opposition being unquestionably summed up in simple words like “Never mind the bloody ball, where's the bloody actor?” Words easily understood by all.

Among other things I was playing Hamlet at that time at the Old Vic but for the next few performances after that match I was compelled to play him as if he were Richard the Third. The punishment I took had been innocently compounded by a paragraph in a book of reminiscence by Bleddyn Williams with whom I had played on and off (mostly off) in the RAF. On page 37 of that volume Mr. Williams is kind enough to suggest that I had distinct possibilities as a player were it not for the lure of tinsel and paint and money and fame and so on. Incidentally, one of the curious phenomena or my library is that when you take out Bleddyn’s autobiography from the shelves it automatically opens at the very page mentioned above. Friends have often remarked on this and wondered afresh at the wizardry of the Welsh. It is in fact the only notice I have ever kept.

Anyway, this little snippet from the great Bleddyn's book was widely publicized and some years later by the time I played that last game had entered into the uncertain realms of folk legend and was deeply embedded in the subconscious of the sub-Welshmen I submitted myself to that cruel afternoon. They weren't playing with chips on their shoulders, they were simply skeptical about page 37.

I didn’t realize that I was there to prove anything until too late. And I couldn't. And didn't. I mean prove anything. And I'm still a bit testy about it. Though I was working like a dog at the Vic playing Hamlet, Coriolanus, Caliban, The Bastard in King John, and Toby Belch, it wasn't the right kind of training for these great knotted gnarled things from the burning bowels of the earth. In my teens I had lived precariously on the lip of first-class rugby by virtue of knowing every trick in the canon, evil and otherwise, by being a bad bad loser, but chiefly, and perhaps only because I was very nippy off the mark. I was 5 ft 10 ½” in height in bare feet and weighed, soaking wet, no more than 121 stone, and since I played in the pack, usually at open side wing-forward and since I played against genuinely big men it therefore followed that I had to be galvanically quick to move from Inertia. When faced with bigger and faster forwards, I was doomed. R. T. Evans of Newport, Wales and the Universe for instance - a racy 141 stone and 6 ft 1 ½” in height - was a nightmare to play against and shaming to play with, both of which agonies I suffered a lot, mostly thank God, the latter lesser cauchemar. Genuine class of course doesn't need size though sometimes I forgot this. Once I p1ayed rather condescendingly against a Cambridge college and noted that my opposite number seemed to be shorter than I was and in rugby togs looked like a schoolboy compared with Ike Owen, Bob Evans or W. I. D. Elliot. However this blond stripling gave me a terrible time. He was faster and harder and wordlessly ruthless and it was no consolation to find out his name afterwards because it meant nothing at the time. He has forgotten me but I haven’t forgotten him. This anonymity was called Steele-Bodger and a more onomatopoeic name for its owner would be hard to find. He was, I promise you, steel and he did, I give you my word, bodger. Say his name through clenched teeth and you’ll see what I mean. I am very glad to say that I have never seen him since except from the safety of the stands.

In this match, this last match played against troglodytes, burned to the bone by the fury of their work, bow-legged and embittered because they weren't playing for or hadn't played for and would never play for Cardiff or Swansea or Neath or Aberavon, men who smiled seldom and when they did it was like scalpels, trained to the last ounce by slashing and hacking away neurotically at the frightened coal face for 7 ½ hours a day, stalactitic, tree-rooted, curved out or granite by a rough and ready sledge hammer and clinker, against these hard volumes of which I was the soft cover paper-back edition. I discovered some truths very soon. I discovered just after the first scrum for instance that it was time I ran for the bus and not for their outside-half. He had red hair, a blue-white face and no chin. Standing up straight his hands were loosely on a level with his calves and when the ball and I arrived exultantly together at his stock-still body, a perfect set-up you would say, and when I realized that I was supine and he was lazily kicking the ball into touch I realized that I had forgotten that trying to intimidate a feller like that was like trying a cow a mandrill, and that he had all the graceful willowy-give and sapling-bend of stressed concrete.

That was only the outside-half.

From then on I was elbowed, gouged, dug, planted, raked, hoed, kicked a great deal, sandwiched, and once humiliatingly taken from behind with nobody in front of me when I had nothing to do but run fifteen yards to score. Once, coming down from going up for the ball in a line-out, the other wing-forward - a veteran of at least fifty with grey hair - chose to go up as I was coming down if you'll forgive this tautological syntax. Then I was down and he was up and to insult the injury he generously helped me up from being down and pushed me in a shambling run towards my own try-line with a blood-curdling endearment in the Welsh tongue since during all these preceding ups and downs his unthinkable team had scored and my presence was necessary behind the posts as they were about to attempt the conversion.

I knew almost at once and appallingly that the speed, such as it had been, had ended and only the memory lingered on, and that attacking Olivia De Havilland and Lana Turner and Claire Bloom was not quite the same thing as tackling those Wills and Dais, those Twms and Dicks.

The thing to do I told myself with desperate cunning was to keep alive, and the way to do that was to keep out of the way. This is generally possible to do when you know you're out-classed without everybody knowing, but in this case it wasn't possible to do because everybody was very knowing indeed. Sometimes in a lament for my lost youth (I was about 28) I roughed it up as well as I could but it is discouraging to put the violent elbow into the tempting rib when your prescience tells you that what is about to be broken is not the titillating rib but your pusillanimous pathetic elbow. After being gardened, mown and rolled a little more, I gave that up, asked the Captain of our team if he didn't think it would be a better idea to hide me deeper in the pack. I had often, I reminded him, played right prop, my neck was strong and my right arm had held its own with most. He gave me a long look, a trifle pitying perhaps but orders were given and in I went to the maelstrom and now the real suffering began. Their prop with whom I was to share cheek and jowl for the next eternity, didn't believe in razor blades since he grew them on his chin and shaved me thoroughly for the rest of the game taking most of my skin in the process, delicacy not being his strong point. He used his prodigious left arm to paralyze mine and pull my head within an inch or two of the earth, then rolled my head around his, first taking my ear between his fore-finger and thumb, humming “Rock of Ages” under his breath.

By the end of the game my face was as red as the setting sun and the same shape. Sometimes, to vary the thing a bit he rolled his head on what little neck he had around, under and around again my helpless head. I stuck it out because there was nothing else to do which is why on Monday night in the Waterloo Road I played the Dane looking like a Swede with my head permanently on one side and my right arm in an imaginary sling intermittently crooked and cramped with occasional severe shakes and involuntary shivers as of one with palsy. I suppose to the connoisseurs of Hamlets it was a departure from your traditional Prince but it wasn't strictly what the actor playing the part had in mind. A melancholy Dane he was though. Melancholy he most certainly was.

I tried once to get myself removed to the wing but by this time our Captain had become as, shall we say, “dedicated” (he may read this) as the other team and actually wanted to win. He seemed not to hear me and the wing in this type of game I knew never got the ball and was, apart from throwing the ball in from touch, a happy Spectator, and I wanted to be a happy spectator. I shuffled after the pack.

I joined in the communal bath afterwards in a large steamy hut next to the changing-rooms, feeling very hard-done-by and hurt though I didn't register the full extent or the agonies that were to crib, cabin and confine me for the next few days. I drank more than my share of beer in the home team's pub, joined in the singing and found that the enemies were curiously shy and withdrawn until the beer bad hit the proper spot. Nobody mentioned my performance on the field.

There was only one moment of wild expectation on my part when a particu1arly grim sullen and taciturn member of the other side said suddenly with what passed shockingly for a smile splitting the slag heap of his face like an earth tremor,

“Come outside with us will ‘ew?” There was another beauty with him.

"Where to?” I asked.

“Never 'ew mind,” he said, “you'll be awright. Jest come with us.”

“O.K.”

We went out into the cruel February night and made our way to the outside Gents - black-painted concrete with one black pipe for flushing, wet to the open sky. We stood side by side in silence. They began to void. So did I. There had been beer enough for all. I waited for a possible compliment on my game that afternoon - I had after all done one or two good things if only by accident. I waited. But there was nothing but the sound of wind and water. I waited and silently followed them back into the bar.

Finally I said: “What did you want to tell me?"

“Nothing,” the talkative one said.

“Well, what did you ask me out there for then?'”

“Well,” the orator said, “Well… us two is brothers and we wanted to tell our mam that we'd 'ad a…”

He hesitated, after all I spoke posh except when I spoke Welsh, which oddly enough the other team didn't speak to me though I spoke it to them. “Well, we jest wanted to tell our mam that we had passed water with Richard Burton” he said with triumphant care.

“Oh ‘ell!” I said.

I went back to London next day in a Mark VIII Jaguar driving very fast, folding up and tucking away into the back drawer of my subconscious all my wounds, staunched blood, bandaged pride, feeling older than I've ever felt since. The packing wasn't very well done as from time to time all the parcels of all the games I'd ever played wrapped up loosely in that last one will undo themselves spill out of the drawer into my dreams and wake me shaking to the reassuring reaching-out for the slim cool comfort of a cigarette in the dead vast and doomed middle and with a puff and a sigh mitty myself into Van Wyk, Don White and Alan Macarley and winning several matches by myself by 65 points to nil, re-pack the bags.

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March 26, 2008

What me worry? Where's the ball?

What me worry?  Where's the ball?

OK, OK, I'M REACHING HERE, which is not unlike what this Chicago Lions leaper was doing in a lineout against the Philadelphia-Whitemarsh Rugby Club during a Rugby Super League match at South Jersey RFC's fine pitch on Evesham Road in Deptford, N.J. a couple of weeks ago. Chicago hammered the homeboys 40-5, which should be embarrassing, and which, quite frankly, is.

But because I AM THE MEDIA and I can spin a massacre into a Cinderella story. Chicago turned into frogs at midnight. Of course, Philly-Whitemarsh turned into Fijians.

Not that that's a bad thing.

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March 15, 2008

On St. Patrick's Day even white men can jump

On St. Patrick's Day even white men can jump

THIS PHOTO TELLS YOU EVERYTHING you need to know about the game of rugby as it is played these days. I am addressing this observation to a lot of you "back in the day" rugby players who haven't tied up the laces on your boots in earnest since a try was was worth four points. I'm also addressing you younger guys who are just breaking in to this exciting, enigmatic and yet elemental lifestyle called rugby.

To give you a sense of where I'm coming from, I'm the guy who years ago came up with an idea for a bumper sticker to take advantage of the publicity surrounding the tragic crash of an airliner into the Andes mountains. The charter flight of 45 passengers and crew members was filled with players and supporters of a Uruguyan rugby club on their way to play an away match in Chili. The plane crashed on Oct. 13, 1972. Seventy-five days later, long after the families and the world had given up hope of finding any survivors, two rugby players -- a 22-year-old second row and a 19-year-old winger -- walked out of the mountains after an heroic trek through snow and ice that saved the lives of 14 other survivors huddled miserably at the crash site. Soon the world discovered the answer to the miracle of how they all stayed alive without food for more than two months. And that's when I printed up bumper stickers that said, "RUGBY PLAYERS EAT THEIR DEAD."

Rugby has always been a edgy sport with edgy people attracted to it Sure they hold responsible jobs and raise families and pay taxes and sometimes, lord knows why, even vote Republican. But I don't know a single rugby player who wouldn't eat a dead teammate if he had to. (Well, at least a dead teammate who wasn't Italian.)
When I started playing for Whitemarsh in 1968, rugby was sort of the outlaw motorcycle gang of contact sports. It's reputation -- well deserved, I might add -- preceded it. Rugby was everything people said it was. And my team -- Whitemarsh -- was even more of that. We prided ourselves on being bigger, tougher, faster, harder on the field, with more of us than them singing louder, funnier and longer at the party. We wanted it all. And then not to get arrested on the way home.

But in our wildest dreams none of us "back in the day" rugby guys could imagine a future where white second row forwards could routinely jump seven feet in the air in a single bound. And yet you see this sort of counter-intuitive, anti-gravitational, anabolic-steroid-free leaping ability at virtually all levels of rugby as it's played in the first decade of the 21st Century .

It's marvelous to look at when it's done right, such as this Kodak moment yesterday afternoon in Cherry Hill, N.J., where Phitladelphia-Whitemarsh forwards out-skied their Rugby Super League rivals from the black-clad Chicago Lions. But in a competitive contact sport context, let alone a rugby football context, these unnatural teammate-assisted pyramids seem as contrived as a routine by Big Five cheeerleaders during a college basketball time out at the Palestra.

Don't get me wrong, I love watching the cheerleaders lift their perky pals over their heads. But if I saw Dionte Christmas and Ryan Brooks hoisting Mark Tyndale overhead and then holding him high above the hoop until he scored Temple's winning basket over St. Joes in the Atlantic Ten Tournament championship, well sir, I'd be thinking that something hinky has happened to basketball.

I'm not saying that rugby isn't better a game than it used to be. I'm just saying that these days we bury our dead. And I miss the meat.

Continue reading "On St. Patrick's Day even white men can jump" »

March 09, 2008

i got your march madness, right here, pal!

i got your march madness, right here, pal!

MARCH MADNESS IS NOT THE EXCLUSIVE DOMAIN of college hoops, as any fan or player of the sport of rugby football will be glad to tell you -- (and a special shout out to any mother or wife of a rugby player who gets stuck with ther soggy chore of washing and/or burning the game day jerseys after a March madness mud wrestling match like the ones Saturday afternoon between Brandywine Rugby Club and the visiting Baltimore-Chesapeake RFC at Brandywine's pitch in a former pasteur in the vast and beautiful horse and cattle country of that part of southern Chester County that is closer to Wilmington than West Chester.

When March is acting lionish with high winds, horizontal torrential rains and olympic pool- sized puddles the sport of rugby achieves a sort of sacred messiness caused by wet hands, sodden boots, floodtide turf, and muddy balls (yeah, including the ones they play the game with). A wet sloppy field is the great common denominator of rugby, where every speedy back in the three quarters line is transformed into a lumbering second row forward with bad hands. To imagine what it's like to cleanly catch a wet muddy rugby ball that has been passed or kicked in your general direction is like shooting a clean game of billiards while chalking your cue with axel grease.

Rugby players love playing in the mud because injuries are rare when the ground is as soft and spongy as a water-logged sofa left out overnight at a frat party kegger. Mud is a true democratic athletic condition. The fast get slower, the slow get slower still, and everyone drops the ball constantly. It would be comical if it weren't so unavoidable.

This photo is from the B side match which was played in great part during a sudden white squall of wind and 50 MPH bullet-like rain drops that arrived as suddenly as a twister and hung around for 20 minutes. As heavy as the rains were where you were yesterday, imagine trying to pass, kick, tackle , ruck and maul in rain and wind so fierce it blinded you as some other blind many was hurling his body at you. Look at some of the players facing the wind coming from the left in the photo above. And to think they actually pretended that they could see what was going on.

The young turkheads from Brandywine won both the A and B side matches, 22-15 and 20-5 respectively, remaining undefeated on the young season that started with a championship tournament performance in Fort Lauderdale last month where Brandywine defeated some major rugby clubs in the United State and Canada, including the Georgiaforeign-student rich rugby factory Life College and the Toronto Scots in the final.

March Madness on a rugby pitch. . . It's never pretty, but it sure is beautiful.

Continue reading "i got your march madness, right here, pal!" »

we got your march madness, right here, pal!

we got your march madness, right here, pal!

MARCH MADNESS IS NOT THE EXCLUSIVE DOMAIN of college hoops, as any fan or player of the sport of rugby football will be glad to tell you -- (and a special shout out to any mother or wife of a rugby player who gets stuck with ther soggy chore of washing and/or burning the game day jerseys after a March madness mud wrestling match like the ones Saturday afternoon between Brandywine Rugby Club and the visiting Baltimore-Chesapeake RFC at Brandywine's pitch in a former pasteur in the vast and beautiful horse and cattle country of that part of southern Chester County that is closer to Wilmington than West Chester.

When March is acting lionish with high winds, horizontal torrential rains and olympic pool- sized puddles the sport of rugby achieves a sort of sacred messiness caused by wet hands, sodden boots, floodtide turf, and muddy balls (yeah, including the ones they play the game with). A wet sloppy field is the great common denominator of rugby, where every speedy back in the three quarters line is transformed into a lumbering second row forward with bad hands. To imagine what it's like to cleanly catch a wet muddy rugby ball that has been passed or kicked in your general direction is like shooting a clean game of billiards while chalking your cue with axel grease.

Rugby players love playing in the mud because injuries are rare when the ground is as soft and spongy as a water-logged sofa left out overnight at a frat party kegger. Mud is a true democratic athletic condition. The fast get slower, the slow get slower still, and everyone drops the ball constantly. It would be comical if it weren't so unavoidable.

This photo is from the B side match which was played in great part during a sudden white squall of wind and 50 MPH bullet-like rain drops that arrived as suddenly as a twister and hung around for 20 minutes. As heavy as the rains were where you were yesterday, imagine trying to pass, kick, tackle , ruck and maul in rain and wind so fierce it blinded you as some other blind many was hurling his body at you. Look at some of the players facing the wind coming from the left in the photo above. And to think they actually pretended that they could see what was going on.

The young turkheads from Brandywine won both the A and B side matches, 22-15 and 20-5 respectively, remaining undefeated on the young season that started with a championship tournament performance in Fort Lauderdale last month where Brandywine defeated some major rugby clubs in the United State and Canada, including the Georgiaforeign-student rich rugby factory Life College and the Toronto Scots in the final.

March Madness on a rugby pitch. . . It's never pretty, but it sure is beautiful.

Continue reading "we got your march madness, right here, pal!" »

February 20, 2008

Every Son Must Find His Own War

Every Son Must Find His Own War

I AM PREPARING MY OBITUARY. I The older I get the more I read about men whose lives are defined, to some, by their acts during wartime. My father's generation is dying off so fast I can't appreciate the heroes as they flash past. And there are so many of them . I like to think that rugby cured me of feeling like a weakling in front of my father. It wasn't easy. And I wasn't alone.

There was the rugby, of course. The hardness. The voluntary hurt. The friendships. Rugby was my Vietnam and I embraced it. I wanted, I needed, to feel tested. And I had everything to lose by playing rugby. There was nothing in it for me except what it made me feel about myself. Play rugby every week for ten or so years, two seasons a year, and you get to know something about madness. The good kind. The "I can't believe I cared that much about that back when I cared about that." And to realize I still care about all that. Still crazy after all this rugby.

My father never got it. I can speak of this now because I am a man, and in the maul of my life I have learned how to speak of hurt without it sounding pitying. I pitied my father. He was the biggest influence in my life . He was the huge. And he was completely out of his mind. There was alcohol involved. The more I understand my father the more it breaks my heart. All that stuff left unsaid because he never found the language of his own life.

I understand his rage
, his rage against the dying of the light. I just wish he had found the words or gestures. My father used to talk about World War II when I was a kid. I remember everything he said except where he was, and he never talked about the stories we found eight years after he died in letters he wrote to his sister. He was in Okinawa in August 1945. The first letter he got through to his sister was dated Oct. 16, 1945.

He filled in the blanks as best he knew them. He had been part of the invasion of Okinawa, saw frightened Japanese-hostage Okinawains emerge from a cave, and since then had been placed on a ship off the coast of Japan awaiting the order to invade. Which is where he was the day America went mediaval on Hiroshima. In his letter my father never mentions the means. He described the atomic bomb as "the Japanese surrender proposal." Regarding his feelings about invading Japan my father wrote "but the Japanese surrender proposal put an end to that interesting assignment." And then, to prove he's human, he added, "Thank God." My father was 36 years old. I wouldn't be born for another four years.

This new knowledge of how close my father was dying in the awful battle that never happened because of the Atomic bomb was the first time I was forced to consider life without me in it. I quickly came to the conclusion, "That sucks!" Suddenly I felt more pride than pity toward my father.

Boo-fuckin'-hoo. Am I breakin' any hearts here? We all had it rough. Or if we didn't, we do now because we play rugby. Or try to. Or did. I'm all fucked up from playing rugby. Won't begin to name the places. But let me point out that the heart of ruck and roll is till beating. I regret nothing. Not the waste of time. Not the misplaced values. Not the sad inventory a rugby braveheart has to submit himself to when he confronts the reality of how much time he spent on rugby rather than on family. Or job. Or success. Did I mention I'm also a mummer?

Oh, to get back to that opening "obituary" remark, I want rugby mentioned in my obituary. I want the world to know in the last story of my life how how much I loved the game of rugby football. And I love the game. Then and now. The game is better than ever. Much better than back when I played. But back then I actually played it. I played rugby as hard as I could. And now I feel like a man, for having played it, with purpose, year after year.

To speak such feelings iin front of rugby players is to feel like a fruit in front of the ripest bunch of bad apples I ever met. Slap a pair of tits on me, I'm a woman. But ask yourself this: "Would I have ever met this asshole if it weren't for rugby?" I could name names, and maybe I will. But let me speak the great unspoken about rugby players: We Love Each Other Because.

There was a bumper sticker back when I first started to play in the late '60's. All it said was "Rugby Because"

To this day I have no idea what that means and yet that's my best explanation for how I feel. In my wisdom gathered from years of living in my own skin, I know I needed to play rugby. Besides being the coolest sport I ever heard of, my older brother played it. And my older brother Bill was the coolest guy in the history of the world. Short, but cool.

I didn't realize my big brother was short until he beat me up when I was 18. He'd be away at college or something and I had taken over his room on the third floor to get beyond smelling distance of my younger brother Doug, who slept next to me for the first 18 years of my life. I had my reasons. But Billy would hear none of them. Like the Tank Man in Tianamin Square I stood defiant in front of my older brother. He proceeded to kick the shit out of me.

I remember this because it was the last time he ever kicked the shit out of me and I remember each moment like a bad scrum. I blame myself. I could have done better. I ended up running like a scolded dog down the stairs, even though I was six inches taller, 50 pounds heavier and eight years younger. Of course, Bill was drunk. And I was still a boy. And so, once again, I slept next to my brother Doug.

Rugby became a symbol for me. It was different. It was manly. It was out of it's freakin' mind. Oh, the adventures. And I wanted that. I wanted that bad. And I found it with the Whitemarsh Rugby Club, a name that gives me chills as I write it, because it means nothing except everything. We were brothers once, and young. We became men in front of our own eyes. I would trust them with my life, my fortune and my sacred honor. Beyond that, I got no time for any of them.


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October 21, 2007

Not this year rose boy

Not this year rose boy

I KNOW WHAT YOU'RE THINKING this morning: How 'bout them Pumas? Sure, sure there are those who want to talk about the Springboks, who hammered the Eagles 64-15 last month during their six-week march to the Rugby World Cup championship which ended Saturday when South Africa defeated defending world champion England 15-6 in the final.

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September 19, 2007

Custer's Last Stand

Custer's Last Stand

FOR SOME REASON this photo reminds me of a certain blonde long-haired general leading the 7th Cavalry at the very moment that Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse and the rest of the Souix forwards swallowed him alive. This is a moment late in the second half of a rugby match at South Jersey Rugby Club's pitch in Cherry Hill, N.J. Saturday afternoon. South Jersey, in green, is pushed within yards of their goal line in a set scrum they have won but lost against Brandywine (Pa.) Rugby Club.

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September 16, 2007

Bloody Rugby: Red, Black and Blue

Bloody Rugby: Red, Black and Blue

I'M REALLY GETTING TO BE A FAN of this Brandywine Rugby Club, which in the past couple of seasons I have watched defeat some of the best clubs in the Eastern Pennsylvania Rugby Union. Maybe it's because Brandywine is coached by George Betzler, my gunney for many years at Whitemarsh, and later Philadelphia-Whitemarsh RFC.

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September 10, 2007

I've Got your haka right here, pal!

MY COLUMN yesterday about the haka war dance performed by the New Zealand All Blacks before Rugby World Cup matches drew this reaction from The International Rugby Board (IRB) :

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September 09, 2007

KA MATE! KA MATE! I DIE! I DIE!

KA MATE! KA MATE! I DIE! I DIE!

ON THIS FIRST SUNDAY of the NFL season I want you to go to YouTube. Type in the word "haka" in the search field and see what happens. If you aren't converted instantly into a fan of rugby football after watching the New Zealand All Blacks perform the Maori war dance called a haka before an international match, the Rugby World Cup may not be your cup of tea.

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August 25, 2007

Sometimes you feel like a nut, sometimes you don't

Sometimes you feel like a nut, sometimes you don't

I USED TO COACH TEMPLE UNIVERSITY'S rugby club during the late 1980's and early 1990's. And I heard from one of my former players a few weeks ago following a reunion game between Temple Rugby alumni and the current squad, a match won by the old boys. His name is Joe Ruszkowski and he wrote from Honolulu, Hawaii, where he lives, works and surfs.

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July 29, 2007

And the Winners of the "Very Open" Division. . .

And the Winners of the

YOU'VE GOT TO LOVE PLAYING in a championship final scheduled for noon during an all-day rugby torunament at the shore. Let the "serious" challengers beat each other up until six o'clock in the afternoon. In the "Very Open" division of the Surfside Sevens tournament at Stone Harbor hosted by the Philadelphia-Whitemarsh Rugby Club, the championship Saturday ended up being an intrasquad scrimmage among Philly-Whitemarsh old boys who wore different color T-shirts.

The Shockers (mostly Kutztown RFC alums) won it all.

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July 28, 2007

The Few. The Proud. The Guys Not in This Picture

The Few.  The Proud.  The Guys Not in This Picture

MAMMA, DON'T LET YOUR BABIES grow up to be ruggers. Don't let 'em hurt folks and drive hard in loose rucks. Make 'em be doctors and lawyers and such.

This is what several decades of rugby will get you. Man boobs, receding hair, artificial knees, a stomach that needs to be sucked in, and sunglasses because you're blind and therefore qualified to be a rugby referee. I remember when each one of these guys was young -- including me. Never did we suspect that 30, 35 years later we'd still be dragging our sorry butts to some sad outpost of pain to spend a day of happy misery among boys too young to know the terrible truth. Rugby isn't just a youthful indiscretion. It's a lifetime indiscretion.

Travellin' with kit bags and old faded jerseys to pitches unheard of with directions unknown. And if you don't understand him and he don't quit young, he'll probably tell you he feels right at home
.

The better part of two hundred young men, and formerly young men, gathered in Stone Harbor, N.J. today for the fourth annual Surfside Sevens rugby tournament sponsored by the Philadelphia-Whitemarsh Rugby Club. There's an old saying in rugby: Those who can, play. Those who can't, ref. Those who can't play or ref, write about it. I guess that last part would mean me. But I feel no embarrassment among this crew because these guys are old enough to remember my 15 minutes of magnificence as a rugby player.

OK, OK, itt took me almost 20 years to accumulate that total of 15 minutes, but hey, I earned them the old fashioned way. One injury at a time. Some of these guys might have been responsible for one or more of them since we played against each other more frequently than on the same side. That's Blackthorn-bred Joe Grohovsky on the left, and Harrisburg-escapee Michael Cook on the right, and the grin reaper next to me (I'm the one in red with the man boobs) is the guy I like to call "the snake from South Jersey" Pete Hesler. We go back a long ways. It's a rugby thing. The longer your around, you're glad to stand next to guys you once wanted to see flat on their backs.

Mamma, don't let your babies grow up to be ruggers. They'll never stay home and they're never alone alone, even with people they loathe.
Ruggers aren't easy to love and their harder to scold. You like them for something they do that is bold. You hate them for seeking it then asking to ice it and then pretending each bruise is real gold.

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June 04, 2007

Does This Make Ruby Look Too Gay?

Does This Make Ruby Look Too Gay?

SORRY, IF THE SHOE FITS>

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May 26, 2007

I take Pictures like this

I take Pictures like this

THAT'S WHAT I DO. Blame me, praise me, pity me, ignore me. This is what I see. This is what I find interesting. The patterns. The landscape. The game. This is the kickoff of a rugby match between an unseen team in black versus the white and orange of Philadelphia Whitemarsh Rugby Club. The unseen black team is the Chicago Lions. Are? the Chicago Lions. Our? the Chicago Lions. Whaddo I care? Fuckers beat us by three that day,that's all I know.

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March 28, 2007

Why Backs Look Funny Tackling Forwards

Why Backs Look Funny Tackling Forwards

GET A LOAD OF THE WRIST ON THAT GUY! No. 11 looks like Stephen Siano trying to tackle his brother Michael. Either that or the over-the-top gay friend from Will and Grace just got thrown into his first rugby match. But then he'd be running in the other direction. Or maybe not. You can make up your own back story to go with the picture.

Whatever the game of rugby football is, whether it's played by men or women, straight or gay, it is not about limp wrists. This, or course, was one of those "happy accident" moments that happen sometimes when you're shooting photos of action, as I was over the weekend. The large bearded fellow is a forward from Brandywine Rugby Club who is being harrassed, like a lion by hyenas, by three members of the Schuylkill River Exiles back line.

You can probably guess that I was a proud member of the forward pack during my rugby playing days. I won't say that there is "resentment" or "envy" among front row and second row forwards towards, say, wings and fullbacks who score flashy tries after we have done all the work in scrums, rucks, lineouts and rolling mauls just to get them the ball. I will say that there is no sight in rugby sweeter than a prop, hooker or lock making an open field break late in the second half.

Thankfully, rugby has evolved into an exciting 15-man sport where any player can and does score touchdowns (tries) at any time. When I started playing rugby a try was worth three points and a tight head prop was expected to score such a marvelous thing maybe once or twice in a career. The job of the front five forwards was like that of offensive linemen in football. Win the ball by any means necessary, and then immediately hand it over to the adults in the backline who "knew better" what to do with such a sacred object. In 1969 a rugby forward was expected to play like a luckless draftee into the infantry. All grunt, no glory.

So forgive me if I get a special kick out of this picture. For some reason I think of another struggle for equal opportunity that was raging when I started playing the game. "Free at last, free at last, thank God almighty, we're free at last!"

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March 25, 2007

Muddy March Madness

Muddy March Madness

Talk About Bracket Busters! I have seen Division II Brandywine Rugby Club play twice during the last several months, both times as visitors and both times against Division I clubs. And both times Brandywine spanked the big boys convincingly. Last September Brandywine laid a 48-0 licking on Philadelphia-Whitemarsh at Memorial Hall in Fairmount Park, and on Saturday in the mud of FDR Park in South Philly the suburban boys shut out another solid city side, the Schuylkill River Exiles, by a similar result if not high score.

Brandywine forwards, in red and black, powered their way to a try on this movement, which completed an 80-yard counterattack from a Schuylkill kick that never found touch. I couldn't help but notice all the Philadelphia-Whitemarsh kit bags among the Brandywine players' gear on the sideline. Oh, yeah, and then there was their coach, George Betzler, who may or may not have something to do with Brandywine becoming the emerging beast of Eastern Pennsylvania rugby.

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March 11, 2007

Let The Good Times Roll

Let The Good Times Roll

IF IT'S MARCH, IF IT'S MUDDY, it must be rugby season in Philadelphia. The Philadelphia-Whitemarsh Rugby Club opened its 2007 Rugby Super League Season Saturday in Fairmount Park with a "friendly" match against PAC (Potomac Athletic Club) of Washington, D.C. The visitors (in red) delivered a message to the home boys in blue and red during two matches when Philadelphia-Whitemarsh was held without a try scored.

That's not a great way to warm up for the season that officially begins next Saturday with a Rugby Super League match against the Division One Champions, the Irish Wolfhounds from Boston. Fittingly, the match will be played on St. Patrick's Day at Widener University's football stadium in Chester . Kickoff for the Super League match is 2 p.m. with the B side curtain raiser match beginning at noon. Come on out and support the home team.

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February 25, 2007

Men, Men, Men, Men. . .

Men, Men, Men, Men. . .

GIVE ME TEN MEN. Who are stout-hearted men. And I'll give you some lyrics I don't understand. I've heard that song a thousand times but I never quite got the words. The first lines in the rousing chorus of that famous Nelson Eddy march go, "Give me some men who are stout hearted men. Who will fight for the right they adore." All these years and I never heard the key word, adore.

The song comes to mind because I was in the company of stout hearted men Saturday night during the Philadelphia-Whitemarsh Rugby Club hall of fame induction ceremonies. A man doesn't get into an amatuer athletic hall of fame without adoring the sport he played, and in the case of rugby football it is no coincidence that adore rhymes with endure.

Rugby has haunted my life like an exercise in bad judgement that I would keep making over and over again even in the face of maturity, responsibility and certain death. Every rugby player knows he's going to die one day. Could that be why we play? To cheat the reaper? What terror can death hold after you've voluntarily submitted yourself to the torments of Monday morning after a rugby match, week after week, year after year. The game is tough enough. But the physical hangover from all that pounding is nothing but inglorious suffering. And just when your body is getting over last week's injuries, you start all over again.

Every rugby player I know hurts. Not that he'd tell you. I mean anyone who has played rugby every weekend like a religion for at least 10 years of his life. A decade of rugby proves something to a man about himself. Not only can I hack it, I love it. Not only do I suffer, I enjoy it. Not only do I risk injury, I can almost guarantee one. And yet the rugby player, like the boxer who "carries a reminder of every glove that laid him down or cut him 'til he cried out," still remains.

Saturday night I was in rugby heaven, which is a place you go when all the people who lived through the same madness, bus trips and mud flats show up at the same time. Along with their sons and daughters. And the people who love them anyway. The inductees into the Philadelphia-Whitemarsh rugby club's hall of fame -- John Siano, Joe Dougherty and Keith McLean -- were to a man, men. They were poised, prepared, modest and funny. And they didn't know when to shut up. They were honored to be honored. And maybe just a little bit amazed. They stood among peers in a shared brotherhood of pain and they fought back tears, some more successfully than others.

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January 02, 2007

A Meeting of the Clark(e)s

A Meeting of the Clark(e)s

SO WHERE WERE YOU on New Year's Day? If you were like the Clark(e) brothers, you were at Dirty Frank's bar at 13th and Pine awaiting an outbreak of Mummers. The Clarke to the left is Bob (formerly Bobby) Clarke, NHL Hall of Famer for the Philadelphia Flyers. The Clark to the riight is some guy in an ill-fitting Caucasian wig.

God, I love this job.

The parade has been postponed until Saturday. But who don't know dat?

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December 30, 2006

Lookin' Good Frogs

Lookin' Good Frogs

CALL THIS MY DEFINITION OF SHAMELESS. This is a photo from Second Street in South Philadelphia I took last New Years morning of some members of the James "Froggy" Carr NYB looking at a photo album of my pictures from the Mummers Parade of 2005. What you can't see in this photo is that the photographer is dressed exactly like these guys.

Et tu Clarkie?

Yes, I am a Mummer. I have been marching with the Froggy Carr wench brigade for more than 20 years. Before that I marched with the Whitemarsh Rugby Club (registered as the Manoa Fire Co. Comic Brigade). I've been a Mummer for more than half of my life, and I have gathered some stories.

I will share some of those old stories -- plus new stories from the New Year and Monday's 2007 Mummers Parade -- in the next several days. Meanwhile, please feel free to post any Mummer moments of your own.

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October 14, 2006

This isn't what it looks like

This isn't what it looks like

AND WHAT IT LOOKS like is either Saturday night in a bathhouse off Spruce Street or an evenly contested lineout in a college rugby match between Kutztown University (in white) and host West Chester University rugby clubs Saturday afternoon. It would be as unfair to describe this photo as a bunch of young guys reaching for other young guys' private parts, as it would be to describe this match as "evenly contested."

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