United States national rugby union team















































































United States of America
Nickname(s)
Eagles
Emblem
American bald eagle
Union
USA Rugby
Head coach
Gary Gold
Captain
Blaine Scully
Most caps

Todd Clever (76)
Top scorer
Mike Hercus (465)
Top try scorer
Vaea Anitoni (26)


















First colors














Second colors



World Rugby ranking
Current
15 (as of June 24, 2018)
Highest
14 (2007)
Lowest
20 (2008)
First international

United States 8–12 Australia
(Berkeley, California, U.S.; November 16, 1912)
Biggest win

United States 91–0 Barbados
(Stanford, California, U.S.; July 1, 2006)
Biggest defeat

England 106–8 United States
(London, England; August 21, 1999)
World Cup
Appearances
7 (First in 1987)
Best result
Pool stage, 1987, 1991, 1999, 2003, 2007, 2011 and 2015
Website
www.usarugby.org

The United States national rugby union team, nicknamed the Eagles, is controlled by USA Rugby. USA Rugby is a member of Rugby Americas North, one of six regional governing bodies under World Rugby. Until sevens made its debut at the 2016 Rio Games, the United States was the reigning Olympic champion in rugby, having won gold at the 1920 and 1924 Summer Olympics.


As of March 4, 2018, the Eagles are ranked 15th in the world by the World Rugby Rankings.[1] Their highest ranking, achieved ahead of the 2007 World Cup, was 14th; their lowest ranking was 20th, following a winless campaign in the 2008 Churchill Cup.


The highest profile tournament in which the Eagles play is the Rugby World Cup. The Eagles have played in all but one Rugby World Cup since the tournament began in 1987. The United States has expressed interest in hosting the 2027 Rugby World Cup.[2]


The United States competed in the Pacific Nations Cup every Summer from 2013 to 2015. Previously, the U.S. has competed in the now-defunct Churchill Cup and the Pan American Championship.[3] In April 2015, USA Rugby announced the creation of a new, annual International Championship to be contested among the top-6 ranked rugby nations in the Americas: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Uruguay and the United States. The contest was named the Americas Rugby Championship and began in 2016.[4] The United States won the 2017 Americas Rugby Championship after drawing with Argentina XV. It was the United States' first 15-a-side rugby union title in over 90 years.





Contents






  • 1 Early history


    • 1.1 Early years: 1872–1912


    • 1.2 Olympic Gold: 1920 and 1924




  • 2 Modern history


    • 2.1 The 1960s and 1970s


    • 2.2 The 1980s


    • 2.3 The 1990s


    • 2.4 The 2000s


    • 2.5 The 2011 Rugby World Cup cycle


    • 2.6 The 2015 Rugby World Cup cycle


    • 2.7 Professional era (2016–present)




  • 3 Recent results


  • 4 Coaches


  • 5 Players


    • 5.1 Current squad




  • 6 Stadium & Attendance


  • 7 Rivalry with Canada


  • 8 Tournament records


    • 8.1 Honors


    • 8.2 Rugby World Cup


    • 8.3 Pacific Nations Cup


    • 8.4 Americas Rugby Championship


    • 8.5 Summer Olympics


    • 8.6 Defunct competitions


      • 8.6.1 Churchill Cup


      • 8.6.2 Super Cup






  • 9 Player records


    • 9.1 Most caps


    • 9.2 Most tries


    • 9.3 Most points




  • 10 Previous head coaches


  • 11 Overall record and rankings


    • 11.1 Record against Tier 1 teams




  • 12 Other U.S. national teams


    • 12.1 USA Selects


    • 12.2 Women's national team




  • 13 See also


  • 14 Notes and references


  • 15 External links





Early history




Early years: 1872–1912




The Harvard–McGill game of 1874


Informal football games such as rugby became popular in the United States in the mid-19th century. Rugby union was played as early as 1872 among rugby clubs in the San Francisco Bay Area composed mainly of British expatriates. On December 2, 1882, the first Californian representative rugby team to play an outside opponent, took on a group of rugby-playing ex-Britons, who called themselves the Phoenix Rugby Club of San Francisco. California lost to the Phoenix club 7–4.




The USA side that played Australia at California Field during the Wallabies 1912 tour of Canada and the U.S.


The first recorded rugby game in the U.S. place in May 1874 when local Harvard University hosted Canadian McGill University.[5] The game sparked an interest on college campuses nationwide. In 1876 Yale, Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia formed the Intercollegiate Football Association, which largely used the rugby code.[6] In 1886 Harvard's Oscar Shafter Howard introduced these rules to the campus of the University of California, Berkeley.


American football was fierce, and as injuries mounted, the public became alarmed at its brutalities and President Theodore Roosevelt threatened to outlaw the sport.[7] Beginning in 1906, rugby union became the game of choice at Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley and several other colleges in California.[8] Rugby's popularity, however, was short lived, and the sport had died out by the outbreak of World War I.


A California student team toured Australia and New Zealand in 1910, and invited their hosts to return the visit.[9] Australia obliged by touring North America in 1912, and the U.S. national team played its first international match on November 16, 1912 against Australia in Berkeley, California. The visitors won 12–8.[10] A year later, the U.S. hosted New Zealand at the same venue on November 15, 1913, but the Kiwis ran away with the contest 51–3.[9]



Olympic Gold: 1920 and 1924




The U.S. rugby team for the October 1920 test match vs France


Rugby union had not been played competitively in most of the U.S. for more than a decade before the 1920 Olympics. The U.S. Olympic committee decided that because "California is the only state playing Rugby in the US, the Committee will give sanction but no financial aid". The U.S. assembled mostly a California-based team, with six players from the University of California, Berkeley.[11] The Olympic Games Committee of the Amateur Athletic Union paid the expenses to transport the team from California to the games in Antwerp.[12] By the time the US Rugby team arrived in Europe, Czechoslovakia and Romania had withdrawn from the competition. France and the U.S. were the only teams left to compete. The U.S. won a shock 8–0 victory over France to earn the gold medal.


The stunned French suggested that the U.S. team tour France, which they did; winning three out of the four matches they played. Between 1920 and 1924, however, rugby union virtually disappeared once again in the U.S., as American football soared in popularity.




France vs U.S. rugby match during the 1924 Summer Olympics


The 1924 Paris Olympics caused France to challenge the U.S. to defend its title. Once again, the U.S. Olympic Committee granted permission but no funds. Nonetheless, seven players of the 1920 team dusted off their boots, raised $20,000, found 15 new players including some American football players who had never played in a rugby union match. The assembled U.S. team was again based heavily from Northern California, with 9 Stanford alumni, 5 from Santa Clara, and 3 from Cal.[11] The team headed for England to play some tuneup matches, where they were beaten four times.


The French Olympic Committee (FOC) had scheduled the rugby event to kick off the 1924 Paris Games at Colombes Stadium in Paris. Romania and the U.S. were expected to provide only token opposition for the European champions. On Sunday, May 11, the U.S. pounded Romania 39 to 0, including nine tries.




The U.S. team that won gold in the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris


The final was played at Colombes Stadium on May 18 before an estimated crowd of 30,000 - 50,000 that had gathered to watch the rugby final and the awarding of the first medal of the 1924 Olympics.[11][13] Bookmakers set the odds at five to one with a 20-point spread.[14] However, the Americans were not intimidated, and the American captain Babe Slater wrote in his diary before the match "we are sure going to let them know they have been in a battle."[11] Despite the odds, the U.S. team started well, led by captain Colby "Babe" Slater, and led 3-0 at the half. Heavy tackling by the Americans, derived from American football, intimidated and exhausted the French, as the U.S. scored four tries in the second half to defeat the French 17-3.[15] Rare vintage film footage of the 1924 gold medal match was released in the documentary, "A Giant Awakens: the Rise of American Rugby".


Shortly after the 1924 Olympics, however, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) removed rugby union as an Olympic sport. Without the Olympic incentive, the sport's growth in America collapsed and the game remained dormant.



Modern history




The 1960s and 1970s


The sport then enjoyed a renaissance, beginning in the 1960s and continuing through the 1970s. This created the need for a national governing body to represent the United States in the international rugby community. The United States of America Rugby Football Union (now known as USA Rugby) was formed in 1975 by four territorial organizations (Pacific Coast, West, Midwest, and East).[16] The first Eagles match was played in Anaheim in 1976 against Australia, the Wallabies won 24–12.[16]


The U.S. also performed well against France in Chicago, losing the game 33–14. The next season the Eagles played two internationals, one against England (XV-not capped) at Twickenham on their 1977 United States rugby union tour of England, which they lost 37–11, and the other against Canada, which they also lost, 17–6. The U.S. played the Canadians again in 1978, and defeated them 12–7 in Baltimore. They then travelled to Canada in 1979 and lost 19–12 in Toronto.



The 1980s


The U.S. national team came to further prominence during the 1980s, and from the start of the decade, were playing a notably larger number of games every season. They did however lose all three of their games in 1980, all at home. They could not muster up a win in 1981 either, losing 3–6 to Canada, and 7–38 to South Africa. In 1982, the U.S. drew Canada 3-3. They travelled to Australia in 1983 to play the Wallabies, and lost 49–3 in Sydney. The U.S. played its first-ever match against Japan in 1985, winning 16-15 at the Prince Chichibu Memorial Stadium.[17]


The U.S. participated in 1987 in the first ever Rugby World Cup in New Zealand and Australia. The U.S. were in Pool 1, alongside co-hosts Australia, England and Japan. The U.S. won their first ever World Cup game, defeating Japan 21–18 at Ballymore Stadium in Brisbane, with fullback Ray Nelson scoring 13 points.[18] The U.S. lost both subsequent matches; 47–12 against the Wallabies and 34–6 against England. The U.S. finished third in the pool, out of contention for the quarterfinals.


The Eagles first met Wales at Cardiff in November 1987 as the final match of their 1987 tour, where Wales, who had just finished third in the inaugural Rugby World Cup, enjoyed a 46–0 win. In 1988, the Eagles had mixed success in their tour of Europe, defeating Romania but losing to the Soviet Union.[19]



The 1990s


The U.S. notched three consecutive wins from September 1990 to May 1991 — all against Japan — for the first three-match win streak in U.S. team history.[20]


The U.S. made their way through a qualifying tournament to reach the 1991 Rugby World Cup in the United Kingdom, pooled with defending champions New Zealand, hosts England, and Italy in a tough group. In their first match of the tournament, Italy defeated them 30–9. Next, New Zealand defeated them 46–6. Hosts England won 37–9 at Twickenham. The U.S. finished fourth in the pool.


In round one of the Americas qualifying tournament for the 1995 Rugby World Cup the U.S. defeated Bermuda 60–3 to advance to round two. Argentina defeated the Eagles twice in close games in the series to qualify, leaving the U.S. missing out on the 1995 Rugby World Cup in South Africa.


The Eagles went close to beating a major rugby nation in a match against Australia at Riverside in 1993 when the U.S. lost 22–26.


The Eagles had a successful tour of Europe in 1998, beating Spain and Portugal.[19] Also in 1998, the U.S. played Fiji for the first time, losing 9-18 in Suva.[21]


The Eagles set out to qualify for the 1999 Rugby World Cup in Wales. In round four of the Americas qualifying tournament in Buenos Aires, the United States lost 52–24 to Argentina and 31–14 to Canada, but defeated Uruguay 21–16 in their last game to qualify for the 1999 tournament. The U.S. played in the 1999 Pacific Rim Championship, notching its first-ever victories over Fiji (25-14) and Tonga (30-10).[21]


The Eagles entered the 1999 Rugby World Cup in pool E alongside Australia, Ireland and Romania. In their first game, the United States went down 53–8 to Ireland. They then lost to Romania 27–25. Australia defeated the Eagles 55–19 in their final game of the tournament, seeing the Eagles finish fourth in the pool. The Eagles, however, had the honor of being the only side to score a try against the eventual champions, Australia, during the entire tournament.[22]



The 2000s


In qualifying matches for the 2003 Rugby World Cup the U.S. finished third in the Americas. The U.S. won the repechage and qualified for the 2003 tournament by beating Spain 62–13 and 58–13. The Super Powers Cup was first contested in 2003 between Japan, Russia and the United States.[23] The U.S. then followed up with victories over Japan and Canada. This was the first time the Eagles had won four consecutive tests since making their international debut in 1976.[20]


At the 2003 Rugby World Cup the Eagles finished fourth of five in their pool. In the first match against Fiji, the Americans led 13–3 early in the second half, but Fiji regained the lead and secured a 19–18 win, with the Eagles suffering their ninth consecutive World Cup loss. The U.S. then lost to Scotland. The Americans defeated Japan 39–26, behind 17 points by Mike Hercus, for their first win in a Rugby World Cup since 1987 (also against Japan).[24] The U.S. closed the tournament with a loss to France, concluding the tournament with a 1–3 record.


The 2004 Super Powers Cup saw the addition of Canada. The U.S. beat Russia in the third-place play-off. The U.S. toured Europe in November 2004, losing 55–6 to Ireland and 43–25 to Italy. The 2005 Super Cup took part between the U.S., Canada, Japan and Romania. The U.S. lost 30–26 to Canada but beat a Romanian team stripped of their France-based players 23–16 in the third place play-off.




The U.S. Eagle mascot during 2010 Churchill Cup.


The U.S. campaign to qualify for the 2007 Rugby World Cup began in 2006. The U.S. lost 56–7 to Canada, resulting in a home/away play-off against Uruguay. The U.S. defeated Uruguay 42–13 in the first match and 26–7 in the second to send them through to the Rugby World Cup.[25]


In the 2007 Rugby World Cup, the U.S. joined England, Samoa, South Africa and Tonga in Pool A. The Eagles, ranked 13th in the world standings, lost all 4 games in Pool A, scoring 1 bonus point in the game against Samoa. Coached by New Zealander Peter Thorburn, the Eagles started off with tough match against the defending world champions England, losing 28–10. The U.S. was then beaten by Tonga 25–15, lost to Samoa 25–21, and lost their final match to highly favored South Africa 64–15. The Eagles, however, had a major highlight in the South Africa match. After a Todd Clever interception and a pair of passes, Takudzwa Ngwenya sped down the sideline and outran the speedster Bryan Habana to score a try that received Try of the Year honors at the 2007 IRB Awards.[26]


Following the resignation of Scott Johnson, on March 5, 2009 Eddie O'Sullivan was named the new national coach.[27]


The Eagles finished a solid 2009 campaign at a mark of 4–5, with a 4–3 record in full internationals. In the 2009 Churchill Cup, the Eagles lost to Ireland and Wales, but defeated Georgia to take home the Bowl.[28]



The 2011 Rugby World Cup cycle


The Eagles split a World Cup qualifying series with Canada, but lost on aggregate points. The Eagles then faced Uruguay in a two-game playoff. In November 2009, the United States booked their place at the 2011 Rugby World Cup with two wins against Uruguay, winning the home leg 27–6 in Florida.[29]


The Eagles played 7 matches in 2010: 3 home matches in June at the Churchill Cup, finishing with a 1-2 record, and 4 matches in Europe in the Fall, finishing 1-3.
In the June 2010 Churchill Cup, the US beat Russia 39–22, before losing to the England Saxons 32–9 and France A 24–10.
For the November 2010 tests, the Eagles traveled to Europe. The Eagles defeated Portugal 22–17,[30] but lost to Scotland A 25–0,[31] and lost to Georgia 19-17.[32]
The Eagles finished 2010 ranked 16th in the world,[33] and with a record in test matches of 2 wins (Russia, Portugal) and 1 loss (Georgia).


The buildup to the 2011 Rugby World Cup started in June with three matches in the Churchill Cup. The Eagles dropped their first matches to the England Saxons 87–8[34] and to Tonga 44–13,[35] before defeating Russia 32–25.[36] 2011 was the final Churchill Cup.[37]
The Eagles finalized their 2011 Rugby World Cup preparations with three test matches in August.[38] The Eagles lost to Canada 28–22,[39] lost their second match against Canada 27–7.[40] and lost to Japan 20–14. The Eagles had a 1–5 record in test matches for the year in their preparations for the 2011 Rugby World Cup.[41]





Australia scrum against the U.S. at the 2011 RWC.


In their 2011 Rugby World Cup opening match against Ireland the Eagles defense initially held, before conceding their first try at the 39' mark. The final tally was 22–10.[42]
The Eagles came into the World Cup with their measuring mark for success as being a win over Russia. The Americans took a 10–3 lead into the half, and held on to win 13–6.[43]
For their third match, Australia dominated, leading to the final result of 67–5, the worst defeat a U.S. team has ever suffered to Australia.[44]
The final match saw the Eagles playing Italy for a third-place finish in Pool C. The Italians finished with a 27–10 victory.[45] The defeat marked the end of the 2011 Rugby World Cup for the U.S.


The Eagles finished 2011 with a record of 2–7 in full tests. The performances in the Rugby World Cup showed improvement, and the win over Russia left the team with a 1–3 RWC record and feeling as a modest success. The World Cup also saw prop Mike MacDonald become both the most capped Eagle in World Cup play (11 caps) and the most capped Eagle of all time at 65 caps. Also notable was the performance of lock John van der Giessen, who achieved the most lineout steals of all players in the 2011 Rugby World Cup, despite appearing in only three matches.[46]



The 2015 Rugby World Cup cycle


The Eagles played three matches in North America during the 2012 June international window. This was a regular series of international tests for the United States against Tier 1 (Italy) and Tier 2 (Canada, Georgia) opponents, as the Churchill Cup is no longer held. The highlights of the June tests were a win over higher-ranked Georgia, and a match against Italy at BBVA Compass Stadium in Houston that drew a record crowd of 17,214.[47]
The Eagles also played three matches in Europe during the November 2012 tests. The Eagles finished their European tour with 2 wins (Romania, Russia) and 1 loss (Tonga) — the first time since 1998 that the Eagles had concluded a European tour with a winning record — and improved in ranking from 17th to 16th.[19]




The U.S. v. the Māori All Blacks at PPL Park in 2013.


The U.S. played five matches during the June 2013 international test window, with one test match against Ireland and four matches as part of the 2013 IRB Pacific Nations Cup. The U.S. started with competitive matches against Canada (9-16), Ireland (12-15), and Tonga (9-18), but finished with double-digit losses against Fiji (10-35) and Japan (20-38), and sliding to #18 in the rankings.
In August 2013, the U.S. played a home-and-away series against Canada as part of qualifying for the 2015 Rugby World Cup. The U.S. lost both matches by an aggregate score of 20-40, meaning the U.S. must play Uruguay in 2014 as part of 2015 RWC qualifying.
In November 2013, the U.S. lost 19-29 to the Māori All Blacks at PPL Park in Philadelphia before a sold-out crowd of 18,500.[48]


Throughout late 2013 and early 2014, a number of U.S. players signed contracts to play professionally overseas. Of the players called into the U.S. national team in March 2014 for two home-and-away 2015 Rugby World Cup qualifying matches against Uruguay, 14 of the 26 were playing professionally overseas, with 10 playing professionally in England.[49]
The Eagles defeated Uruguay 59-40 on aggregate over two tests during 2014 to qualify for the 2015 Rugby World Cup. During the June 2014 test window, the U.S. played competitive matches against higher ranked Scotland and Japan, and the test window culminated with a 38-35 victory over Canada. Subsequently, in November 2014 the Eagles were defeated 74-6 by New Zealand in a match played in front of a crowd of more than 61,000 spectators at Soldier Field, Chicago.[50]


The Eagles began a lengthy assembly in build up to the 2015 Rugby World Cup with the 2015 Pacific Nations Cup. On July 18, the U.S. dropped the opening PNC match 21-16 to Samoa.[51] The team bounced back to upset Japan 23-18. The Eagles, however, fell to Tonga in the final preliminary match for the PNC 33-19. In the resulting fifth-place match, the Eagles edged rival Canada 15-13. The victory was the second consecutive over team Canada. Three weeks later, Canada and the U.S. met again in a World Cup warmup match. For the first time, the U.S. laid claim to a three-match win streak over team Canada after defeating the Canadians 41-23.[52] Continuing on the road to the World Cup, the U.S. faced off against English Premiership side Harlequins, where the Americans fell to the visitors 24-19.[53] The Eagles returned to Soldier Field to compete against the #2 ranked Australia Wallabies. The Americans trailed 14-10 at the half. In the second half, the Wallabies capitalized on American errors and pushed the match out of reach: Australia 47, the U.S. 10.[54]



Professional era (2016–present)



The Professional Rugby Organization (PRO Rugby) began a professional rugby competition in 2016.[55] Five teams played a 10-match schedule from April to July. Each PRO Rugby team had a quota for overseas players and U.S. Eagles internationals.[56][57] The team included 14 professionals in the starting lineup for the June 2015 test against Italy — six U.S.-based professionals and eight overseas professionals.[58] PRO Rugby did not last long, however, with the competition folding after only one season.


Professional rugby returned in 2018 with the advent of Major League Rugby, a seven-team competition that runs from April to early July. Head coach Gary Gold called up an all-professional squad for the June 2018 tests, drawing from a mix of Major League Rugby players and overseas professionals. During the June 2018 tests, the U.S. defeated Scotland 30–29 to give the U.S. its first win over a Tier 1 nation since beating France at the 1924 Olympics.



Recent results


The following table shows the results of the U.S. national team in official test matches during the previous 24 months, as well as upcoming fixtures.

















































































































































































































































































Date
Opponent

Opp Rank
Result
Venue
Attendance
Event
Top U.S. Scorer
2018-11-24

 Ireland



Republic of Ireland Aviva Stadium


end-of-year tests

2018-11-17

 Romania



Romania Ghencea Stadium


end-of-year tests

2018-11-10

 Samoa



Spain Estadio Anoeta


end-of-year tests

2018-11-03

 Māori All Blacks



United States Soldier Field


end-of-year tests

2018-06-23

 Canada
22
W, 42–17

Canada Wanderers Grounds
6,300

mid-year tests

Cam Dolan (15)

2018-06-16

 Scotland
6
W, 30–29

United States BBVA Compass Stadium
11,300

mid-year tests

MacGinty (15)
2018-06-09

 Russia
19
W, 62–13

United States Dick's Sporting Goods Park


mid-year tests

MacGinty (11)
2018-03-03

 Uruguay
17
W, 61–19

Uruguay Estadio Charrúa


ARC

Magie (12)
2018-02-24

 Brazil
25
W, 45–16

Brazil Estádio Martins Pereira


ARC

Germishuys (10)
2018-02-17

 Chile
26
W, 45–13

United States Titan Stadium
2,000

ARC

Audsley (10)
2018-02-10

 Canada
21
W, 29–10

United States Papa Murphy's Park
2,500

ARC

Matyas (10)
2018-02-03

Argentina Argentina XV
N/A
W, 17–10

United States StubHub Center
6,500

ARC

Magie / Hooley (6)
2017-11-25

 Georgia
12
L, 20–21

Georgia (country) Mikheil Meskhi Stadium
20,000

end-of-year tests

J. Taufete'e (10)
2017-11-18

 Germany
22
W, 46–17

Germany BRITA-Arena, Wiesbaden
3,150

end-of-year tests

AJ MacGinty (21)
2017-07-01

 Canada
23
W, 52–16

United States Torero Stadium
5,000

2019 RWC qualifying

AJ MacGinty (12)
2017-06-24

 Canada
23
T, 28–28

Canada Tim Hortons Field
13,138

2019 RWC qualifying

N. Civetta / M. Te'o (10)
2017-06-17

 Georgia
12
L, 17–21

United States Fifth Third Bank Stadium


mid-year tests

AJ MacGinty (7)
2017-06-10

 Ireland
4
L, 19–55

United States Red Bull Arena
22,000

mid-year tests

N. Civetta / J. Quill / R. Matyas (5)
2017-03-04

Argentina Argentina XV
N/A
T, 27–27

Argentina Estadio Comodoro
9,000

ARC

D. Tameilau (10)
2017-02-25

 Chile
30
W, 57–9

Chile Estadio San Carlos de Apoquindo
1,000

ARC

Ben Cima (17)
2017-02-18

 Canada
18
W, 51–34

Canada Swangard Stadium
3,416

ARC

M. Te'o (15)
2017-02-11

 Brazil
34
W, 51–3

United States Dell Diamond
6,091

ARC

T. Lamborn (10)
2017-02-04

 Uruguay
21
W, 29–23

United States Toyota Field
3,000

ARC

B. Cima (11)
2016-11-19

 Tonga
15
L, 17–20

Spain Estadio Anoeta
12,000

end-of-year tests

W. Holder (7)
2016-11-12

 Romania
16
L, 10–23

Romania Stadionul Arcul de Triumf
5,000

end-of-year tests

W. Holder (10)
2016-11-04

 Māori All Blacks
N/A
L, 7–54

United States Toyota Park

18,700

end-of-year tests

T. Clever (5)

Notes:



  • Opponent rank is listed as of the date of the match.

  • Green shading indicates a win or tie against a higher ranked opponent. Red shading indicates a loss or tie against a lower ranked opponent.

  • Bolded attendance figures indicate the match is one of the top five highest attended home matches in U.S. national team history.



Coaches




  • Head Coach: South Africa Gary Gold


  • Assistant Coach: Ireland Greg McWilliams (Backs and Attack)


  • Assistant Coach: United States Scott Lawrence (Defense)


  • Assistant Coach: United States Shawn Pittman (Set-piece)



Players



Current squad


The following squad was announced for the 2018 November tests.[59]


Seven players were added after the initial announcement. Olive Kilifi, who was in the original squad announcement, was replaced due to injury.[60]


  • Caps Updated: 17 October 2018


Note: Flags indicate national union for the club/province as defined by World Rugby.







































































































































































































































































Player
Position
Date of Birth (Age)
Caps
Club/province

Dylan Fawsitt

Hooker

(1990-07-24) July 24, 1990 (age 28)
5

United States Rugby United New York

James Hilterbrand

Hooker

(1989-05-21) May 21, 1989 (age 29)
16

Australia Manly

Alex Maughan

Hooker

(1995-04-24) April 24, 1995 (age 23)
1

United States Life University

Joe Taufete'e

Hooker

(1992-10-04) October 4, 1992 (age 26)
16

England Worcester Warriors

Eric Fry

Prop

(1987-09-14) September 14, 1987 (age 31)
44

France Vannes

Titi Lamositele

Prop

(1995-02-11) February 11, 1995 (age 23)
23

England Saracens

Paul Mullen

Prop

(1991-11-16) November 16, 1991 (age 26)
3

England Newcastle Falcons

Anthony Purpura

Prop

(1986-11-11) November 11, 1986 (age 31)
11

United States Old Blue

Dino Waldren

Prop

(1991-07-11) July 11, 1991 (age 27)
12

England London Scottish

Chance Wenglewski

Prop

(1997-04-09) April 9, 1997 (age 21)
0

United States Lindenwood University

Nate Brakeley

Lock

(1989-08-31) August 31, 1989 (age 29)
16

United States Rugby United New York

Nick Civetta

Lock

(1989-11-05) November 5, 1989 (age 28)
15

England Doncaster Knights

Ben Landry

Lock

(1991-03-26) March 26, 1991 (age 27)
15

England Ealing Trailfinders

Samu Manoa

Lock

(1985-03-05) March 5, 1985 (age 33)
21

Wales Cardiff Blues

Greg Peterson

Lock

(1991-03-26) March 26, 1991 (age 27)
17

Scotland Glasgow Warriors

Hanco Germishuys

Flanker

(1996-08-24) August 24, 1996 (age 22)
8
Unattached

Tony Lamborn

Flanker

(1991-07-31) July 31, 1991 (age 27)
16

New Zealand Southland

John Quill

Flanker

(1990-03-10) March 10, 1990 (age 28)
27

United States Glendale Raptors

David Tameilau

Flanker

(1990-01-22) January 22, 1990 (age 28)
9

Scotland Glasgow Warriors

Psalm Wooching

Flanker

(1994-01-16) January 16, 1994 (age 24)
3
Unattached

Cam Dolan

Number 8

(1990-03-07) March 7, 1990 (age 28)
37

England Nottingham

Shaun Davies

Scrum-half

(1989-06-20) June 20, 1989 (age 29)
18

United States Glendale Raptors

Ruben de Haas

Scrum-half

(1998-10-09) October 9, 1998 (age 20)
4

South Africa Cheetahs

Will Magie

Fly-half

(1992-02-23) February 23, 1992 (age 26)
16

United States Glendale Raptors

Dylan Audsley

Centre

(1994-01-15) January 15, 1994 (age 24)
6

United States San Diego Legion

Bryce Campbell

Centre

(1994-09-21) September 21, 1994 (age 24)
18

England London Irish

Mika Kruse

Centre

0

United States Glendale Raptors

Paul Lasike

Centre

(1990-06-18) June 18, 1990 (age 28)
6

England Harlequins

Gannon Moore

Centre

0

New Zealand North Harbour

Nate Augspurger

Wing

(1990-01-31) January 31, 1990 (age 28)
21

United States San Diego Legion

Marcel Brache

Wing

(1987-10-15) October 15, 1987 (age 31)
10

Australia Western Force

Ryan Matyas

Wing

(1990-12-24) December 24, 1990 (age 27)
10

United States San Diego Legion

Tim Maupin

Wing

(1989-03-23) March 23, 1989 (age 29)
7

United States New Orleans Gold

Blaine Scully

Wing

(1988-02-29) February 29, 1988 (age 30)
40

Wales Cardiff Blues

Will Hooley

Fullback

(1993-11-28) November 28, 1993 (age 24)
4

England Bedford Blues

Luke Hume

Fullback

(1988-01-26) January 26, 1988 (age 30)
20

United States Rugby United New York



Stadium & Attendance


The Eagles do not have an official home stadium. The Eagles used to play several of their home games at Infinity Park in Denver, Colorado, but with the increasing popularity of the U.S. national team, the Eagles have not played there since June 2012. Since 2012, the U.S. national team has often played in larger Major League Soccer stadiums across the country. The Eagles have played a home match against a Tier 1 nation each June since 2012 before large crowds at BBVA Compass Stadium in Houston, Texas.[61] Since 2012, the Eagles have played at other MLS stadiums, such as PPL Park in Philadelphia and the StubHub Center in Los Angeles. The Eagles play some of their less high-profile matches at minor league soccer stadiums.


The highest attended matches in the U.S. involving the U.S. national team are:[62]



































































































































Rank Attendance Opponent Date Venue Metro area
1 61,500 New Zealand 2014-11-01
Soldier Field (NFL)
Chicago, IL
2 23,212 Australia 2015-09-05 Soldier Field (NFL) Chicago, IL[63]
3 22,000 Ireland 2017-06-10
Red Bull Arena (MLS)
New York, NY[64]
4 20,181 Ireland 2013-06-08
BBVA Compass Stadium (MLS)
Houston, TX
5 20,001 Scotland 2014-06-08 BBVA Compass Stadium (MLS) Houston, TX
6 18,700 Māori All Blacks 2016-11-04
Toyota Park (MLS)
Chicago, IL[65]
7 18,500 Māori All Blacks 2013-11-09
PPL Park (MLS)
Philadelphia, PA[66]
8 17,214 Italy 2012-06-03 BBVA Compass Stadium (MLS) Houston, TX
9 16,000 South Africa 2001-12-01
Robertson Stadium (CFB)
Houston, TX[67]
10 14,000 New Zealand XV 1980-10-08
San Diego Stadium (NFL)
San Diego, CA
11 13,591 Chile 2016-02-20
Lockhart Stadium (NASL)
Fort Lauderdale, FL
12 11,300 Scotland 2018-06-16 BBVA Compass Stadium (MLS) Houston, TX
13 11,000 Japan 2015-07-24
Bonney Field (USL)
Sacramento, CA
14 10,241 Argentina XV 2016-02-06 BBVA Compass Stadium (MLS) Houston, TX
15 10,017 Samoa 2015-07-18
Avaya Stadium (MLS)
San Jose, CA

Note: The international rugby match in the U.S. with the largest crowd didn't involve the United States national team; 62,000 watched Ireland defeat New Zealand 40–29 at Soldier Field On November 5, 2016.[68]



Rivalry with Canada



The United States' biggest rival in rugby is Canada. The US has played more test matches against Canada than any other country. The two teams first met in 1977, and have played every year since then with the exception of 2010. As of July 2017, the two sides have met 58 times, with 18 wins for the U.S., 38 wins for Canada, and 2 draws.


The U.S. and Canada routinely play each other in qualifying matches for the Rugby World Cup. They have met in the qualification stages for every tournament, except for the 1987 tournament, for which teams were invited rather than going through qualification matches, and the 1995 tournament, for which Canada had automatically qualified by finishing as a quarterfinalist in the 1991 Rugby World Cup. Since 2015, the teams play each other annually at the Americas Rugby Championship.


The U.S. has been undefeated in the last seven matches, with six wins and a draw. The first victory of the current winning streak ended a seven match winning streak by Canada that lasted from 2009 through 2013.



Tournament records



Honors




  • 2018 Americas Rugby Championship – Champion


  • 2017 Americas Rugby Championship – Champion


  • 1924 Olympics – Gold Medal


  • 1920 Olympics – Gold Medal



Rugby World Cup



The United States has qualified for every Rugby World Cup except the 1995 tournament. The best result that the U.S. has managed at a Rugby World Cup is to win one game, which it accomplished in 1987, 2003, and again in 2011.













































































Tournament
Host
U.S. Win/Loss
(Bonus Pts)[o 1]
U.S. Finish
U.S. Defeated
Leading U.S. scorer

1987

 Australia
 New Zealand
1–2
3rd in Pool A
Japan (21–18)

Ray Nelson (24)

1991

 England
 France
 Ireland
 Scotland
 Wales
0–3
4th in Pool A


Mark Williams (16)

1995

 South Africa

Did not qualify

1999

 Wales
0–3
4th in Pool 5


Kevin Dalzell (22)

2003

 Australia
1–3 (2 BP)
4th in Pool B
Japan (39–26)

Mike Hercus (51)

2007

 France
0–4 (1 BP)
5th in Pool A


Mike Hercus (26)

2011

 New Zealand
1–3 (0 BP)
4th in Pool C
Russia (13–6)

Chris Wyles (18)

2015

 England
0–4 (0 BP)
5th in Pool B


AJ MacGinty (25)

2019

 Japan

Qualified




  1. ^ A bonus point is awarded for scoring 4 tries or for losing by 7 points or less.




Pacific Nations Cup



The Pacific Nations Cup has been played every year since 2006, and has been played in its current format since 2013, when the United States and Canada joined Japan, Fiji, Samoa and Tonga.































Tournament U.S. record U.S. finish Leading U.S. scorer U.S. wins
2013 0–4 5th / 5
Chris Wyles (19)

2014 1–1 3rd / 6
Chris Wyles (32)
Canada
2015 2–2 5th / 6
AJ MacGinty (44)
Japan, Canada


Americas Rugby Championship



The Americas Rugby Championship pits the six highest ranked rugby nations in North and South America (Argentina XV, Brazil, Canada, Chile, United States, and Uruguay). It was first contested in 2016.































Tournament U.S. record U.S. finish Leading U.S. scorer U.S. wins
2016 2–1-2 2nd
James Bird (32)
Canada, Chile
2017 4–1-0 1st
Ben Cima (36)
Uruguay, Brazil, Canada, Chile
2018 5–0-0 1st
Will Magie (38)
Argentina XV, Uruguay, Brazil, Canada, Chile


Summer Olympics



Rugby was included an Olympic sport four times from 1900 to 1924, with the United States winning the last two of those tournaments — 1920 and 1924. After a lengthy absence, rugby returned to the Summer Olympics in 2016, albeit in the rugby sevens format.





























Olympics U.S. finish U.S. record Defeated

France 1900 Paris

(U.S. did not participate)

United Kingdom 1908 London

(U.S. did not participate)

Belgium 1920 Antwerp

Gold
1–0
France

France 1924 Paris

Gold
2–0
France, Romania


Defunct competitions



Churchill Cup
































































Year
Host nation(s)
U.S. record
U.S. finish /
# Teams

2003

Canada Canada
1–2
2nd / 3

2004

Canada Canada
0–2
4th / 4

2005

Canada Canada
1–1
3rd / 4

2006

Canada United States Canada & United States
0–3
6th / 6

2007

England England
0–3
6th / 6

2008

Canada United States Canada & United States
0–3
6th / 6

2009

United States United States
1–2
5th / 6

2010

United States United States
1–2
4th / 6

2011

England England
1–2
5th / 6


Super Cup


Main article: Super Cup


































Year
Champion
Second
Third
Fourth
US Record (W–L)
2003
Russia

United States
Japan
N/A
1–1
2004
Japan
Canada

United States
Russia
1–1
2005
Canada
Japan

United States
Romania
1–1


Player records




Most caps










Previous record holders:




  • Mike Purcell — 1980–1987, 14 caps (U.S. record co-holder at time of retirement), 14 starts, 4 tries. 2 tries at the 1987 Rugby World Cup.


  • Kevin Swords — 1985–1994, 36 caps (U.S. record holder at the time of his retirement), U.S. captain, Barbarians (2).


  • Chris Lippert — 1989–1998, 38 caps (U.S. record holder at the time of his retirement), U.S. captain (3), Barbarians (3).



Most tries











Most points











Previous head coaches




  1. South Africa Gary Gold (2018–present). 8 wins, 0 losses


  2. New Zealand Dave Hewett (Interim) (2017). 1 win, 1 loss


  3. New Zealand John Mitchell (2016–2017). 8 wins, 8 losses 3 draws.


  4. United States Mike Tolkin (2012–2015). 10 wins, 23 losses, 1 draw. 0–4 at the 2015 RWC.


  5. Republic of Ireland Eddie O'Sullivan (2009–2011). 8 wins, 17 losses. 1–3 at the 2011 RWC


  6. Australia Scott Johnson (2008–2009). 1 win, 3 losses


  7. New Zealand Peter Thorburn (2006–2007). 0–4 at the 2007 RWC


  8. United States Tom Billups (2001–2005). 12 wins, 21 losses. 1–3 at the 2003 RWC


  9. Australia Duncan Hall (2000–2001). 3 wins, 9 losses


  10. United States Jack Clark (1993–1999). Most victories (16) among U.S. national team coaches.[69]


  11. England Jim Perkins (1987–1991)


  12. Republic of Ireland George Hook (1987)


  13. United States Bing Dawson (dates unknown)[70]


  14. United States Ray Cornbill (1976–1983)


  15. United States Dennis Storer (1976–1982)[16] — first U.S. national team coach in the modern era


Last updated: July 29, 2018.



Overall record and rankings




































































































































































































Men's World Rugby Rankings


Top 30 rankings as of 29 October 2018[71]
Rank Change* Team Points
1
Steady
 New Zealand

092.96
2
Steady
 Ireland

090.12
3
Steady
 Wales

085.94
4
Steady
 England

085.68
5
Steady
 South Africa

083.52
6
Steady
 Scotland

083.02
7
Steady
 Australia

082.86
8
Steady
 France

079.10
9
Steady
 Argentina

078.01
10
Steady
 Fiji

076.54
11
Steady
 Japan

075.24
12
Steady
 Tonga

073.84
13
Steady
 Georgia

073.13
14
Steady
 Italy

072.56
15
Steady
 United States

071.66
16
Steady
 Samoa

068.28
17
Steady
 Romania

068.25
18
Steady
 Uruguay

065.37
19
Steady
 Russia

064.89
20
Steady
 Spain

063.09
21
Steady
 Hong Kong

060.46
22
Steady
 Namibia

059.97
23
Steady
 Canada

059.93
24
Steady
 Portugal

058.30
25
Steady
 Belgium

058.09
26
Steady
 Brazil

056.81
27
Steady
 Netherlands

056.52
28
Steady
 Kenya

055.71
29
Steady
 Germany

055.59
30
Steady
 Chile

054.36

*Change from the previous week

United States's historical rankings

United States IRB World Rankings.png

Source: World Rugby - Graph updated to 2 July 2018[71]

Below is table of the representative rugby matches played by a United States national XV at test level up until 24 June 2018.[72]




























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Opponent
Played
Won
Lost
Drawn
Win %
For
Aga
Diff

 Argentina
8 0 8 0 0% 119 247 -128

Argentina Argentina Jaguars
1 0 1 0 0% 30 34 -4

 Australia
8 0 8 0 0% 78 368 -290

 Australia XV
1 0 1 0 0% 22 26 -4

 Barbados
1 1 0 0 100% 91 0 +91

 Bermuda
1 1 0 0 100% 60 3 +57

 Brazil
3 2 1 0 66.66% 117 43 +74

 Canada
60 20 38 2 33.33% 1042 1389 -347

 Chile
5 4 1 0 75.00% 214 65 +149

 England
5 0 5 0 0% 52 253 -201

 England XV
2 0 2 0 0% 11 96 -107

England England Saxons
4 0 4 0 0% 29 194 -165

 Fiji
6 1 5 0 16.67% 97 143 -46

 France
7 1 6 0 14.29% 93 181 -88

 France XV
1 1 0 0 100% 8 0 +8

 Georgia
6 3 3 0 50% 146 117 +29

 Germany
1 1 0 0 100% 46 17 +29

 Hong Kong
7 3 4 0 42.86% 152 191 -39

 Ireland
9 0 9 0 0% 101 361 -260

 Ireland XV
1 0 1 0 0% 7 32 -25

Ireland Ireland Wolfhounds
2 0 2 0 0% 22 74 -52

 Italy
5 0 5 0 0% 74 154 -80

 Japan
23 13 9 1 56.52% 655 526 +129

 New Zealand
3 0 3 0 0% 15 171 -156

 New Zealand XV
1 0 1 0 0% 6 53 -47

 Māori
2 0 2 0 0% 13 128 -115

 Portugal
2 2 0 0 100% 83 22 +61

 Romania
8 6 2 0 75.00% 199 99 +100

 Russia
8 8 0 0 100% 280 110 +170

 Samoa
5 0 5 0 0% 85 117 -32

 Scotland
6 1 5 0 16.67% 96 249 -153

 Scotland XV
1 0 1 0 0% 12 41 -29

 Scotland A
1 0 1 0 0% 9 13 -4

 South Africa
4 0 4 0 0% 42 209 -167

 Soviet Union
1 0 1 0 0% 16 31 -15

 Spain
3 3 0 0 100% 169 29 +140

 Tonga
9 1 8 0 11.11% 134 241 -107

 Tunisia
1 1 0 0 100% 47 13 +34

 Uruguay
17 14 2 1 82.35% 553 282 +271

 Wales
7 0 7 0 0% 86 315 -229

 Wales XV
1 0 1 0 0% 18 24 -6
Total 247 87 156 4 35.22% 5129 6651 -1522


Record against Tier 1 teams


The following table shows the top ten best U.S. results against Tier 1 opponents.[73][74]





































































Pts Diff Result Opponent Date
+14 W (17–3)
 France
1924-05-18
+8 W (8–0)
 France
1920-09-05
+1 W (30-29)
 Scotland
2018-06-16
–3 L (26–29)
 Argentina
1996-09-14
–3 L (12–15)
 Ireland
2013-06-08
–4 L (8–12)
 Australia
1912-11-16
–4 L (20–24)
 Italy
2016-06-18
–5 L (11-16)
 Argentina
1994-06-20
–5 L (23-28)
 Wales
1997-07-12
–6 L (22-28)
 Argentina
1994-05-28


Other U.S. national teams



USA Selects












































Americas Rugby Championship
Year
Champion
U.S. result

2009

Argentina Jaguars
4th

2010

Argentina Jaguars
3rd
2011

Not held due to the 2011 Rugby World Cup

2012

Argentina Jaguars
4th

2013

Argentina Jaguars
2nd

2014

Argentina Jaguars
2nd
2015

Not held due to the 2015 Rugby World Cup


The USA Selects is a second national rugby team for the United States. The USA Selects is a developmental team, usually fielding younger players looking to break into the U.S. national team, and sometimes including amateur domestic U.S. national team players who need more high-level matches.


The USA Selects participates in the Americas Rugby Championship, a tournament featuring the "A" sides for Argentina, Canada, the United States, and Uruguay. The ARC is an annual tournament that has been played every year since 2009 (except for Rugby World Cup years), and replaces the North America 4 competition. The USA Selects best result in the ARC was in 2013, when the USA Selects beat Canada A to take second place.[75]



Women's national team



The U.S. women's national team, officially formed in 1987, has been an international powerhouse since its inception, although more recently have fallen behind other powerhouses such as England and New Zealand on the world rankings. The Eagles won the first official World Cup in 1991, and finished second in the two following World Cups (1994, 1998). The Eagles have set a high standard for international competition, leading an ensuing wave of women's rugby growth and game development worldwide. The US finished 7th in the 2002 tournament. The women's national team traveled to the United Kingdom in January 2006 to play Scotland, Ireland and England, winning all three games. The 2006 Women's Rugby World Cup was held in Edmonton, Canada.



See also




  • Rugby union in the United States

  • USA Rugby

  • United States national rugby sevens team

  • United States national under-20 rugby union team

  • List of United States national rugby union players

  • Rugby World Cup

  • American Cougars



Notes and references





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  6. ^ Gridiron football, Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved September 26, 2015.


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  31. ^ "Loading..." Retrieved September 21, 2015.


  32. ^ "Loading..." Retrieved September 21, 2015.


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  73. ^ United States test matches. ESPNscrum. Accessed July 29, 2018.


  74. ^ United States rugby stats. RugbyData.com. Accessed July 29, 2018.


  75. ^ "Eagles Select XVs defeat Canada 30-10 at Americas Rugby Championship", USA Rugby, October 15, 2013. Retrieved September 13, 2014.




External links






  • Official website












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