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Written by Bernie Decker    Monday, 07 November 2011 18:53    PDF Print Write e-mail
Quins Beat Flamingos in Shootout
Clubs - Men's DII Clubs

Four lead changes in the span of 10 minutes and 15 total tries scored ensured that the DII league derby between the Denver Harlequins and Northern Colorado was an action-packed crowd pleaser as the sides battled Saturday at Infinity Park South turf field in Glendale.

After an initial period of forward activity between the 10-meter lines, an unfruitful NoCo clearance found Harlequins fullback Dave Jaeger instead of touch, and he countered well, bearing pressure on Northern Colorado’s interior defensive wall. Ball spun from the loose piece found No. 8 Joe Vitapa, who flippered his way into space inside NoCo’s 10-meter line and fed hard-charging center Steve Klaus at the 22. The speedy five-eighths outdistanced pursuit to touch down, and with Jaeger’s conversion, Denver led by 7-0 after five minutes.

A Denver lineout infringement caused the Flamingos to be awarded a free kick. which flyhalf Mike Staab used to pin the hosts deep in their own end. NoCo was able to turn ball over at breakdown and No. 8 Nick O’Connell scooped the ball from the loose five meters out and bulled his way across for the grounding, and it was 7-5 with seven minutes gone.

Each side exhibited difficulty in securing their own possession at lineout, and with a volatile wind impinging ball grips, the ensuing offensive schemes were scrambled and unsteady until a Staab corner kick had NoCo on the front foot within 15 meters of goal. And it was O’Connell again who angled powerfully off the ruck and dove over for the try, giving Northern Colorado had its first lead, 10-7, at the 17-minute mark.

The Quins came back directly two minutes on. After a turnover at the traveler’s 10 meter line, inside center Alan Kloss  burst through a gap and stepped neatly inside a defender en route to a touch down ‘neath the sticks. With the conversion by scrumhalf, Bruce Hook, the Quins had retaken the lead at 14-10.

Slow maulwork by NoCo’s forwards, yet in the correct direction, had them surging with ten to go when scrumhalf  Dave Wright   finished well a pack rush to goal by touching down and the Flamingos had gone back up, 15-14 at 24.

Three minutes later NoCo was pinged for failure to release at breakdown thirty meters out from goal on the left post. Hook was deadly from that distance and it was 17-15 as the home side regained the lead.

The contest was full-on now with each side making significant ground gains, though turnover ball was affected by blowy gusts and their handmaidens, the knock-on and forward pass.

Harlequins got another from Kloss as the crafty speedster employed dips and jinks for thirty before crossing for the dot and, with Hook’s conversion, it was 24-15 at 37. Denver’s backline began to click and it was Jaeger who corkscrewed through the visitor’s defense to touch down at the whistle for a score of 29-15 Quins at break.

Quins extended their lead at minute 46 when wing Mike Boyle touched down in support of a fluid backline movement and the margin was 36-15 and things seemed a bit desperate for NoCo when flyhalf Shane Milek touched down in corner. With Hook conversion, the numbers were 43 and 15 at 57.

O’Connell got a third and then a fourth try and Wright picked up a brace for the Flamingos, but it was Harlequins who had this day with Boyle and Jaeger each touching down a second and replacement wing Gordon Westmont who got the last for a final of 64-30 to Denver as the clubs go into 10 weeks of winter break.

“Our forwards were committed in loose play and defense, and our backs came to run,” said Harlequins head coach, Mark Price. “Northern Colorado always brings a good team and the competition is always tough.”

Harlequins
Tries: Klaus, Kloss (2), Jaeger (2), Boyle (2), Milek, Westmont;
Con: Jaeger, Hook (7)
Pen: Hook

Northern Colorado
Tries: O’Connell (4), Wright (2)

 
Written by RUGBYMag Staff    Monday, 07 November 2011 18:37    PDF Print Write e-mail
Women DI College Standings Fall 2011
Scores-Standings-Stats - 2011 Standings

Updated November 7, 2011


NORTHEAST
New England

W L T Pf Pa Pd BT BL Pts
Army 5 0 0 219 12 207 4 0 24
Boston Univ 3 1 1 145 103 42 2 0 16
Boston College 3 1 1 93 72 21 1 0 15
UConn 2 3 0 102 109 -7 3 2 13
Northeastern 1 4 0 54 180 -126 2 0 6
UMass 0 5 0 29 166 -137 0 1 1










New York State

W L T Pf Pa Pd BT BL Pts
Buffalo 5 0 0 178 39 139 5 0 25
Syracuse 3 2 0 135 86 49 4 2 18
Cortland 2 1 2 108 123 -15 4 0 16
Brockport 2 2 1 119 95 24 5 0 15
Hamilton 1 4 0 50 142 -92 2 0 6
Cornell 0 4 1 34 163 -129 1 0 3










Ivy League

W L T Pf Pa Pd BT BL Pts
Brown 5 0 0 237 37 200 5 0 25
Princeton 4 1 0 211 67 144 4 1 21
Radcliffe 3 2 0 149 67 82 3 0 15
Dartmouth 2 3 0 190 111 79 3 1 12
Columbia 1 4 0 47 250 -203 1 0 5
Yale 0 5 0 27 322 -295 0 1 1










MID-ATLANTIC
Eastern Penn

W L T Pf Pa Pd BT BL Pts
Penn State 1 0 0 70 7 63 1 0 5
West Chester 0 1 0 7 70 -63 0 0 0










Potomac

W L T Pf Pa Pd BT BL Pts
Navy 1 0 0 71 7 64 1 0 5
Maryland 0 1 0 7 71 -64 0 0 0










Virginia

W L T Pf Pa Pd

Pts
James Madison 1 1 0 17 55 -38

5
Virginia 1 0 0 43 0 43

4
Virginia Tech 0 1 0 12 17 -5

1










MIDWEST
Eastern

W L T Pf Pa Pd BT BL Pts
Ohio State 4 1 0 146 56 90 3 1 20
Michigan 4 1 0 158 90 68 4 0 20
Notre Dame 3 2 0 127 78 49 3 2 17
Indiana 3 2 0 115 71 44 3 1 16
Michigan State 0 4 1 32 102 -70 0 1 3
Purdue 0 4 1 22 203 -181 0 0 2










Western

W L T Pf Pa Pd BT BL Pts
Northern Iowa 4 0 0 188 27 161 4 0 20
Minnesota 3 1 0 99 114 -15 3 0 15
Iowa State 1 3 0 52 117 -65 1 0 5
Milwaukee 1 3 0 84 112 -28 2 1 7
Illinois 1 3 0 67 120 -53 2 0 6










PACIFIC MOUNTAIN
East

W L T Pf Pa Pd BT BL Pts
BYU 4
0
0 234
0
234 4
0 20
Colorado 3
1
0 89
97
-17 3
0 15
Colorado State
2 2
0 54
99
-45 1
0 9
Air Force Academy 1
3 0 41
124 -83 0 1 5
Univ. New Mexico
0
4
0 49
147
-98
1
1
2










WEST
Texas

W L T Pf Pa Pd BT BL Pts
Texas 1 0 0 31 5 26 1 0 5
Texas Tech 1 1 0 34 46 -12 1 0 5
Texas A&M 0 1 0 15 29 -14 0 0 0


 
Written by RUGBYMag.com News Release    Monday, 07 November 2011 18:32    PDF Print Write e-mail
Lindenwood Women End Fall With Bang
Colleges - Women's College

Lindenwood's Lady Lions concluded their inaugural season with an impressive shutout win over DePaul 41-0 in Maryland Heights, Mo. Saturday. Lindenwood controlled possession of the ball on offense and locked down against the Blue Demons on defense throughout the game.   

The Lady Lions scored just six minutes into the first half when prop Adi Qauqau and captain Kim Smallacombe drove the ball into the try zone. Haley Young added the conversion to make the score 7-0 in favor of Lindenwood. Just six minutes later, prop Lisa Ramsey was able to score off of a breakaway from center Cece Calloway to put the Lady Lions up 12-0.  Lindenwood forced a DePaul turnover that Young picked up and ran into the try zone at the 22-minute mark. She added her second conversion of the game to put Lindenwood up 19-0, which is where the score remained until halftime.

The Lady Lion backline took charge in the second half. Only three minutes had elapsed before Qauqau scored her second try of the game off of a penalty play, and the following conversion made the score 26-0. Lindenwood extended the lead to 31 when smooth passing off of a kickoff and quick recognition of an overload by Patricia Belcher led to an untouched try by Jolene Steibel. Young scored her second try of the game after the Lady Lions forwards stole the ball during a Blue Demons scrum and Lindenwood reached the 41-point mark when Danielle Bell crossed the try line off an assist from Steibel.

Young led the Lady Lions balanced scoring attack with 16 points and Qauqau had 10, while three other players added five points each for the win.

After a slow start to their inaugural season, the Lady Lions finished with three straight wins and to improve their record to 4-2 overall. Despite the two losses, Lindenwood outscored opponents by a margin of 107-31, picking up two shutouts along the way.

While the regular season is over, the Lady Lions will continue to prepare for spring action that could include their first rugby tournament and competition against DI club and top-ranked DI and DII college teams. Schedule details are expected to be released at the beginning of 2012.

 
Written by RUGBYMag.com News Release    Monday, 07 November 2011 18:42    PDF Print Write e-mail
Seminoles Keep LSU Winless
Colleges - Men's DI College

(Adapted from a story originally run on lsureveille.com)

LSU slipped to 0-2 Saturday, losing 22-20 to Florida State 22-20 on the last play of the game.

LSU junior flyhalf Allen Alongi made a penalty kick with one minute left to put the Tigers up 20-17, but LSU was called for a diving over penalty while trying to run out the clock. FSU moved the ball to the other side of the field, capitalizing on LSU's poor field distribution, and streaked up the left sideline for game-winning try.

"They had an overload with numbers," Alongi said. "We were expecting to retain it and kick it out and win, but that's what happens in rugby. Any split second, the game can change."

Senior outside center and captain Jeff Levasseur said the penalty highlighted the team's biggest weakness — inexperience. The club had to replace nine starters this season, Alongi said.

"The ruck is the biggest thing we need to work on with all the new kids, because they're coming from football and other sports," Levasseur said. "We need to be aggressive but we need to be controlled."

FSU also scored the first points of the game. An FSU center caught the defense off guard and broke through a gap, running half the length of the field for the first try of the match, making the score 7-0 after a completed conversion.

"We came out flat," Levasseur said. "We came out pretty dead. We didn't practice defense enough of them skipping it out immediately. We were expecting them to crash the ball, crash the ball. ... We need to start off strong, finish strong. We can't just play in the middle 40 to 50 minutes."

Alongi and Levasseur both scored tries for LSU, and Alongi kicked two penalties and two conversions.

The Tigers will regroup and try to defend their title this weekend at the 33rd Annual Battleship Rugby Tournament at USS Alabama Memorial Park in Mobile, Ala.

Levasseur said that despite the loss, he is pleased with the team's improvement since its last game, a 23-10 loss to Texas State.

"I am much more comfortable and confident going into the tournament after today's game," Levasseur said. "It sucks that we lost, but I am much more confident than three weeks ago."

 
Written by Jackie Finlan    Monday, 07 November 2011 18:10    PDF Print Write e-mail
EPRU Semifinalists Named
Colleges - Women's College

Division II women’s colleges in Eastern Pennsylvania took their first step into the post season this weekend, and Temple, La Salle, Shippensburg and Delaware are still in the hunt for a seed to the MARFU championships.

Shippensburg races past Drexel to stay alive in EPRUs.

The EPRU receives three seeds to the territorial championships held in the spring, but this year marked the first time that the LAU began its qualifying process at the quarterfinal level. It’s been a very exciting season, at least in the eastern division, as the seeding wasn't determined until the Temple v La Salle match last Wednesday (Temple won 5-0). Shippensburg won the western division easily, outscoring opponents 164-12. The seedings came down to the final weekend of play in the west, and some of that drama translated to the first round of playoffs.

Having cruised through league season, Shippensburg was aptly challenged by Drexel during its 22-7 win.

“We were hoping to have a greater score difference against Drexel, but they came out stronger than we expected,” Shippensburg captain Chelsea Keenan said of the DII newcomer. “We have never played each other before, so we were anxious and curious about their playing experience and level of their athleticism. They definitely gave us a run for our money.”

Shippensburg took advantage of Drexel’s weaker set pieces and was able to steal possession on multiple occasions. Shippensburg also had superior support at the breakdowns as well as breakaways. The balanced game resulted in evenly spaced tries from captain Erin Moore, Emily Grotzinger and Dawn Porowski (2).

“One player in particular who stood out was Dawn Porowski, who is a loose-head prop,” Keenan praised. “She scored two of our tries. She showed excellent perseverance on the field and had great tackles.”

Shippensburg was able to dominate late in the game, as their conditioning started to take center stage. And players need to come off, Shippensburg tapped it’s incredibly deep bench. Drexel brought fewer than 20 players to the game and struggled to keep up with the pace of the game.

“We look forward to playing back-to-back games this weekend for the EPRU Championship and hope to come out top with a shiny new medal,” Keenan exclaimed. “Our starting 15 consists mostly of juniors and seniors with great knowledge of the game, and good sportsmanship. We will be working very hard this week in order to prepare us for the upcoming weekend.”

Shippensburg will host La Salle, which won 7-0 against a very big Scranton squad on Saturday, in the EPRU semifinals.

The other semifinal will occur between Temple and Delaware, both of whom won their quarterfinals with healthy margins last weekend. Temple downed East Stroudsburg 40-5, and Delaware shut out York 51-0.

The two teams played each other early in league season, and the Owls won 12-5. Since then, both sides have undergone massive improvements.

“Since losing to us in the first week of the season, they have gone undefeated and seem to be hitting their stride just like us,” Temple coach Owen Jones said. “I am expecting a very spirited game as a coach and a very fun one as a fan.”

Temple’s offense has certainly found its rhythm, but Jones credited the defense with Saturday’s win over ESU.

“Our defense set the tone for the game with a fast line and we were consistently making contact on their side of the gain line,” Owens said. “ESU had strong runners who, if given the outside, could do some damage, but we played very sound defensive and made their attack turn back into our forwards rather than able to go wide.”

It took some time for Temple to put some distance between them and ESU, and halftime ended with a 12-0 lead in the Owls’ favor. A few decision-making blunders kept Temple within ESU’s striking distance, but the Owls’ consistent pressure on defense began to take its toll in the second half.

“The past two seasons, it seemed as if I was talking about the same three to five girls each week as being the scorers and standout players,” Owens said. “This year, we have been very fortunate to have consistent performances from each and every player. The offense has been very balance and 11 different players scored: six different forwards and five different backs.”

Owens was also pleased to see five rookies contribute to an elimination playoff match.

Once again, both Saturday and Sunday matches are important. With three seeds to the MARFU championship, all but one team will continue on to the territorial championships in the spring.

 


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