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College rugby is played by men and women throughout colleges and universities in the United States. Seven-a-side and fifteen-a-side variants of rugby union are most commonly played. Most collegiate rugby programs do not fall under the auspices of the NCAA and are instead governed by National Collegiate Rugby and USA Rugby, two nationwide governing bodies. 27 women's programs participate in the NCAA.

Quick Facts Governing body, First played ...
College rugby in the United States
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California Golden Bears v Saint Mary's Gaels match in March 2010
Governing body
First played1874
Registered players65,000 [1]
Clubs900
Club competitions
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College rugby is the fastest growing college sport in the US and one of the fastest growing sports in the nation as the number of athletes increased by roughly 350% from 18,500 in 2006 to 65,000 in 2010.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8] Women's rugby is an NCAA Emerging Sport.[1] Over 900 college teams—male and female—are registered with USA Rugby and hundreds more with National Collegiate Rugby.[9] Over 32,000 college players are registered with USA Rugby, making college rugby the largest section of its membership.[10]

The highest profile college rugby sevens competition is the Collegiate Rugby Championship (CRC). College club rugby has included several championship competitions since 1980.

Rugby has been played in universities since as early as the 1800s, but in the 1960s rugby found a foothold in colleges, led by Catholic colleges such as Notre Dame and particularly Jesuit universities such as Boston College and St. Joseph's in Philadelphia.[11] Several schools have upgraded their investments in rugby by creating programs with varsity or quasi-varsity status and funding for scholarships.[12]

Alumni from collegiate programs make up much of the United States men's and women's national teams.

Major League Rugby implemented its first collegiate MLR Draft in 2020. Players are eligible for the draft after 3 years in college at 21 years old. Free agents can join teams at age 18.[13][14][15][16]

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Governance

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Pacific Tigers kicking off in a 1961 game

The College Rugby Association of America (CRAA) oversees the top-level men's and women's divisions.[17][18]

27 schools govern their women's teams under applicable NCAA bylaws for recruiting and eligibility, under the NCAA's Emerging Sports for Women program. The NCAA has no authority over men's college rugby.

College rugby is often called a club sport because teams are usually administered by a student club sports department rather than the intercollegiate athletics department. Some schools promoted rugby to varsity status, committing resources for scholarships and paid coaches, or given rugby an elevated status short of full varsity status.

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History

In the United States, college rugby was traditionally governed by (in descending order of authority): USA Rugby, geographical unions (GUs) and local area unions (LAUs) (e.g., NERFU) and administered by a College Management Committee.[19]

The Ivy Rugby Conference formed in 2009.[20] This move signaled a shift away from the LAUs and GUs as the governing bodies for regional college rugby. By 2011 USA Rugby was urging college rugby programs to adopt new conference structures like the conferences used by their other athletic programs. In 2019, in the wake of USA Rugby's bankruptcy declaration, the College Rugby Association of America (CRAA) formed to oversee the top-level men's and women's divisions.[17][18]

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Play and participation

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Lynchburg College team photo after defeating Emory & Henry College, 35–15. Fall 2015

Winter and spring are the primary seasons for conferences in the Pacific, Northwest, and South regions (e.g., PAC, Southeastern); the fall is the primary season for conferences in the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic and Upper Midwest (e.g., Big Ten, Atlantic Coast). Conferences establish playing schedules in the primary season, while in the secondary season the teams often set up friendly matches or focus on playing rugby sevens.

USA Rugby maintains player eligibility guidelines, administered by the local area unions. College players generally have five years of rugby eligibility from the time they graduate high school.[citation needed] On-field disciplinary issues are generally handled by the local area unions, while off-field disciplinary issues are governed by the academic institution and the local area union. USA Rugby's CIPP insurance program provides liability insurance to players, teams, administrators, and pitch hosts in exchange for an annual dues payment. Roughly one quarter of college rugby programs offer financial aid to their players.[21]

Outstanding college rugby players are recognized as All-Americans.[22] Qualified All-Americans can represent the United States in international tournaments by playing on the United States national under-20 rugby union team or the All Americans rugby union team.

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Divisions

College rugby competition in the USA is divided into several tiers:

  • The highest is Division I-A for men and Division I Elite for women
  • Division I-AA for men and Division I for women
  • Division II
  • Small College
  • The separate National Intercollegiate Rugby Association (NIRA) consists of women's NCAA DI, II and III rugby programs that adhere to NCAA organizational rules under a sanctioning agreement with USA Rugby.[23]

USA Rugby generally allows colleges to select the division in which the college thinks it would fit best. Most schools remain in the same division from year-to-year, but there are exceptions. Schools that have been successful in a particular division may move up but are not required to do so; likewise, poorly performing schools may move down a division, but are not required to. Successful schools may have varied reasons for declining promotion. For example, a school may prefer to remain in its current conference against traditional rivals, or a school with a small budget might resist the additional travel expense that might come from switching divisions and conferences.

Significant movement across men's divisions occurred in 2011 when USA Rugby separated Division I into Division I-A and I-AA.[24] This new arrangement caused Division I schools to choose one or the other, with 31 schools joining Division I-A and the majority of Division I schools joining Division I-AA.[24] Additionally, the creation of Division I-AA caused several successful Division II schools to move up to Division I-A. The evolving division structures caused significant shifts in schools between Divisions I-A and I-AA in the following years, with half of the original 31 D I-A members leaving by the end of 2013, and new schools from lower divisions taking their place.[24]

The governance of collegiate rugby was split and diverged in 2021. The umbrella of the USA Rugby Collegiate Council includes College Rugby Association of America (CRAA), American Collegiate Rugby Association (ACRA), American College Rugby (ACR), and independent conferences.[23] National Collegiate Rugby (NCR), formerly NSCRO, challenged the existing structure and expanded beyond small colleges to include the higher divisions. Men's and women's conferences each chose as individual conferences (in some cases, schools within conferences also chose[23]) to align with USA Rugby or NCR.

Women

Twelve women's conferences that played historically in DII left the oversight of USA Rugby to join NCR. Beginning in 2021, women's college rugby within NCR is split between Small College and an Open Division. The Open Division, which NCR now refers to as its DI, is made up of teams from these 12 conferences.[23]

According to Goff Rugby Report, the DI Elite women's teams are part of College Rugby Association of America, and so are most women's DI conferences (eight conferences) and the independents. There are also a couple of DII or hybrid conferences within CRAA.[23][25]

The American Collegiate Rugby Association is a group of four DII-level women's conferences remaining under the aegis of USA Rugby, which included 62 teams as of June 2020.[25][26]

The collegiate women's programs in the NIRA operate their own regular season competition and championship.

Men

In 2021, most DII men's rugby conferences aligned with NCR.[23]

In 2011 USA Rugby created a new Division 1-A with approximately 30 schools forming a new premier division.[27]

Two men's conferences that played DIA in 2019 joined NCR in 2021, as have three DIAA conferences. Under NCR, they competed in fall 2021 as DI and DIAA, with separate postseasons.[23]

Men's DIAA was dramatically split in 2021, with both NCR and CRAA-run postseasons in the fall. There was also a CRAA-run postseason in spring 2022. According to Goff Rugby Report, there was no way to have a sole men's DIAA national champion in 2021–2022.[23]

In 2021, there are five men's DIA conferences plus independents under USA Rugby/CRAA.[23]

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Varsity programs

Men's varsity

Majority of colleges classify their rugby programs as club sports rather than varsity sports. A small but growing number of universities, however, have begun labeling rugby as a varsity sport, realizing that rugby can be profitable, as a successful rugby program can result in national championships and increased marketability.[28]

More information Athletic Affiliation, Metro area ...
Men's College Varsity Programs (arranged by date)
College Athletic

Affiliation

Metro area Varsity

since

National achievements
California (Berkeley)[29] D1: Pac-12 Berkeley, CA 1882 26 national championships since 1980, 5 CRC 7s championships
Paul Smiths College (USCAA) Paul Smiths, NY 2000 2013 and 2017 ~ NSCRO Ranked Top 40
Cal Maritime (NAIA) Vallejo, CA 2001 NSCRO rank #1 (2009, 2010); runner up (2012)[30]
Franciscan University D3: 3RRC Steubenville, OH 2001 NSCRO Ranked #1 (2012); 3rd at Nationals
Norwich D3: GNAC Northfield, VT 2008 D2 national playoffs (2013)
American International College[31] D2: NE-10 Springfield, MA 2009
Life University[32] (NAIA) Marietta, GA 2010 D1-A champion (2013, 2016, 2018, 2019); D1-A runner-up (2014, 2015, 2017)
Lindenwood D1: Ohio Saint Louis, MO 2011 D1 7s champion (2015, 2017, 2018), CRC 7s champion (2018); D1-AA runner-up (2013)
Notre Dame College[33] D1: Rugby East Cleveland, OH 2012 2017 D1-AA National Champion, 2016 D1-AA National Runner-Up, 2023 D1-A National Champion (NCR)
Wheeling Jesuit[34] D2: Mtn. East Wheeling, WV 2012
Army[35] D1: Patriot West Point, NY 2014
Central Washington University[36] D2: Great NW Ellensburg, WA 2014
Bethel College[37] (NAIA) Mishawaka, IN 2015
New England College[38] D3: NECC Henniker, NH 2015 NSCRO National Champions VII's (2014), NSCRO National Champion XV's (2015), National runner up XV's (2014)[39]
Marywood University[40] D3 Scranton, PA 2018
Queens University of Charlotte[41] D2: SAC Charlotte, NC 2018
Navy[42] D1: Patriot Annapolis, MD 2022
Principia College[43] D3 Elsah, IL ??? USA Rugby Division 2 7s title champion (2013). NCR D2 National Champs 15s (2022)[44]
SUNY Maritime College D3: Skyline Bronx, NY ???
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More information Athletic Affiliation, Metro area ...
Men's College Quasi-Varsity Programs
College Athletic

Affiliation

Metro area Status
Penn State D1: Big Ten University Park, PA "Team sports" status; member of Athletic Department.[45]
BYU D1: West Coast Provo, UT Rugby is one of four extramural sports teams sponsored by the school.[46]
Spring Hill College D2: SIAC Mobile, AL Receives support from the athletics department, including a full-time head coach.[47]
Davenport D2: Great Lakes Grand Rapids, MI Officially listed as non-varsity, but is fully supported as a varsity program.[48]
Kutztown D2: PSAC Kutztown, PA Kutztown rugby has been designated as elite club status.[49]
Arizona D1: Pac-12 Tucson, AZ Rugby is in the "Cactus Tier", an elevated level of intercollegiate competition.
Mount St. Mary's D1: Northeast Emmitsburg, MD Elevated to "Premier Team Sport" status.[50][51]
Dartmouth D1: Ivy League Hanover, NH Men's rugby uses varsity facilities, has full time coaching staff
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Women's Rugby: An NCAA Emerging Sport

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Logo of NCAA Rugby with the "Emerging Sport" at bottom

The NCAA marked women's rugby as an NCAA Emerging Sports for Women in 2002. Thereafter schools began adding women's rugby as an NCAA sport. An "Emerging Sport" must gain championship status (minimum 40 varsity programs, except 28 for Division III) within 10 years, or show progress toward that goal to remain on the list.[52] Until then, it is under the auspices of the NCAA and its respective institutions. Emerging Sport status allows competition to include club teams to satisfy the NCAA's minimum number of competitions rule.

Growth was initially slow, with only 5 of nearly 350 collegiate teams qualifying.[53] The push for NCAA rugby status received a boost in 2009 when the International Olympic Committee announced that rugby would return to the Summer Olympics in 2016. Although NCAA Division I schools dropped 72 women's varsity sports teams during 2008–2012 due to the recession,[54] women's rugby programs grew in number.

As of the fall of 2022, the NCAA had sanctioned rugby for 27 schools across 3 Divisions, adding Princeton University for the 2022–23 season.[55][56] Current NCAA women's rugby programs include the following:[57]

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Penn State vs West Chester University of Pennsylvania (2008).Nichole Lopes '07 '09 with the ball for Penn State
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Division 1 National Championships (15s)

Men's National Championship

Sports Illustrated named Notre Dame national champion in 1966.[citation needed] In 1967, Sports Illustrated named California national champions after their 37–3 defeat of Notre Dame.[citation needed]

National Invitational Championship

More information Year, Champion ...
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1980–2012

Except for interruption by the COVID-19 pandemic, USA Rugby has crowned an official national men's champion each year since 1980.[83] After the 2010 season, USA Rugby split Division 1 into two, with the top flight called Division 1-A Rugby (formerly called the College Premier Division), and the second flight called Division 1-AA.

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
1980California15 - 9Air Force
1981California6 - 3 (a.e.t.)Harvard
1982California15 - 14Life College
1983California13 - 3Air Force
1984Harvard12 - 4Colorado
1985California31 - 6Maryland
1986California6 - 4Dartmouth
1987San Diego State10 - 9Air Force
1988California9 - 3Dartmouth
1989Air Force25 - 7Penn State
1990Air Force18 - 12Army
1991California20 - 14Army
1992California27 - 17Army
1993California36 - 6Air Force
1994California27 - 13Navy
1995California48 - 16Air Force
1996California47 - 6Penn State
1997California41 - 15Penn State
1998California34 - 15Stanford
1999California36 - 5Penn State
2000California62 - 16Wyoming
2001California86 - 11Penn State
2002California43 - 22Utah
2003Air Force45 - 37Harvard
2004California46 - 24Cal Poly
2005California44 - 7Utah
2006California29 - 26BYU
2007California37 - 7BYU
2008California59 - 7BYU
2009BYU25 - 22California
2010California19 - 7BYU
2011California21 - 14BYU [84]
2012BYU49 - 42Arkansas State
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2013–2017

In 2013, eight of the top college rugby teams withdrew from the USA Rugby D1A competition and organized their own championship called the Varsity Cup. The media and other rugby commentators viewed the Varsity Cup as equivalent to the USA Rugby D1A championship, given the strength of the teams participating and the fact that the 2013 Varsity Cup finalists – BYU and Cal – finished the spring 2013 season as the consensus #1 and #2 ranked teams in all of college rugby.[85][86][87] Four additional schools joined the Varsity Cup for 2014, bringing the number of teams in that tournament to twelve. The Varsity Cup was successful in gaining media exposure, with the 2014 Varsity Cup final televised live on NBCSN. USA Rugby responded to the successful promotion of its Varsity Cup rivals by signing a ten-year contract in October 2014 with IMG that would focus on the marketing and increase exposure of USA Rugby's Collegiate National Championship.[88] The Varsity Cup folded in November 2017 when the organizer, broadcast partner and a major sponsor, Penn Mutual, withdrew their support.[89]

The lists below show the champions for the Division 1-A Rugby and the Varsity Cup championships for each year, along with the teams' final regular season rankings, as ranked by RugbyMag/RugbyToday.com.

More information Year, Champion ...
USA Rugby championship
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2013(#3) Life University16 - 14St. Mary's (CA) (#5)
2014(#1) St. Mary's (CA)21 - 6Life University (#3)
2015(#3) St. Mary's (CA)30 - 24Life University (#4)
2016(#3) Life University24 - 20St. Mary's (CA) (#5)
2017(#1) St. Mary's (CA)30 - 24Life University (#2)
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More information Year, Champion ...
Varsity Cup Championship
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2013(#1) BYU27 - 24California (#2)
2014(#2) BYU43 - 33California (#4)
2015(#1) BYU [a]30- 27California (#2)
2016(#1) Cal40 - 29BYU (#2)
2017(#3) Cal43 - 13Arkansas St. (#5)
  1. In 2016, BYU was stripped of the 2015 title for using an ineligible player.[90]
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2018–present

More information Year, Champion ...
2018-
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2018Life University60 - 5California
2019Life University29 - 26California
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021cancelled (pandemic)
2022Army20 - 8St. Mary's (CA)
2023Navy28 - 22California
2024St. Mary's26 - 22Navy
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National Collegiate Rugby (Men)

More information Year, Champion ...
Division I
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2021St. Bonaventure19 - 18Penn State
2022Brown21 - 5Queens
2023Notre Dame College33 - 10St. Bonaventure
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Men's Division 1-AA

More information Year, Champion ...
2011 -
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2011Davenport38 - 19UC Santa Barbara[91]
2012Davenport39 - 0San Diego State[92] (Davenport promoted to D-1A for the following season)
2013Central Florida27 - 25Lindenwood[93] (Lindenwood promoted to D-1A for the following season)
2014Central Florida64 - 13Arizona[94]
2015UC Davis18 - 15Central Florida[95]
2016UC Davis17 - 13Notre Dame College[96]
2017Notre Dame College40 - 20UC Davis[97]
2018Mary Washington38 - 30Dartmouth[98]
2018 fallBowling Green19 - 7Saint Joseph's
2019 springDartmouth46 - 5Chico State
2019 fallIowa Central Community College36 - 21Western Michigan[99]
2020 springcancelled (pandemic)
2020 fall
2021 spring
2021 fallTennessee36 - 31Bowling Green (CRAA)[100]
2022 springFresno State22 - 17Kansas (ACR)[101][102]
2023 springSacramento State28 - 24Florida State (CRAA)[103][104]
University of San Diego41 - 19Iowa State (ACR)[105][106]
2024 springUniversity of San Diego38 - 7Iowa State (CRAA)
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National Collegiate Rugby (Men)

More information Year, Champion ...
Division I-AA
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2021Virginia Tech34 - 22West Chester
2022Virginia Tech24 - 22Louisville
2023Kentucky43 - 28Louisville
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Women's National Championship

The following are the results from the Division 1 women's national championship, from 1991 to the present.[107] USA Rugby established a new division called "Division 1 Elite" that began championship competition in 2016, following which the remainder of Division 1 was called "Division 1 Club".

More information Year, Champion ...
Division 1 Elite
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2016Penn State15 - 5Brigham Young
2017Penn State28 - 25Lindenwood
2018Lindenwood36 - 9Life University
2019Lindenwood36 - 19Life University
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021Lindenwood54 - 12Life University
2022Lindenwood21 - 0Life University
2022 (fall)Lindenwood17 - 15Life University (CRAA, moved from spring 2023 to fall 2022)
2024Life University44 - 41Lindenwood (CRAA, moved from fall 2023 to spring 2024)
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More information Year, Champion ...
Division 1
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
1991Air ForceBoston College
1992Boston CollegeConnecticut
1993ConnecticutAir Force
1994Air ForceBoston College
1995PrincetonPenn State
1996PrincetonPenn State
1997Penn StateRadcliffe
1998RadcliffePenn State
1999StanfordPrinceton
2000Penn StatePrinceton
2001Chico StatePenn State
2002Air ForcePenn State
2003Air ForceIllinois
2004Penn StatePrinceton
2005Stanford53 - 6Penn State
2006Stanford15 - 12Penn State
2007Penn State22 - 21Stanford
2008Stanford15 - 10Penn State
2009Penn State46 - 7Stanford
2010Penn State24 - 7Stanford
2011Army33 - 29Penn State[108]
2012Penn State32 - 12Stanford [109]
2013Penn State65 - 10Norwich [110]
2014Penn State38 - 0Stanford
2015Penn State61 - 7Central Washington
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More information Year, Champion ...
Division 1 Club
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2015–16 (fall)Connecticut19 - 12Air Force [111]
(spring)UC Davis30 - 25Virginia[112]
2016–17 (fall)Air Force19 - 8Connecticut[113]
(spring)UC Davis27 - 19Notre Dame College[114]
2017–18 (fall)Davenport89 - 24Notre Dame College [115]
(spring)Chico State54 - 26UCF [98]
2018–19 (fall)Air Force40 - 27Davenport [116]
(spring)BYU48 - 0Virginia Tech [117]
2019–20 (fall)Air Force26 - 10Navy [118]
(spring)cancelled (pandemic)
2020–21 (fall)
(spring)
2021–22 (fall)Navy20 - 12Davenport (CRAA)[119]
(spring)BYU80 - 7Virginia Tech (CRAA)
2022–23 (fall)Navy61 - 28Utah State (CRAA)
(spring)BYUforfeitVirginia (CRAA)
2023–24 (fall)Northeastern42 - 7Colorado Mesa (CRAA)
(spring)Stanford36 - 19Grand Canyon (CRAA)
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National Collegiate Rugby (Women)

More information Year, Champion ...
Division 1
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2021 (fall)Life University87 - 3Northern Iowa (For NCR in 2021, Life University fielded a largely freshman and sophomore team.[25])
2022 (fall)Michigan41 - 14Notre Dame College
2023 (fall)Michigan33 - 17Notre Dame College
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College Rugby Sevens

Since the 2009 announcement that rugby sevens will be included in the 2016 Olympics, college rugby sevens has grown more popular. The addition of Rugby 7s to the 2016 Summer Olympics has led to increasing interest from TV and other media coverage, and an increased emphasis in the collegiate ranks on the 7s game. For example, the University of Texas founded its competitive rugby sevens program in 2010.[120] Cal rugby announced in December 2011 that beginning in 2013 it would use the fall term for sevens.[121]

Collegiate Rugby Championship

The Collegiate Rugby Championship (CRC) is the highest profile college sevens rugby championship in the United States. The inaugural CRC, held in Columbus, Ohio in June 2010 was televised live by NBC and NBC Universal.[122] The result was high ratings, with the CRC ratings beating the NCAA lacrosse championship.[123]

The success of the inaugural 2010 tournament led to a second tournament in 2011 at PPL Park in Philadelphia, again televised live by NBC.[124] NBC recognized that rugby is growing in popularity, participation, and interest.[125] In 2014, the Penn Mutual Life Insurance company become the title sponsor of the championship. The tournament grew each year and was signed to a multi-year deal with several large sponsors and Talen Energy Stadium (Formerly PPL Park) for the tournament to be held in Philadelphia for several more years.[126] The success of the tournament in 2016 showed how popular this collegiate level event had become.[127]

The National Collegiate Rugby Organization obtained the rights to the CRC in 2020 and in 2021 and 2022 staged its championship 7s matches at the tournament in New Orleans. In 2023, it moved to the Maryland suburbs of Washington DC.

Men's

More information Year, Champion ...
Division I Premier
("Division I" before 2022)
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2010Utah31 - 26California[128]
2011Dartmouth32 - 10Army
2012Dartmouth24 - 5Arizona
2013California19 - 14Life
2014California24 - 21Kutztown
2015California17 - 12 (a.e.t.)Kutztown
2016California31 - 7UCLA
2017California19 - 0Life
2018Lindenwood24 - 7UCLA
2019Lindenwood21 - 12Life
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021Lindenwood24 - 14Life
2022Kutztown17 - 12Dartmouth
2023Mount St. Mary's19 - 5Indiana
2024Wheeling29 - 12Kutztown
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More information Year, Champion ...
Division I Club
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2022Sam Houston State17 - 15Salisbury
2023University of San Diego15 - 7Clemson
2024Louisville29 - 0NC State
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Women's

More information Year, Champion ...
Division I Premier
("Division I" before 2022)
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2011Army14 - 5Penn State[129]
2012not held
2013Penn State31 - 5Ohio State[130]
2014Penn State29 - 12James Madison
2015Penn State24 - 7Lindenwood
2016Life19 - 10Lindenwood
2017Life17 - 12Lindenwood
2018Lindenwood21 - 12Penn State
2019Lindenwood34 - 12Army
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021Lindenwood10 - 7Life
2022Lindenwood19 - 7Life (Premier)
2023Brown21 - 19Army
2024Brown12 - 5Army
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More information Year, Champion ...
Division I Club
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2022Roger Williams12 - 7Wisconsin–Eau Claire
2023Clemson29 - 17Massachusetts
2024Claremont17 - 7Oregon
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USA Rugby National Championship

USA Rugby announced in September 2011 the creation of a new sevens tournament, the USA Rugby Sevens Collegiate National Championships.[131] The tournament was held annually at the end of the fall season for its first three years and featured 24 teams. Qualification is based on performance at sevens tournaments during the fall, where tournament winners receive automatic bids, with the remaining places in the 24-team field filled by invitation. Some of the more high-profile qualifying tournaments include tournaments based on traditional conference rivalries, such as the Atlantic Coast 7s (composed mostly of ACC schools), the Southeastern 7s (composed mostly of SEC schools) and the Heart of America 7s (composed mostly of Big 12 schools).

The inaugural Championship tournament was held December 16–17, 2011 in College Station, Texas, and was contested by 24 teams that qualified based on performance in qualifying tournaments throughout the fall of 2011. The 2011 tournament was won by Life University, defeating Central Washington 22–17 in overtime.[132] Tim Stanfill of Central Washington was the tournament MVP, Derek Patrick of Miami was the tournament's leading try scorer, and Colton Caraiga of Life University was the tournament's leading points scorer.[133] In the first three years, strong teams that won bids have declined to participate.[134][135][136]

Men's Division I

More information Year, Champion ...
Division I
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2011Life University22 - 17Central Washington
2012Arkansas State21 -7Life University
2013Arkansas State32 - 12Saint Mary's (CA)
2014(moved from fall 2014 to spring 2015)
2015Lindenwood28 - 10Davenport
2016Saint Mary's7 - 5AIC[137]
2017Lindenwood26 - 5Saint Mary's[138]
2018Lindenwood26 - 12California
2019Lindenwood36 - 0AIC[139]
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021cancelled (pandemic)
2022Life University24 - 19 (a.e.t.)Lindenwood[140][141]
2023Life University28 - 17Lindenwood
2024cancelled (not enough teams)[142]
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Men's Division I-AA

More information Year, Champion ...
Division I-AA
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2019Lindenwood-Belleville19 - 5Western Michigan[139]
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021cancelled (pandemic)
2022San Diego28 - 14Harvard[141]
2023Iowa State20 - 10Nebraska (ACR)
2024Western Washington21 - 0Oregon (CRAA/ACR)
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Women's

More information Year, Champion ...
Division I Elite/Premier
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2018Lindenwood20–0Penn State
2019Lindenwood24–7Dartmouth[139]
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021cancelled (pandemic)
2022Lindenwood32 - 0Dartmouth[140][143]
2023Life17 - 12Lindenwood
2024Harvard17 - 12Lindenwood
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More information Year, Champion ...
Division I/College Club
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2011Norwich University34–5Boston College[144]
2012Norwich University17–5Navy[144]
2013Norwich University17–10James Madison[144]
2014(moved from fall to spring)
2015Penn State47–26Central Washington
2016Life10–0Lindenwood[145]
2017 (Open, all divisions)Lindenwood31–12Life[146]
2018 (Open to DII)Air Force20–17Chico State
2019Air Force21–5Virginia Tech[147]
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021cancelled (pandemic)
2022Davenport24 - 17Navy[143]
2023Northeastern19 – 5Air Force
2024 (Open to DII)Western Washington12 – 7Colorado State
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Conference membership

Team rankings are in parentheses, based on Goff Rugby Report rankings, current as of January 2017.[148]

Division I-A

The conference champion is invited to the D1A playoffs along with several at large bids for independents or other highly ranked teams.[149]

More information PAC, Rocky Mountain ...
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More information East, Big Ten Universities ...
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Division I-AA

Italics indicate second teams of clubs competing in D I-A. These teams are ineligible for Division I-AA playoffs.[150][151]

More information Atlantic Coast, Mid Atlantic ...
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More information Gold Coast, Heart of America ...
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More information MAC Schools, NCRC ...
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More information South Independent Rugby Conference, SCRC ...
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Former Conferences:

  • The Mid-Eastern conference disbanded in summer 2012, as most members went to the D1-A Big Ten Universities or to the D1-AA Mid-America conference.
  • The Midwest conference disbanded in summer 2012, as most members went to the D1-A Big Ten Universities or to Division 2.

Organization and conferences

American college rugby is governed by USA Rugby. In the past, college rugby competitions have been governed by local unions.

The structure of the college game has evolved significantly in recent years. To increase the marketability of the game, many traditional rivals have been consolidated into conferences resembling major NCAA conferences such as the Pac-12 and Big Ten.[154][155][156]

Conferences and conference tournaments

Beginning around 2010, college rugby programs began realigning into conference structures that mirror the traditional NCAA conferences used by the member schools' other athletic programs. The first high-profile example was the formation of the Ivy League Rugby Conference in 2010.[20] Following the organization of the Ivy League schools, the members of the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Southeastern Conference followed suit in 2010.

Ivy Rugby Conference

The Ivy Rugby Conference was formed and had its first full season in 2009.[157] The IRC was formed to foster better competition among rugby teams from the Ivy League schools and to raise the quality of play.[158] The IRC has had consistent success in attracting commercial interests.[154] The IRC formed committees to manage the league, independently of the LAUs and TUs.[158] Prior to formation of the IRC, clubs from the eight Ivy League schools had competed in the Ivy Rugby Championship Tournament since 1969.

Southeastern Collegiate Rugby Conference

In December 2010, a core group of founding schools formed the Southeastern Collegiate Rugby Conference (SCRC). By April 2010, the SCRC had expanded to 11 schools, comprising the entire membership of the NCAA's Southeastern Conference (SEC) at that time except for Arkansas. Tennessee won the 2010 Southeastern Collegiate Rugby Sevens Championship beating LSU 19–17, and repeated in the 2011 SCRC Olympic Sevens Championship, beating Florida 26–14 in the final. Similar to other conferences, the SCRC has also enjoyed commercial success, announcing in fall 2010 that the SCRC had formed commercial partnership agreements with Adidas and the World Rugby Shop.[159]

The Southeastern Collegiate Rugby Conference, formed by the aforementioned 11 SEC schools, was created in late 2010 and began play in the 2011–12 season. Florida won the conference title in the inaugural season, defeating Tennessee in the championship match. Although the SEC has since expanded to 14 schools, the SCRC membership remains at 11.

Pacific Athletic Conference

Several members of the Pac-12 conference agreed in spring 2012 to form a conference beginning play in the 2012–13 season.[160]

Other conferences

Nine D1A rugby programs currently compete in the Big Ten Universities conference, which was founded in 2012. The Red River Conference, which replaced the Allied Rugby Conference in 2014–15, is composed mostly of teams from what had been the Big 12 South from 1996 to 2011. The Southwest Conference (SWC) was created in 2011 with charter members from seven Texas schools. University of Texas was immediately added, and Texas won the conference in the inaugural 2011–12 season.

Other competitions

College rugby includes rivalry trophies such as the World Cup between the University of California, Berkeley and the University of British Columbia (Canada),[161] the Wasatch Cup between BYU and Utah,[162] the University Cup between Texas and Texas A&M,[163] the Koranda Cup between Yale and Princeton,[164] and the Common Wealth Shield between Virginia and Virginia Tech.[165]

The ACRC Bowl Series championship 15s tournament took place annually for three years from 2014 until 2016. College conference champions and select elite sides participated. The tournament provided an opportunity for teams to play outside of their conferences and was therefore relevant to establishing final fall 15s college rankings.[166]

Division II XVs

Until 2021, Division II was solely governed by USA Rugby.

USA Rugby

Men

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
1994Lock Haven University[167]
1995Lock Haven UniversitySalisbury[101]
1996Salisbury[168]Coast Guard[101]
1997Salisbury[168]Bates[101]
1998UC San DiegoOregon[169]
1999UC San Diego21 - 18Chico State[169]
2000Sacramento State49 - 3Claremont
2001Baylor29 - 16Arkansas State
2002Stanford26 - 15Northern Iowa
2003Radford32 - 22Northern Colorado
2004Salisbury43 - 24Arkansas State
2005Northern Colorado24 - 22Humboldt State
2006Coast Guard17 - 12Northern Colorado
2007Middlebury38 - 22Arkansas State
2008Radford25 - 14Utah Valley State
2009Middlebury27 - 11Wisconsin
2010Claremont Colleges25 - 19Temple (Claremont promoted to Div. 1)
2011UW-Whitewater7 - 3Middlebury[170]
2012Lindenwood50 - 12Salisbury[171] (Lindenwood promoted to Div. 1-AA)
2013 (Spring)Salisbury34 - 17Minnesota-Duluth[172]
2013 (Fall)Minnesota-Duluth31 - 7Salisbury[173]
2014Minnesota-Duluth24 - 14UW-Whitewater
2015Minnesota-Duluth25 - 19UW-Whitewater
2016UW-Whitewater29 - 13Furman [174]
2017UW-Whitewater34 - 27VMI[175]
2018North Carolina State University57 - 12UW-Whitewater[176]
2019Queens University (NC)74 - 8UW-Whitewater [99]
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021Auburn31 - 12Montana State (CRAA)[177]
2022none (NCR only)[178][179]
2023
2024
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Women

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2000Plymouth StateEast Stroudsburg
2001Northern IowaNevada-Reno
2002Northern IowaMinnesota
2003DaytonNorthern Iowa
2004Temple17 - 7Providence
2005Providence15 - 10Temple
2006UC Santa Cruz22 - 10Plymouth State
2007Iowa State26 - 19UC Santa Cruz
2008Shippensburg47 - 0Minnesota-Duluth
2009Shippensburg29 - 5Stonehill
2010Washington State37 - 0Temple
2011Radcliffe22 - 10University of Notre Dame (South Bend, IN)[180]
2012Norwich82 - 12Winona State[181]
2013Washington State60 - 5Winona State[182]
2014Mary Washington36 - 22Cal State, Northridge[183]
2015Notre Dame College69 - 10UC-Riverside
2016Davenport61 - 0USC[a][184]
2017Davenport71 - 5Kennesaw State [185]
2017–18 (fall)Winona State38 - 36Vassar [115]
(spring)Tulane31 - 14Claremont Colleges [98][186]
2018–19 (fall)Vassar50 - 13Winona State [187]
(spring)Fresno State25 - 19Salisbury [117]
2019–20 (fall)Winona State19 - 10Colorado School of Mines [118]
(spring)cancelled (pandemic)
2020–21 (fall)
(spring)
2021–22 (fall)Vassar74 - 5Temple (ACRA)[188]
(spring)Claremont22 - 7San Diego State (CRAA)
2022–23 (fall)Vassar71 - 24Coast Guard (CRAA/ACRA)
(spring)Claremont47 - 5Howard (CRAA)
2023–24 (fall) - not held (NCR only)[189]
(spring)Cal Poly San Luis Obispo104 - 5Eckerd College (CRAA)
  1. USC substituted for Tulane, who qualified for the final but could not participate.
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National Collegiate Rugby

Men

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2021Thomas More21 - 17Adrian
2022Principia47 - 16Indiana (PA)
2023Indiana (PA)27 - 19Memphis
Close

Women

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2022Wisconsin–Eau Claire78 - 0Marquette
2023Wisconsin-Eau Claire32 - 29Vassar
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Division II Sevens

USA Rugby

Men

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2013Principia27-12UW–Stout[190]
2014(moved from fall 2014 to spring 2015)
2015James Madison40 - 22Wisconsin–Whitewater[191]
2016Minnesota–Duluth17- 5Saint Louis[137]
2017Wisconsin–Whitewater26 - 5UNC Charlotte[192]
2018UNC Charlotte38 - 10Wisconsin–Whitewater[193]
2019North Carolina State University28 - 12Wisconsin–Whitewater[194]
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021cancelled (pandemic)
2022Southern California29 - 7Memphis[140][141]
2023none[195]
2024
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Women

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2016Davenport24 - 14Bloomsburg[196]
2017eligible for open division
2018eligible for open division
2019Bryant22 - 19Fresno State[197]
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021cancelled (pandemic)
2022San Jose State22 - 0St. Mary's[140][143]
2023Colorado Mesa19 – 14San Jose State
2024eligible for Division I/College Club tournament
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National Collegiate Rugby

Men

More information Year, Champion ...
Close

Women

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2023Roger Williams10 - 5Colorado Mines
2024UW - Eau Claire22 - 5Roger Williams
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Small Colleges

Small College Rugby, formerly known as Division III, is governed by the National Collegiate Rugby Organization, formerly the National Small College Rugby Organization (NSCRO). In 2020, NSCRO re-branded as National Collegiate Rugby. The National Small College Rugby Organization was created to give a competitive outlet to small colleges which would not otherwise have an opportunity to compete on a national stage. Each year, the NSCRO hosts rugby tournaments for Men's and Women's college teams, and during 2006–2011 it also conducted a Division IV Women's college tournament.

Men

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2002Western Carolina UniversityStonehill College
2003Furman UniversityStonehill College
2004Furman UniversityCentral Connecticut State
2005Furman UniversityDuke University
2006Bentley UniversityThe Citadel
2007Bentley University11 - 10Furman University
2008Plymouth State Univ22 - 15Furman University
2009Coastal Carolina36 - 15SUNY Oswego
2010Penn State Berks11 - 6Keene State[198]
2011Longwood University36 - 27Occidental College[199]
2012Salve Regina22 - 15Cal Maritime[200]
2013St. John's (Minn.)Duke
2014St. John's (Minn.)New England College
2015New England College32 - 15Mt. Saint Mary's (MD)
2016Mt. Saint Mary's (MD)26 - 19Claremont Colleges[201]
2017Claremont Colleges65 - 10Tufts[202]
2018Iowa Central Community College64 - 11Claremont Colleges
2019Claremont Colleges57 - 17Christendom College[203]
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021Christendom College34 - 29New Mexico Tech
2022Cal Poly Humboldt20 - 15Wayne State
2023Babson27 - 23Wayne State
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Women

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2002–03College of New JerseyUniversity of Maine
2003–04Fordham UniversitySusquehanna University
2004–05Castleton StateSusquehanna University
2005–06Babson UniversityUrsinus College
2006–07 (Spring)Stonehill CollegePenn
2007 (Fall)Stonehill CollegeMarist College
2008Bryant UniversityGettysburg College
2009MITEast Stroudsburg University
2010Bentley UniversityDrexel University[204]
2011CarletonLock Haven
2012Wayne State (Nebraska)Roger Williams
2013Wayne State (Nebraska)Smith
2014Roger Williams45 - 10Sacred Heart
2015MSU-Moorhead44 - 24Colgate[205]
2016Wayne State (Nebraska)11 - 0Colgate[206]
2017Wayne State (Nebraska)46 - 26Bentley
2018Wayne State (Nebraska)67 - 12Catholic University[207]
2019Wayne State (Nebraska)90 - 14Endicott College[118]
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021Wayne State (Nebraska)72 - 10SUNY–Cortland[208]
2022Endicott24 - 12Lee University
2023St. Bonaventure22 - 17Wisconsin-Platteville
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Men's 7s

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2013Occidental[209]
2014New England College[210]
2015New Mexico Highlands22 - 19New England College
2016New Mexico Highlands31 - 7St. Mary's College (MD)[211]
2017Christendom College24 - 19 (OT)St. Mary's College (MD)
2018Claremont Colleges17 - 0Salve Regina
2019 vacated, ineligible players[212]New Mexico Highlands17 - 12Claremont Colleges
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021cancelled (pandemic)
2022New Mexico Tech26 - 10Christendom College
2023Babson17 - 0Springfield
2024Slippery Rock19 - 12St. Thomas (Minn.)
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Women's 7s

More information Year, Champion ...
YearChampionMatch ScoreRunner-up
2014Wayne State College (Nebraska)[213]
2015Wayne State College22 - 17Mt. Saint Mary's
2016Wayne State College20 - 0Colorado College [214]
2017Colgate15 - 12Wayne State College [215]
2018Wayne State College24 - 5Lee
2019Wayne State College31 - 7Rochester [216]
2020cancelled (pandemic)
2021cancelled (pandemic)
2022Chicago10 - 5South Dakota [217]
2023Endicott15 - 10Lee [218]
2024Yale31 - 7Gannon University
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Division IV

The National Small College Rugby Organization conducted a Women's only Division IV championship from 2006 to 2011.

Injuries

In the US, college rugby has much higher injury rates than college football. Rugby union has similar injury types to American football but with more common injuries of arms.[220]

See also

References

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