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🏉Rugby cars, MA state final, and why SoCal & NC are thriving

Hint, it's not just the weather. 🌤️

Hey there, Rugby Rioter!

It’s June. Most states have wrapped up playoffs. Graduations are mostly over.

Most players are probably halfway through a Costco popsicle pack while reading this.

But guess what? There’s still rugby to cover!

Massachusetts holds their state final tomorrow. Ohio hosts the national youth 7s tourney this weekend. And we have some thoughts on how indoor facilities may impact rugby’s growth.

Note: we’ll talk about the national youth sevens tourney next week.

Packed with rugby. Let’s go! 👇

In This Issue

🌤️Credit the sunshine?

Take a look at the recent rise of top club teams in the country, and one trend is hard to miss: SoCal and North Carolina are rolling right now.

2025 national final: San Diego Mustangs vs. Charlotte Cardinals.
This year’s champs: the Mustangs.
Last year’s champs: the Cardinals.

Additionally: the Charlotte Tigers made a strong showing in Tier 1, and SoCal was well represented too—Belmont Shore was very competitive, and the SOC Raptors captured the Tier 2 crown.

So what’s going on with SoCal and NC?

We’ve been hearing this a lot: “Well, they have better weather and longer seasons. Of course NC and CA have the advantage!”

Valid. But let’s peel back the onion a bit, shall we?

Climate helps. No doubt.

It’s no secret that both California and North Carolina enjoy peachy weather and essentially two rugby seasons each year. School rugby starts in December. Club rugby kicks off in March. That gives players more reps, more development time, and more chances to build chemistry with their teammates.

Case in point👆
Jealousy level: 11/10 đź‘€

But giving all the credit to the sunshine would be lazy. Weather gives you a boost—but it’s not the whole story.

It starts with the pipeline.

The real advantage is what that weather allows you to build: more playing time, better cohesion, and—most importantly—a strong youth pipeline.

SoCal and North Carolina teams have leaned into that. Their clubs run deep across multiple age levels, with strong participation numbers and tight links between school and club. That’s the engine powering programs like the Cardinals and the Mustangs. The weather helps, but it’s not as important as the youth system.

That’s true in other places, too.

Take the Woodlands in Texas. Sure, the weather isn’t terrible there—but they’re not surrounded by elite competition the way SoCal is. Still, they’ve built a perennial powerhouse. They won the Texas state title again this year, and finished second at Nationals in 2024. Year in and year out, they’re in the top conversation.

How? They’ve built a legit feeder program, with over 300 kids from grade school through high school. That’s how you get sustained success.

Same deal in Ohio single school rugby. St. Ignatius is tied into Rookie Rugby Cleveland, a youth program with great numbers and coaching involvement from Ignatius staff. It’s not technically a feeder, but it kinda functions like one. St. Ignatius just won their eighth straight state title.

Even in Ohio D2, Medina’s youth program has nearly 200 participants—and they capped it off with a D2 state championship of their own this year.

Where there’s a strong youth base, competitive rugby follows. Whether you’re in a warm-weather region or not, building from the bottom up works.

Bottleneck: facilities

Now here’s where the sunshine argument carries some weight. It’s not just about whether you can play outdoors in February. It’s about whether you have anywhere to train.

In colder regions, field access in winter is virtually nonexistent. That’s where indoor facilities could change everything.

Look at soccer. Cities like New York, Philly, and Kansas City aren’t exactly tropical climates—but they’ve produced top talent and routinely go toe-to-toe with clubs from California and Texas. A huge reason: Indoor turf fields. Year-round training. Winter doesn’t shut them down. There are literally thousands of youth soccer teams playing nonstop, coast to coast.

Rugby hasn’t reached that level of infrastructure. At least, not yet.

And good luck renting time at the existing indoor spots. Remember all those youth soccer teams I mentioned? Yeah…they’re running the show from dawn to dusk.

We’re gonna need more indoor joints, folks.

Of course, building those facilities isn’t cheap. You need land, money, coaches, and—most importantly—enough kids to make it viable.

That’s why youth development has to come first. Once you’ve got hundreds of players in the system, the economics start to make more sense. The demand is there. The momentum builds. And suddenly, facility investment feels a lot less risky.

(If you have millionaire uncle with a penchant for lighting cash on fire, you can disregard everything I just said.)

So the clubs investing in youth now are putting themselves in position to be next in line when infrastructure catches up. Regardless of weather.

Those that aren’t may find themselves falling behind.

Our take:

Right now, warmer climate clubs might have an edge. They’ve got more playing time and the sun on their side. More importantly, they’ve made great use of that time by building terrific youth programs.

And THAT’S the real advantage.

But the gap can close.

It just takes investment in the right order:
Start with the kids. Build the numbers. Justify the space.

It’s happened in other sports. Soccer built its ecosystem from the ground up.

Rugby can do the same. Maybe even faster.

And let’s be honest… rugby is just better.

This is the way.

I realize this may be an oversimplification. There’s a lot that goes into building a strong rugby program: culture, coaching, supportive parents, buy-in from schools and local communities etc.

Indoor facilities might just be the spark for rugby’s next big leap. Time will tell. Until then, one thing stands tall above the rest: build the youth programs, and good things will happen.

-Zach
Chief Rioter

BC High vs Xaverian Bros
MA D1 State Final
Saturday, June 14th

BC High vs Xaverian Bros is firmly in rivalry territory. These teams know each other well—they clash on the football field and rugby pitch each year—and the margins between them are razor thin.

Check this out:

  • 36–35 BC High win earlier this spring

  • 31–31 draw in the 2024 regular season

  • 2-point BC win in 2024’s title match

That’s three total points of separation in two years of play! If you’re into close ones, buckle up.

Xaverian doesn’t get much national press—short season, no out-of-state games—but make no mistake: these guys can ball. They play a direct, punishing style with athletes everywhere. Football star Luke Bell headlines a bruising roster. They hit hard, control possession, and wear you down with their physicality. Will Benting (8-man) and Ben Kramer (inside center) are also legit problems.

BC High brings its own firepower. Loosehead prop Mikey Smith is the senior anchor in the forward pack, and he’s joined by the Blind brothers—Braxton (9), Brennan (12), and Colton (13)—plus try-machine Conrad Babka at 8 and Charlie Thomison at fullback. This group thrives on structured attack, pace, and cohesion—but defense may be the difference on Saturday.

When the dust settles, one team will be hoisting the trophy. And if history holds, it’ll be a one-score game.

This is playoff rugby in Massachusetts. And it’s a rematch of last year’s final. Get ready for a war.

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“Xaverian will be certainly one of the best teams that we face this year, with their athleticism size and power on full display. For us, it will be about playing our game and trusting the work we’ve put in all year. It should be a great match for fans.”

Paul Carty, HC, BC High

Who's gonna win?

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It’s a bit grainy, but if you look close you’ll see Rye (NY) hooker Owen Saya trampling people on his way to the try zone during the NY tier 2 state final. Status: Bulldozer 💪

Pouring rain. Turf pellets all over you. What a rugby photo.
Greenwich vs Fairfield Prep (CT Final)
📸Credit: Greenwich Rugby

Think you know rugby? Prove it!

When did Rugby Sevens become an Olympic Sport?

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Oddball musings, induced by borderline hypothermia.

🏉What is the pickleball of rugby? 
Pickleball is tennis for everyone. Futsal is soccer, but bite-sized. So what’s rugby’s low-friction, all-ages entry point? Flag rugby is close, but what about a 3v3 setup—smaller field, smaller ball, no contact, all juking?
I once played an ultimate-frisbee-style rugby game with some Kiwi kids as a little tyke. Anyone know what I’m talking about? Feels like someone should bring it back.

🏉Crazy business idea: The TopGolf of rugby. I’m talking multiple uprights at different angles and distances, kicking stations with tees, a rugby apparel shop on site. The works, baby. Grab a pint with the boys and laugh at each other’s kicking? Sign. Me. Up.
(Probably gonna need a trainer on staff to deal with all the pulled hammies)

🏉 What is the ultimate rugger’s vehicle? I feel like Jeep Wrangler is in the top 5. Maybe a Toyota Land Cruiser? Or maybe it breaks down by position…

Scrumhalf: Mini Cooper (pretty quick, pretty small)
8-man: Ford F250 (powerful, often dented on the worksite)
Flyhalf: BMW 3-series (fancy, hates scratches)
Winger: Subaru WRX (fast, not as fast as it thinks)
Hooker: Jeep (indestructible, covered in dirt)
Center: Dodge Charger (great straight-line speed, poor turning ability)
Flanker: Harley-Davidson 883 (badass, dangerous)
Lock: Chevy Suburban (long, poor braking ability)
Fullback: Corvette (fast, noisy)
Prop: Still open for debate…but it might be a food truck.

That’s a wrap, gang!

Next week we’ll have more dope rugby stuff to share with you; scores, highlights, stories… all the goods.

If you like this stuff, share it with your friends!

Be well, ruck with gusto, and may your compression shorts always stay in place.

-The Rugby Riot Team

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