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The silver-platter season

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The silver-platter season

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Within the spring of 1974, I used to be new to each MIT and rugby soccer. As a Course 2 graduate scholar, I shared a basement workplace with a number of different college students, together with two gamers on the Tech rugby membership who inspired me to hitch them. Being each an Anglophile and a beer drinker, I used to be fairly simply talked into taking part on this sport, with its British roots and after-match events.

I performed primarily on the squad’s B aspect that season however was amongst these requested to hitch the A aspect gamers within the annual event of the New England Rugby Soccer Union (NERFU), held at UMass Amherst. We wanted additional males for the exhausting event schedule, wherein gamers from each the A and B sides could be mixed in varied methods for various matches. In the present day NERFU has many extra groups and several other divisions of competitors. However in 1974 it had only one division and held a single annual event.  

Institute information present rugby being performed as early as 1882, making the Tech membership the oldest in NERFU and one of many oldest within the nation. In 1974, it fielded two 15-man sides that practiced twice every week and performed each Saturday in the course of the spring and fall seasons. (There was no girls’s aspect then.) Our faculty-supplied uniforms have been classics of a bygone period—striped long-sleeve jerseys with collars and rubber buttons.

Rugby matches are grueling affairs involving steady working and tackling and (for forwards like me, who make up half the group) pushing in organized scrums and advert hoc rucks. (In each scrums and rucks, gamers seize teammates’ shirts, binding collectively to push towards the opposing group whereas making an attempt to realize possession of a ball on the bottom with their ft.) In 1974, substitution was allowed solely in circumstances of damage. Often, one match per week was all a participant would play. Making it to the event’s championship match would require taking part in 4 or 5 in two days, so some gamers would wish to take a seat out a number of the matches. 

group photo of the 1974 rugby champions
The storied MIT rugby membership of 1974. The writer is within the again row, third from the appropriate.
MIT RUGBY FOOTBALL CLUB

Not like now, within the Seventies there have been few (if any) US highschool or under-19 rugby groups, so American school groups have been typically inexperienced. Nonetheless, the 1974 MIT membership had a number of worldwide gamers who had been taking part in since grade faculty in England, Scotland, New Zealand, France, Argentina, or Japan. It additionally included grad college students and an assistant professor (Ron Prinn, ScD ’71), which raised the common age of the group. MIT was thus not a typical school group, though we would have been mistaken for one. Undoubtedly some membership groups within the 1974 event rested their finest gamers when scheduled to play us. 

Our coach was Serge Gallant, a savvy, bearded Frenchman and former scrum half compelled by concussions to retire from taking part in. Shin Yoshida ’76, our fly half, was our star participant. Shin would kick high-arching punts downfield, precisely positioned to permit our group to right away sort out opponents receiving them, or often to get well the ball ourselves. Very like a fast-break offense from a basketball group with smaller gamers, this helped neutralize the peak and energy of larger groups.    

The 1974 NERFU event, held on Could 11 and 12, pitted 24 groups towards one another in 5 rounds of single-elimination matches. The MIT membership had some function within the seeding, so we managed to get a first-round bye and the prospect of a straightforward opponent within the second spherical. Nonetheless, the remaining matches promised to be very tough.

Our first match on Saturday was within the second spherical towards Springfield, whom we beat handily, 13–0. Our final match of the day was towards Charles River, a membership that had crushed us the week earlier than. We eked out a 16–12 victory in double time beyond regulation. 

Since we’d superior to the semifinal spherical to be held on Sunday, preparations have been made for our group to pile into a number of rooms of an Amherst motel for the evening. However first most of us went out to an area restaurant. Regardless of our camaraderie and shared pleasure over having received our first two matches, our celebration was subdued, with not one of the common libations and rugby songs. We have been pleasantly stunned when a former MIT rugby participant turned businessman choose up our meal tab. 

On the restaurant we exchanged pleasant banter with a widely known ahead on the Windfall metropolis membership, our subsequent opponent. In the course of the meal he playfully growled at us whereas chomping on a handful of spring onions. Nonetheless, he didn’t play towards us within the semifinals on Sunday. He was rested for the finals match he by no means received to play.

In the course of the Windfall match, their sideline individuals saved yelling “Get the foot,” which means to focus on Yoshida and take him out of the sport. However our “enforcers” took care of theirs, and he was not damage. We went on to win, 6–3. 

I had performed within the third- and fourth-round matches and was exhausted. So when our coach requested me to play within the finals, I begged off. My spot was taken by Mark Sneeringer ’76, PhD ’82, an amiable sophomore from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. As a result of I wasn’t taking part in, I used to be picked to function a line decide.

For the championship match Tech confronted off towards the Beacon Hill membership, which had received the yr earlier than. This was one other tight and grueling sport that went into double time beyond regulation. Within the first time beyond regulation, our forwards have been gasping for breath. Roger Simmonds, PhD ’78 (an Englishman and our most skilled participant), lifted spirits and power ranges with an impromptu pep speak noting how properly the forwards have been taking part in and the way worn out the Beacon Hill squad was.    

Within the second time beyond regulation, group captain Paul Dwyer, SM ’73, lastly scored the game-winning attempt. As a result of I used to be a line decide, my leaping for pleasure with a material in my hand triggered momentary confusion. That was quickly resolved after I defined that my motion was not an officiating sign. We’d bested Beacon Hill, 7–3. 

Our reward for profitable the championship was a silver platter. In these days, beer was at all times readily available after rugby matches, so whereas nonetheless on the pitch, we awkwardly drank beer from the platter as if it have been a trophy cup. 

Having pulled off a significant upset within the NERFU event, MIT was not a darkish horse within the 1974 fall season, and different groups made positive to present us their finest efforts. The lack of Yoshida, Dwyer, and different key gamers from the spring season weakened our fall A aspect, to which I used to be promoted. We started the autumn season with two wins and two losses after which misplaced the remainder of our matches, together with one wherein the Boston membership totally overpowered and crushed us. 

However, Tech reigned because the NERFU champion till the following event. NERFU would ultimately add a university division to its annual competitors, so to today, MIT’s rugby membership stays the one school aspect ever to seize the top-tier NERFU title.

After retiring from an extended profession in mechanical and nuclear engineering, Dan Guzy, MechE ’75, has written 4 books and plenty of articles on native historical past.

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