Beating rugged competition

Monday, November 18, 2013 - 15:40 in Psychology & Sociology

It was pretty much the opposite of a quiet Saturday morning brunch, a rough-and-tumble rugby match in which 15 fierce and brawny Harvard women relentlessly tackled Princeton’s players to move the ball up the pitch and score. This new varsity team was hardly ladylike or courteous, and definitely not formal dinner-guest material, as it trounced the Tigers, 36-0. Beginning this season, the scrappy rugby sisterhood became more than a club, as the first Harvard sport to achieve varsity designation since 1993. The Harvard-Radcliffe Women’s Rugby Club dated to 1982, and continued for more than 30 years with a legacy of strong coaches and determined players. The club made a compelling argument for varsity status in the spring of 2011, when it won the USA Rugby Collegiate Division II National Championship, with a 22-10 upset victory over Notre Dame. With losses to Quinnipiac and Dartmouth at the start of this season, the ruggers went on...

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