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WPL Championship Weekend Day 2: Round Up

New York is the first team to win three Women’s Premier League (WPL) championships, earning the ninth title with a 27-26 victory over Glendale Sunday. Both of New York’s wins in Tucson, Ariz., needed a come-from-behind effort, making the 2017 trophy an especially memorable one.

Glendale got the best of the first quarter and was rewarded with 12 points. The Merlins drew a short-arm penalty during an attacking scrum, and scrumhalf Jenny Lui quickly tossed the ball to No. 8 Carmen Farmer. The 7s Olympian tapped and tore down the weak side for the try. A composed Denali Graham set up the second try, scooping up a loose ball, weaving through a fractured defense and finding Colleen Cribbs for five points. The wing converted for the 12-0 lead.

New York then entered a long passage of possession. Play ricocheted from the goal line to mid-field but stayed in Glendale’s end. Finally New York got the edge it needed when Glendale was shown a yellow card. After several attempts at the line, flyhalf Kristen Siano – so hard to stop on the first attempt – spied a mismatch on the weak side, picked from the base and scored, 12-5 into the break.

Eight minutes after the half, the Merlins got another forwards try, with captain Sarah Chobot doing the dive-over honors, 19-5. And then New York really started to rally. Championship MVP Gio Cruz, who was disruptive all day, charged up field, and Shelby Lin moved the ball quickly to Siano, who put captain Tiffany Faaee into a gap. She passed out of contact to Rebecca Brafman, who stalled two defenders before passing to Emily Magee for the try, 19-10.

Glendale earned a second yellow card at the turn of the fourth quarter, and Siano charged to the try line. Farmer saved that try, but the recycle made it to fullback Jennifer Salomon, who scored on the second attempt, 19-15.

Cruz created a turnover in New York’s end and a high-tackle penalty followed shortly afterward. Reserve Natalie Kosko went on a bullying run, and again New York did well to go wide immediately afterward. Salomon scored the go-ahead try, 20-19.

New York was back on the board when No. 8 Tahlia Brody simply went weak off a scrum and ran over the defense for the centered try. Siano kicked the conversion, and those two points would end up being the difference, 27-19.

Glendale had a couple of minutes to work with and got a lift when New York coughed up a yellow card. Farmer, who was so impactful on the day, dove over the line for her second try, and Stolba quickly slotted the dropkick conversion, 27-26. There was time for one more restart. The Merlins held onto possession and continued its attack into New York’s end, and as the ball started to move wide, it was kicked ahead – directly into Magee’s hands. The winger calmly kicked the ball into the touch, and that was game, title, season.

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San Diego and Beantown entered the 3rd place match looking for a first win of the championship weekend, and the Surfers started the quest with three first-half tries. No. 8 Matelina Maluia and flanker Sam Pankey connected really well on the run, and the latter dotted down three tries. Megan Foster connected on three kicks, 21-0.

Beantown ended the half with some good possession, which was aided by San Diego penalties. Unfortunately for the Red Conference runner-up, the first 40 ended with a driving scrum and held-up try. But that lost opportunity was salved approximately six minutes after the break, as more Surfers penalties allowed Beantown to stay on attack. Prop Jess Davis then scored a try out of sheer determination, putting her head down powering through defenders. Emily Jones added the extras, 21-7.

The 2016 champions then settled down and ran in two quick tries – Pankey’s fourth and a long-range score from wing Josie Ziluca – 33-7 with Foster’s conversion.

Penalties still plagued San Diego and a yellow card allowed Beantown to continue attacking. This time, Beantown was patient as its five-meter scrum walked across the try line, and Yeja Dunn dotted down for the Jones-converted try, 33-14. But the Surfers had the final say of the match, as Maluia powered over for her second try, which Fosters converted, 40-14 for the win.

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It was an all-Blue Conference showdown for 5th place, as Berkeley and ORSU played each other for the third time this season. Berkeley had won the previous two contests and raced out to a 15-0 lead after 25 minutes. Fullback Emma Harbage scored two tries, finishing off wide, fast ball that graced the entire team’s hands. Allie Byrne and Bulou Mataitoga had their scoring attempts held up before prop Elena Edwards found try zone green.

ORSU got into some penalty trouble before the break, at one point being down two players with yellow cards, but did well to escape with relatively little damage. In the second half, the electric trio of Mataitoga, Cathy Cai and Frieda Fetuu did combine for a fourth try, with Fetuu working the final line of defense for the score, 20-0, but then ORSU wrestled away some momentum. Dive-over scores from Hannah Summers and captain Rachel Johnson made it a 20-10 game.

The game was for the taking, and Berkeley responded to the pressure. The All Blues kept the pace high and three tries in the final 15 minutes followed. Wings Maggie Simpson and Courtney Hendrickson scored, and loose forward Christina Ramos finished off breaks from Cai and Mataitoga, winning the foot race to the corner for the final try. Sam Miller added the conversion for the 37-10 win.

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A really great game evolved between Twin Cities and Chicago North Shore, the league’s two Midwest teams, for 7th place. Both teams scored a try apiece in the first half, with Twin Cities hooker Emily Jalosuo first, and Chicago North Shore No. 8 Brittany O’Dell answering. But a conversion and penalty kick from flyhalf Kat Stanley gave the league newcomers a 10-5 lead into the break.

The third quarter thrilled with three lead changes. Twin Cities got ahead 15-10 with back-to-back tries from flanker Tupouahau Paea and scrumhalf Becca Brown, and then North Shore sent Anna Cohen-Price into the try zone. Stanley’s conversion saw the Chicago side lead 17-15.

A turning point occurred as the Amazons launched another attacking campaign inside North Shore’s 22, and the pressure forced repeated infringements that resulted in a yellow card. Twin Cities made good use of that player advantage and added 14 points through two Katie Johnson tries and conversions, 29-17. As the clock wore down, Paea added her second try for the 34-17 win.

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Atlanta and D.C. squared up for the third time of the fall, this time for ninth place in the league. The Harlequins got out to a 10-point lead as Dominique Purifoy and Ros Chou both scored. The Furies got on the board with a Maggie Olney penalty, and then a Harlequins yellow card saw the penalty tap move to prop Michele Onwochei for the dive-over try, 10-all.

The tie was short lived, however, as Atlanta marched right back down for a Laketa Sutton try in the corner. Outside center Alice Plant – who led a great kicking game along with D.C.’s Olney – made a stellar conversion from the sideline for the 17-10 lead into the break.

D.C. struggled to turn its possession into points in the second half, while the Harlequins used its time on offense for three more tries. Goo
d offloading in traffic challenged the Furies’ defense, and wing Naiomi Cayo-Nelson finished off two good series with two tries. Flanker Caroline Mackey took a Chou offload in for a sixth and final try, and Plant’s conversion ended the game, 34-10 to Atlanta.

WPL Championship Weekend Day 1: Round Up

The Women’s Premier League (WPL) has concluded day one of the national championships in Tucson, Ariz. The title will be awarded to either New York or Glendale, while Berkeley and ORSU look to top the 5th place bracket. The championships resume within Kino Sports Complex on Sunday, Nov. 12.

If you made it to the end of The Rugby Channel’s live-stream, then you were greatly rewarded. The final match of the day between San Diego and New York was undeniably the best, with lead changes and high emotion befitting a championship semifinal. The Surfers entered the game as the reigning champion, but New York was eager to set the tone early.

San Diego held onto possession for the opening four minutes, and New York’s first touch of the ball was a batted-down pass. New York No. 8 Tahlia Brody scooped it up and raced away for the opening try. Minutes later, New York lock Misha Green dove over, and flyhalf Kristen Siano’s two (of three) first-half conversions gave her side the 14-0 lead after eight minutes.

San Diego broke the silence with a Laura Easterling try, but then New York answered with another two scores. Siano and captain Tiffany Faaee were really good about getting meters through the middle and offloading in traffic, while Brody and fullback Jennifer Salomon finished the efforts in the try zone. It was still the first half and New York led 26-5.

“We came flying out of the blocks and really got on the front foot, scored some good tries. Confidence was high and then we tried to play too much rugby in the wrong areas of the field,” New York coach James English recalled a turning point. “Credit to San Diego, a classy side who showed the character to come back into the game with some great moments of individual play. Our discipline let us down and that really gave San Diego some great territory. They had the players who were able to make the most of their opportunities.”

San Diego mounted a comeback. An excellent kicking game from Hunter Griendling and Megan Foster set up some good opportunities, and New York’s composure waivered with two yellow cards. Foster scored twice, chasing down a kick and stutter-stepping around the corner. Ever-charging, ever-gaining No. 8 Matelina Maluia took a lineout ball and popped to her feet against an unprepared defense for a try. And wing Josie Ziluca gathered a kick off the ground for a try. Foster’s conversions and a penalty gave San Diego a 32-26 lead heading into the fourth quarter.

However, New York did not break and reclaimed momentum, which culminated in two tries from WPL rookie Natalie Kosko. A final Siano conversion gave New York the 38-32 win and berth to the final.

“We showed great fight to get back into the game,” English praised his team. “Once we were able to get hold of the ball and build some momentum, we looked dangerous again. Some great impact off the bench injected some energy and sealed a narrow but hard-fought win.”

New York, which won the 2009 and 2010 titles, will face Glendale, which won the 2014 and 2015 titles, in Sunday’s championship. The Merlins shut out Beantown 32-0 today, scoring three tries in each half.

“I think it was a solid performance but we’re still not where we want to be. And that’s O.K. because you want to get better with every game,” Glendale backs captain Jenny Lui reflected. “Beantown has a very good maul and that asked our pack to be physically committed to stopping it. They really stepped up to the challenge and put their bodies on the line to disrupt them.”

The first 15 minutes evolved without a score, but then Merlins flyhalf Hannah Stolba tore down the sideline and worked the two-on-one to put wing Colleen Cribbs away for the try, 5-0. Glendale got its second score after opting for a scrum – a strength – in Beantown’s end. The ball moved wide as Lui sent a final chest pass to Justine Wypych, who stepped her opposite, 10-0.

Penalties hurt Beantown in the first half and negated one of the team’s best attacking opportunities, as two booming kicks from Stolba quickly returned play to the opposite end of the pitch. Lui and Stolba then attacked on the weak side of the ruck, and Carmen Farmer did the rest down the sideline. Cribbs converted for the 17-0 lead into the break.

Beantown played with renewed focus in the second half, and flyhalf Miranda Wakimoto proved an invigorating force. The Boston side also cleaned up its play, and penalties weren’t nearly as disruptive. That said, Glendale stayed steady and methodically worked three more tries: one from reserve Andrea Prusinski that needed the assistant referee’s O.K.; another from forwards captain Sarah Chobot off a driving lineout; and a third from reserve Nichole Wanamaker, who finished off some nice interplay in the loose.

There was a different type of drama in the 5th place bracket. The competitors in the first two games of the day not only had to focus on winning but also needed to run up the point differential. The team with the larger winning margin would advance to the 5th place game, and the winner with the smaller margin would play for 7th.

ORSU made life difficult for the other 5th place playoff teams when it beat the D.C. Furies 56-7. The game was even for approximately the first 10 minutes, as D.C., led by flyhalf Maggie Olney, was gritty in the breakdowns and able to force penalties. But once ORSU started gaining meters through the middle – Paris Hart, Zoe Wilson, Rachel Johnson all reliable for go-forward – and settling into its offload game, the outside opened up and the tries followed. Te Awhina Ho Chee was especially good about putting her teammates into space.

No. 8 Johnson and outside center San Juanita Fetuuaho scored four tries apiece, while wing Claire Lundy and reserve center Anna Symonds added a try each. Flyhalf Emma Richie handled the conversions.

The Jesters had to wait for the outcome of Atlanta vs. Chicago North Shore, and hope the victor did not exceed a 49-point win. But after the first half, it became pretty clear that neither team was going to run away with a victory.

Nearly 30 minutes elapsed before the scoreboard lit up, and it was Atlanta outside center Alice Plant who used a lovely fend to dot down the first try. Chicago North Shore answered right back as wing Christina Schrader shook two defenders for the score, and Kat Stanley’s conversion gave her side a lead it would not relinquish.

The WPL newcomer added two tries from captain Christiane Pheil, two more conversions from Stanley as well as a penalty for the 24-5 victory. While it wasn’t enough for a berth to the 5th place game, it was an important post-season win for Chicago North Shore.

“I’m really proud of the team for today’s performance,” Pheil enthused. “We have struggled with holding onto possession all season, especially with the increased physicality of the WPL. Today, we did a much better job of keeping possession and turning opportunities into points. Going into Sunday, we will need to continue that success and build on it with a better success rate within their 22, and bigger tackles on defense. Overall though, the morale after today’s victory was contagious and we are antsy to get out there on Sunday.”

Chicago North Shore will face Twin Cities in the 7th place match after the Amazons dropped a 41-29 game to Berkeley today. Although the match ended within 12 points of each other, it had wild swings o
f momentum.

Two WPL rookies scored the opening tries: flanker Christina Ramos for Berkeley and prop Lanoira Duhart for Twin Cities. All Blues wing Ardia Kelker showcased her speed along the sideline for her team’s second try and a Bulou Mataitoga conversion gave the All Blues a 12-5 lead heading into the second quarter.

The Amazons then committed two yellow card offenses in the course of three minutes, resulting in a penalty try and opening up a little space for scrumhalf Alyssa Baccarella to dummy into the try zone. That said, Duhart was able to score her second try while her side was down. The momentum didn’t have a chance to build, however, as Berkeley wing Christina Hendrickson’s intercept try closed the half for a 29-10 lead.

Berkeley added tries from Cathy Cai and Mataitoga during the first six minutes of the second half, 41-10, and the game felt decided. But the Minnesota side made really good use of the final 30 minutes, and its superb lineout helped put points on the board. Flanker Rebecca Brown, lock Rachel Hunter-Schlichting and outside center Katie Johnson scored before the buzzer, and conversions from Johnson and Katana Howard capped the scoring. It was just a little too late to overturn the verdict.

“Every player, each week gives everything they have. It’s very humbling to be involved with this group of amazing women,” first-season Berkeley coach Theo Bennett lauded. “They are confident, intelligent, they play for each other, the club, and the position we come from. I cannot think of one player I have that is not worth mentioning in some capacity. I am their biggest fan.”

Tune in Sunday as the teams play for place. Check wplrugby.org for the results and schedule.