Current season, competition or edition: 2023 | |
Conference | Pac-12 |
---|---|
Sport | Rugby union |
First season | 2012 |
No. of teams | 4 |
Country | United States |
Region | Western United States |
Most recent champion(s) | California (2024) |
Most titles | 15s: California (11) 7s: California (9) |
Official website | pac-12.com/rugby |
The PAC Rugby Conference was a college rugby conference composed of four schools from the Pac-12 Conference that competed against each other in Division 1-A Rugby. It was formed in 2012 with six teams, with conference play beginning in February 2013 to compete in Division 1-AA. In 2016, PAC added USC and Stanford and dropped Oregon State, and moved up to D1-A. [1] Despite only recently moving up from D1-AA affiliation, the PAC has historically been one of the strongest conferences in college rugby, with five of its members consistently ranked in the Top 25 overall. [2] The PAC Rugby Conference began play on February 2, 2013, with Cal beating Arizona State at Witter Field in Berkeley. [3]
Around the turn of the century, American football was frowned upon for its violence, and President Theodore Roosevelt insisted upon reform or abolition of the game. During this period of uncertainty, rugby made a brief but important reappearance in many colleges, most notably at Cal and Stanford. It was these two Universities that supplied most of the players to the two U.S. Olympic rugby teams that won gold medals at the 1920 Olympics and 1924 Olympics. PAC Rugby was shown on television for the first time in 2014, when the PAC 12 Network broadcast Cal vs UCLA. [4] Cal has long been one of the faces of rugby at the collegiate level. In addition, excellence by teams such as UCLA and Arizona, as well as recent growth by USC, have made the conference one of the toughest in the country.
Institution | Team | Location | Founded | Enrollment | Endowment | Nickname | Rugby Since | Head coach |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arizona | Arizona Wildcats | Tucson, AZ | 1885 | 40,223 [5] | $563,655,000 [6] | Wildcats | 1969 | Sean Duffy [7] |
California | California Golden Bears | Berkeley, CA | 1868 | 36,142 [8] | $3.15×10 9 [9] | Golden Bears | 1882 | Jack Clark |
UCLA | UCLA Bruins | Los Angeles, CA | 1919 | 40,675 [10] | $2.98×10 9 [11] | Bruins | 1934 | Harry Bennett |
Utah | Utah Utes | Salt Lake City, UT | 1850 | 32,388 [12] | $670,411,000 [6] | Utes | 1972 | Adam Griffee [13] |
Season | Champion | Runner Up | Third | Player of the Year | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2013 | California | UCLA | [14] | ||
2014 | California | [15] | |||
2015 | California | Utah | Arizona State | [16] [17] | |
2016 | California | UCLA | Utah | [18] [19] [20] | |
2017 | California | Utah | Arizona | [21] | |
2018 | California | Arizona | UCLA | [22] | |
2019 | California | Arizona | |||
2020 | California | Arizona | Utah | [23] | |
2021 | Only one match was played with California defeating Arizona 48–7. [24] | ||||
2022 | California | Sam Golla (Cal) Lucas Lacamp (UCLA) | [25] | ||
2023 | California | Arizona | UCLA | [26] | |
2024 | California | UCLA | Arizona | [27] | |
This PAC Sevens Rugby Tournament occurs every fall. The winner of the tournament receives an automatic berth to the USA Rugby Sevens Collegiate National Championships. The tournament debuted in 2011 where Colorado beat Utah in the final match. [28] In 2012, all 12 of the Pac-12 schools participated for the first time and Cal won. [29] In 2016 the tournament was hosted in Tucson, Arizona for the first time, where it was won by Cal for the fifth straight year. [30]
Date | Location | Champion | Final score | Runner Up | Third | Tournament MVP | Leading Try Scorer | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oct. 21-22, 2011 | Stanford | Colorado | 14–12 | Utah | UCLA | Luke Lahman | -- | [28] |
Nov. 3-4, 2012 | Los Angeles | California | 21–12 | Utah | UCLA | -- | -- | [31] |
Nov. 2-3, 2013 | Los Angeles | California | 22–0 | UCLA | Oregon State | -- | -- | [32] |
Nov. 8–9, 2014 | Berkeley | California | 45–5 | Arizona State | UCLA | Russell Webb | [33] | |
Nov. 6–7, 2015 | Berkeley | California | 17–5 | UCLA | Arizona State | [34] | ||
Nov. 12–13, 2016 | Tucson | California | 47–14 | Arizona State | Utah | [35] [36] | ||
Nov. 11–12, 2017 | Tucson | Arizona | 31–26 ( a.e.t. ) | California | [37] | |||
Nov. 3–4, 2018 | Berkeley | California | 33–5 | Arizona | Arizona | Zachary Tavenner | [38] | |
Nov. 9–10, 2019 | Stanford | California | 24–7 | Arizona | UCLA/Utah | [39] [40] | ||
No event held in 2020 | ||||||||
Nov. 6–7, 2021 | Berkeley | California | 10–0 | UCLA | Arizona | Lucas Lacamp (8) | [41] [42] | |
Nov. 12–13, 2022 | Stanford | California | 31–5 | Arizona | Stanford/UCLA | Kealan O'Connell | [43] [44] | |
No event held in 2023 | ||||||||
The Pac-12 Conference is a collegiate athletic conference in the Western United States. It participates at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I level for all sports, and its football teams compete in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), the highest level of NCAA football competition. The conference currently comprises two members, Oregon State and Washington State.
The UCLA Bruins are the athletic teams that represent the University of California, Los Angeles. The Bruin men's and women's teams participate in NCAA Division I as part of the Big Ten Conference and the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF). For football, they are in the Football Bowl Subdivision of Division I. UCLA is second to only Stanford University as the school with the most NCAA team championships at 123 NCAA team championships. UCLA offers 11 varsity sports programs for men and 14 for women.
The Pac-12 Conference men's basketball tournament, otherwise known as the Pac-12 tournament, was the annual concluding tournament for the NCAA college basketball in the Pac-12, taking place in Las Vegas at the T-Mobile Arena. The first tournament was held in 1987 for the Pac-10 conference. It ended after four seasons. The conference did not have a conference tournament until it was started again in 2002.
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The Collegiate Rugby Championship (CRC) is an annual college rugby sevens tournament. The CRC began as the highest profile college rugby sevens competition in the United States, with the tournament broadcast live on NBC from 2010 to 2017, on ESPN News and ESPN3 from 2018 to 2019, The Rugby Network in 2021 and 2023, and on CBS Sports in 2022. The CRC capitalized on the surge in popularity of rugby at major universities following the 2009 announcement of the addition of rugby sevens to the Summer Olympics. Beginning in 2021, the tournament has been organized by National Collegiate Rugby (NCR) under license for the name and logo. Since the CRC franchise was licensed to NCR, the tournament has primarily featured comparatively smaller universities, as USA Rugby, recognized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) as the sport's National Governing Body (NGB), holds the official championship in June 2024.
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