again a once in blue moon that i re post from rugbymag.com but being on west coast and northern California this has me very excited (go seahawks!)
The Northern California RFU has settled on a new men’s DI club 
format which will produce a ten-game regular season for eight clubs, 
including three promoted from DII.
 
 San Francisco Golden Gate, 
the dominant club in the region, will still be in the new competition, 
but will not field its strongest side – that roster will be reserved for
 the Elite Cup and the new West Coast league being formed.
 
 Northern California DI Coordinator Aaron Frederick said the success of the new format was contingent on SFGG fielding a 2nd side.
 
 “SFGG wants to keep DI rugby in Northern California, and we all 
realized that they are above the balance of competition in this region, 
and in most of the country,” said Frederick.”Some clubs felt that if 
SFGG’s elite squad was in DI, they would be reluctant to be a part of 
it.”
 
 At the same time, though, the alternative would have been 
to move all remaining DI clubs down to DII, and all that would have 
served to do would have been to create blowouts between strong DI clubs 
such as the EPA Bulldogs or Sacramento Lions, and the lower-level DII 
clubs.
 
 So this is what happened: SFGG and Olympic Club will 
concentrate on Elite Cup and/or the West Coast League. Olympic Club will
 not field a team in DI, while SFGG will, and has promised to keep their
 roster of top players out.
 
 Teams that were tops in DII last 
year – Santa Rosa, Fresno, San Jose, and Diablo Olde Gaels – are now in 
DI. BA Baracus was asked to move up, but declined.
 
 They will 
join the East Palo Alto Bulldogs, East Palo Alto Razorbacks, Sacramento 
Lions from last year’s DI league, plus the SFGG team.
 
 Not included are the Bay Barbarians, who have been suspended for a year due to repeated on-field foul play.
 
 The formation of this new league took a lot of work from Frederick and NCRFU President John Compaglia. 
 
 “I approached four DII clubs individually, proposing a pool system to 
bring them up which took approximately two months of negotiations,” said
 Compaglia. “After hearing of the possible buy-in of three [DII] clubs 
moving up to DI, San Francisco Golden Gate requested to remain in 
Division 1.”
 
 The League will be made up of two pools of four 
teams. Teams within the pool play each other twice (six games per 
teams), and play teams in the other pool once (four more games).
 
 The pool winners receive a bye to the NorCal semifinals, while the teams that finish 2nd and 3rd play off to see who else makes it to the semis.
 
 “This format allows the all the clubs to play a full season of Division
 1 matches plus a playoff round thus meeting the expanded match mandate 
by USA Rugby,” said Compaglia.
 
 Pool A
 EPA Bulldogs, RFC
 Sacramento Lions, RFC
 San Francisco Golden Gate, RFC
 Santa Rosa, RFC
 
 Pool B
 Diablo (Olde Gaels), RFC
 EPA, RFC
 Fresno, RFC
 San Jose, RFC
 
 
 The split of the pools is intriguing, in that the DII clubs moving up 
are concentrated in Pool B. This, said Frederick, was designed to 
further ease the DII teams in to this higher level. Should they be 
overmatched, it will become evident in the crossovers and in playoffs, 
but will allow all of the teams involved to ensure competitive pool 
matches.
 
 Another key aspect of this league is the topic of 
B-side matches. In Northern California, B-side matches are supposedly 
required in DI and DII, but rarely in DII do they happen as a full 
15-on-15, 80-minute match (or event 60-minute match). 
 
 
Frederick said this has become a frustration for the stronger DII clubs,
 and one carrot to attract them to DI was the guarantee of B-side 
matches. All DI teams will be required to play a B-side match. DII teams
 are expected to, but it has been recognized that it won’t often happen.
No comments:
Post a Comment