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2008-09 Sweet 16 Squad

D1 LEAGUE RESULTS & TABLE D2 LEAGUE RESULTS & TABLE
RECENT NEWS
With a 16-10 win over the Austin Blacks on February 27th the HARC-Bulls positioned themselves alone atop the TRU Division 1 table.
TRAINING SCHEDULE
Men: Tuesday & Thursday nights at the Westland YMCA
HISTORY
HARC was
formed on July 17, 1998 by the merger of the Houston
Rugby Football Club and the Houston Old Boys Rugby
Football Club. These clubs joined to leverage
their strengths and promote rugby in the Houston
area.
2008-09 Season with a win over the visiting Denver Highlanders earned its first ever appearance
in the USA D1 Sweet 16. In Day 1 of the Sweet
16 under extremely wet conditions HARC lost
a close 20-5 game to a heavily favored Las Vegas
side. In Day 2 HARC came out with a very different
side and fell behind early to a disappointed
Olympic Club, the first half ended HARC 0 -
O Club 35, but with a few half time changes
and a character check HARC went 13-13 in the
second half resulting in a 48-13 loss.
HOUSTON RFC
In 1969, Nat Davis (later to become President
of Gerald Hines and currently found at the Houston
Polo Club) figured his rugby days were over.
He had returned to Houston after graduating
from Notre Dame in 1964, where he had been captain
of the rugby team, and after spending another
4 years in the Navy where he played for the
Olympic Club in the Northern California Rugby
Union. One afternoon, however, while driving
through Memorial Park he happened upon John
Savage (a South African) who was practicing
kicking a rugby ball. After trading experiences
they decided that there might be more players
interested in forming a team.
By the fall of 1969 they had located a handful
of people and formed what was known as the Houston
Rugby Football Club. At the time several clubs
had also been formed at Rice University, Austin,
Dallas, and Galveston. Some of the original
Houston RFC members include: Nat Davis, John
Savage, Sydney Gail Borden Tennant, Bill Sanvico,
Lee Garner, Buck O'Gilvie, Kevin Gardner, Wayne
Baxter, Alan Port and Chuck Ehrhardt. In later
years, the club was in the hands of Jim Cornelius.
Jim was club President for more than 12 years
until he had a stroke minutes prior to Houston
RFC's match in the first round of the 1996 Western
Region Championships against Aspen. Jim, and
his wife Cindy, still remain active in club
activities and can be found at the pitch during
most matches.
Houston underwent a series of changes in its
appearance over the years. It was once believed
that stripes made rugby players run faster and
that myth prevailed from 1969 until the 1996/1997
season when the club moved to white jerseys
with black collars and red numbers. As legend
has it, this came about after a well known Houston
player was run down on a break away sprint by
an Aspen rugger in the first round of the 1996
Western Region Championships. Houston was defeated
in the match by the eventual National Champions
and it was decided once and for all - stripes
do not make you run faster. Players continued
to wear the traditional black shorts and black
socks with white caps.
In 1972 Gail Tennant owned a house on Sage close
to what is now the Galleria. In his backyard
he liked to keep animals, especially chickens.
At this time he was going through what some
people referred to as his "French Period", having
just recently returned from a trip abroad. It
was his idea to call the team "The Fighting
Cocks" after the French national mascot - the
rooster. In his backyard was a Red Crested Black
Polish rooster which served as the design for
the Houston RFC crest. Although the logo stuck
- the name did not. At the beginning of the
1997/1998 Season, the Houston RFC crest was
re-designed as part of Houston RFC's change
in image and direction.
Prior to the 1997/98 season it was decided that
in order to become a more competitive club Houston
RFC would have to travel outside of the Texas
Rugby Union. In September, 35 club members and
players traveled to Chicago for a two-day road
trip against The Indianapolis Rugby Football
Club and the Super League's Chicago Lions RFC.
The first such trip in quite a while proved
educational; one key learning was that Pub-Crawls
should be limited to after match functions only.
HOUSTON OLD BOYS RFC
The Houston Old Boys Rugby Football Club was
founded on August 27, 1972 by Mr. William Sonvico
and Mr. Lee Garner. Both men had long and illustrious
careers in rugby, thereby giving a solid base
of know-how and experience on which to build
a successful rugby club.
Bill Sonvico, in his youth, played rugby in
Argentina before moving to the United States
and Houston. Lee Garner played his early rugby
in St. Louis for the Ramblers, later for Old
Blue of New York City and finally in Houston,
where he met Bill Sonvico. Bill was a highly
respected lock and Lee was a tough front row
forward.
The name, Houston Old Boys, was chosen by Sonvico
out of respect for his father who had previously
formed a championship soccer club in Argentina.
The name of his father's club... The "Old Boys".
Bill Sonvico was elected the first President
of the club, with Lee Garner elected the first
coach. The Old Boys first captain and vice-captain
were Jim Zettel and Glynn Morris, both coming
from the defunct Nasa Bay Bombers RFC. In the
club's first year, coach Lee Garner molded a
championship caliber team with only a few players
that had experience in rugby union. The 1972-1973
club won the Southern Division of the Texas
Rugby Union and was a semi-finalist in the TRU
Championship Tournament.
Over the years the Houston Old Boys RFC has
enjoyed much success on the field. Frequent
competitors in the Texas Rugby Union championships,
TRU champions in 1977 and 1980. The Old Boys
were finalists in the 1980 Western RFU tournament
and finished fourth in the West in 1993. Former
Old Boys players include two Eagles: Barry Waite
(1978) and Skip Niebauer who captained the Eagles
in the early '80's. The Old Boys have had numerous
players on the TRU and Western RFU select sides.
As committed as the Old Boys are to competitive
rugby on the pitch, they never neglected the
social side, either. The Old Boys are well respected
for maintaining rugby's off the field traditions.
They were renowned host for touring sides and
became a requisite fixture on the itineraries
of clubs touring Texas.
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