Varsity Cup Championship

Varsity Cup
Sport Rugby union
Instituted 2012
Inaugural season 2013
Number of teams 16
Country United States
Holders Cal (2016)
Most titles BYU (3 titles)
Website http://varsitycup.us//
Broadcast partner NBC Sports

The Varsity Cup Championship is a college rugby competition established in 2012 to serve as an invitational championship following the breakaway of several schools from Division 1-A Rugby.[1]

The Varsity Cup is organized by United World Sport, the same organization that runs the USA Sevens tournament and the Collegiate Rugby Championship.[2] The 2014 Varsity Cup final was televised by NBC Sports on NBCSN.[3] The Varsity Cup's ability to get onto television was seen as a boost to the Varsity Cup and to the rugby programs of the member schools.[4]

The development of the Varsity Cup post-season tournament has created some controversy. The Varsity Cup Championship doesn't replace Division 1-A Rugby, but it is endorsed by USA Rugby.[5] The schools participating in the Varsity Cup often refer to it as the national championship, but with the rival Division 1-A Rugby post-season tournament running concurrently, USA Rugby does not consider the Varsity Cup to be the national championship.[6]

The 1989 Cal Rugby team.

The founding schools formed the Varsity Cup with a number of goals in mind. One was the ability to manage and control their playoff games. Another was to develop a tournament with commercial appeal, that would generate revenue from attendance and concessions, and that would generate marketing exposure through TV coverage.[7]

Teams

The teams invited to compete in the Varsity Cup are from schools where rugby enjoys varsity status or at least advanced club status.[7]

Team School's
Endowment
School's
NCAA
Affiliation
Joined
V-Cup
Head Coach Rugby
Since
Best
VC Result
Air Force $28 m Mountain West 2013 Denny Merideth 1969 QF (2013)
Arizona State $553 m Pac-12 2015 Gary Lane 1975 R16 (2015, 2016)
Arkansas State $43 m Sun Belt Conf. 2015 Mani Delaibatiki 1991 SF (2016)
Army West Point $284 m Patriot League 2016 Matt Sherman 1961 QF (2016)
BYU $957 m West Coast 2013 David Smyth 1965 1st (2013, 2014, 2015)
Cal $3.0 bn Pac-12 2013 Jack Clark 1882 1st (2016)
Central Washington $13 m Great Northwest 2013 Tony Pacheco 1972 SF (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016)
Clemson $483 m ACC 2014 Justin Hickey 1967 QF (2015)
Dartmouth $3.7 bn Ivy League 2013 Alex Magleby 1951 QF (2013, 2014, 2016)
Navy ??? Patriot League 2013 Mike Flanagan 1963 SF (2013, 2014, 2015)
Notre Dame $8.3 bn ACC 2013 Sean O'Leary 1961 QF (2013)
Oklahoma $1.2 bn Big 12 2014 Doug Neubauer 1974 R16 (2014, 2016)
Penn State $3.0 bn Big 10 2016 Blake Burdette 1962 R16 (2016)
Texas $6.0 bn Big 12 2014 Chris Hopps 1985 QF (2014, 2015)
UCLA $2.6 bn Pac-12 2013 Scott Stewart 1934 QF (2013, 2014, 2015)
Utah $670 m Pac-12 2014 Paul Benson ??? QF (2014, 2015, 2016)

Results

Date Champion Final Score Runner Up Broadcast Attendance Location Stadium Other
Semifinalists
May 4, 2013[13] BYU 27–24 Cal YouTube 3,000 Provo, UT BYU's South Field CWU, Navy
May 3, 2014[14] BYU 43–33 Cal NBCSN 10,172 Salt Lake City, UT Rio Tinto Stadium CWU, Navy
May 2, 2015[15] BYU 30–27 Cal NBCSN 9,033 Salt Lake City, UT Rio Tinto Stadium CWU, Navy
May 7, 2016 Cal 40–29 BYU NBCSN Provo, UT BYU's South Field[16] CWU, Ark. St.

2013

Quarterfinals (April 20) Semifinals (April 27) Final (May 4)
         
1 BYU 69
8 UCLA 8
1 BYU 53
4 Central Washington 20
4 Central Washington 81
5 Air Force 28
1 BYU 27
2 California 24
2 California 77
7 Notre Dame 0
2 California 74
6 Navy 6
3 Dartmouth 0
6 Navy 32

2014

  Regionals (April 12) Super Regionals (April 19) Semifinals (April 26) Final (May 3)
                                     
        
   BYU 70  
     Dartmouth 15  
 Dartmouth 59
 Clemson 24  
   BYU 60  
   Navy 0  
        
        
   Navy 64
     Texas 10  
 Texas 55
 Notre Dame 33  
   BYU 43
   California 33
        
        
   California 41
     UCLA 0  
 Oklahoma 12
 UCLA 77  
   California 58
   Central Washington 14  
        
        
   Central Washington 25
     Utah 24  
 Utah 71
 Air Force 24  

2015

  Regionals (April 4) Super Regionals (April 11) Semifinals (April 18) Final (May 2)
(NBCSN)
                                     
        
   BYU 45  
     UCLA 16  
 UCLA 32
 Air Force 12  
   BYU 35  
   Central Washington 8  
 Utah 1  
 Oklahoma 0  
   Utah 7
     Central Washington 18  
 Central Washington 72
 Arizona State 10  
   BYU 30
   California 27
        
        
   California 100
     Texas 7  
 Texas 22
 Notre Dame 17  
   California 57
   Navy 15  
 Clemson 26  
 Arkansas State 22  
   Clemson 23
     Navy 24  
 Dartmouth 22
 Navy 23  

2016

1st Round (April 9) Quarterfinals (April 16) Semifinals (April 23) Championship (May 7)
NBCSN
        
BYU 113
Arizona State 8
BYU 75
Dartmouth 15
Penn State 25
Dartmouth 30
BYU 68
Arkansas State 20
Clemson 0
Arkansas State 50
Arkansas State 31
Navy 24
Notre Dame 3
Navy 57
BYU 29
California 40
Texas 0
California 138
California 41
Army West Point 29
Oklahoma 10
Army West Point 55
California 14
Central Washington 13
UCLA 15
Central Washington 44
Central Washington 58
Utah 5
Air Force 31
Utah 36

Italicized teams hosted each round.

Records

Most points for one team (single match):

  1. 136 — California vs Texas (2016)
  2. 113 — BYU vs Arizona State (2016)
  3. 100 — California vs Texas (2015)

List of broadcasters

The following table shows the broadcasters for each year's final match.

Year TV Network Play-by-play announcers Color commentators Sideline reporters
2013 YouTube Brian Hightower Salesi Sika
2014[17] NBCSN Todd Harris Brian Hightower Marty Snider
2015[18] NBCSN Todd Harris Brian Hightower Marty Snider
2016[19] NBCSN Bill Seward Brian Hightower Tanith White

See also

References

  1. "USA Rugby: What BYU won was a mythical championship", Deseret News.
  2. http://unitedworldsports.com/our-properties/
  3. "Varsity Cup creates promotional broadcast partnership with NBC, UWS", Varsity Cup.
  4. "Varsity Cup, USA 7s parent, NBC in landmark pact", Gainline, June 21, 2013. Retrieved May 4, 2014.
  5. "BYU Rugby joins Varsity Cup Championship", Provo Daily Herald, July 17, 2012. Retrieved May 23, 2014.
  6. "USA Rugby: 'What BYU won ... was a mythical championship'", Deseret News. May 17, 2013. Retrieved August 28, 2014.
  7. 1 2 "New college 15s championship points to business goals", Gainline, July 18, 2012. Retrieved May 4, 2014.
  8. "University of Utah suspends its club rugby program ", Salt Lake Tribune, April 3, 2013. Retrieved May 23, 2014.
  9. "Central Washington Replaces Utah in Varsity Cup", This is American Rugby, April 5, 2013. Retrieved May 23, 2014.
  10. "Arkansas State Joins Expanding Varsity Cup", Rugby Today, July 2, 2014.
  11. "Varsity Cup Adds Arizona State". United World Sports. Retrieved 2014-08-08.
  12. "Oklahoma Makes it Official - No Varsity Cup". Goff Rugby Report. Retrieved 2015-04-02.
  13. Linehan's dramatic dropkick gives BYU men's rugby Varsity Cup national title with win over Cal, Provo Daily Herald, May 5, 2013.
  14. BYU rugby: Cougars defeat California in 2014 Varsity Cup Final, capture third straight national championship, Deseret News, May 3, 2014.
  15. BYU Wins Thriller, Fourth Consecutive Title, Rugby Today, May 2, 2015.
  16. "Varsity Cup Final Venue, PRP Rescheduling, Tracking Camps". This is American Rugby. Retrieved 2016-04-19.
  17. "NBCSN PRESENTS 2014 VARSITY CUP NATIONAL RUGBY COLLEGIATE CHAMPIONSHIP SATURDAY AT 4 P.M. ET". NBC Sports Press Box. Retrieved May 2, 2014.
  18. "NBCSN PRESENTS 2015 PENN MUTUAL VARSITY CUP NATIONAL RUGBY COLLEGIATE CHAMPIONSHIP SATURDAY AT 4 P.M. ET". NBC Sports Press Box. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
  19. "CAL FACES BYU IN 2016 PENN MUTUAL VARSITY CUP NATIONAL RUGBY COLLEGIATE CHAMPIONSHIP SATURDAY AT 4 P.M. ET ON NBCSN: BYU Cougars Face Cal Golden Bears in Championship Match For Fourth Consecutive Year". NBC Sports Press Box. Retrieved May 5, 2016.
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