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Tags: usa sevens

United States coach Al Caravelli has chosen a 22-man squad for an eight-day selection camp ahead of the Wellington and San Diego legs of the International Rugby Board ( IRB ) Sevens World Series.


Caravelli will select a final squad of 12 over the course of the camp, which kicks off on 19 January. The selection will be based on fitness, defensive ability and form assessments.


The camp will provide Caravelli with a chance to work with a number of new players - Corey Blair (Huntington Beach Unicorns), Troy Hunt (White Plains), Mike Hicks (San Diego State) and Nicholas Hawkins (OMBAC) - who showed potential in the US's Rugby National Guard Men's All-Star Championships in December.


However, the cream of Caravelli's new crop is Austin Sage, of Red Mountain, who performed well at the last Under-19 Camp.

"Even though he is only 18 and has only been playing rugby for a few months, he is athletic, quick-footed, strong and has the pace we need in Sevens," Caravelli said.
"I'm really looking forward to seeing him perform during the week. If he works hard and puts in the individual time that our current squad puts in, I can see him making one of the traveling squads this year."



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Thanks to John Devonport for this story.


Patrick Komongnan may be a landmark player, and not only because of his age or race.


The Washington teenager might herald a new wave of athletes coming into American rugby.


Komongnan, who is black, hails from Delaware State by way of a District of Columbia charter school. 7s Eagles have more typically been white, club players aged in their late 20s or early 30s, and affluent enough to take time off work.


Rugby has ever struggled to expand its reach into American society, particularly failing to access those sections that produce large numbers of college varsity and professional athletes. Komongnan’s alma mater, the Hyde Leadership Public Charter School, is a frontier outpost.


“PJ”, as he is widely known, is the most successful player to emerge from a startup XV which has taken its place among the school’s most distinguished teams. Hyde runs 12 varsity programs, and requires each of its 775 students to play three seasons of interscholastic sports in order to graduate.


The achievement of Komongnan as well as Hyde coach and athletic director Tal Bayer, last year honored by the Positive Coaching Alliance, portends, at minimum, a changing demographic for American rugby.


Indeed, the success of youthful Komongnan, with nary a handful of age-grade seasons plus some club 7s and Under-19 experience under his belt, underscores the potential of recruiting collegiate varsity athletes. It is no wonder that chairman Kevin Roberts and chief executive Nigel Melville have been talking excitedly about converting football players.


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Source: Gainline.us


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Competing with the USA



Competing with the USA



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Our thanks to Randy Mar for submitting these pictures. YOu can find more of his work here.


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