Back Bay grows
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Bryce Alderton
The Back Bay under-19 rugby team came up short in its season finale,
but the growth of the first-year squad can hardly be denied.
From eight players who started practicing in the corners of
parking lots at season’s beginning, the number of Sharks swelled to
28 by Saturday’s contest against the powerful Los Angeles Cougars at
Peninsula Park.
Back Bay players and coaches didn’t need to look very far to see
the promise of what the team could become.
The Cougars (16-1), who will represent Southern California in the
national championships in two weeks, scored the final 18 points and
ended Back Bay’s season with a 25-7 victory in front of roughly 100
spectators, many of whom toted their lawn chairs until finding an
ideal viewing spot on a pristine afternoon.
“If you lose, why not lose to the best,” Sharks’ Coach Jeff
Bonnett said. “In the past we’ve come back from stuff like that.
We’ve won games, 67-0, but it’s better to take on teams like this.”
The Cougars are in their fifth season and their coach, Chip
Howard, is an ex-United States national team member.
“They are big, they practice every day and they are all quick,”
Back Bay’s Fernando Lara said. “They know the game and have a good
combination of size and speed.”
Back Bay’s Joe Vuki, a senior football defensive end and fullback
at Western High last fall, took a handoff and raced 10 yards across
the goal line -- worth five points -- in the 17th minute of the first
half. Each half is 30 minutes.
David Del Fante, a starting cornerback and reserve place-kicker on
Corona del Mar’s football team last fall, converted a 10-yard kick
through the goal post for two points and a 7-7 tie.
L.A. took the lead for good five minutes later when center Phil
Rosenberg took an underhanded toss from Nick Regas and beat defenders
to the corner of the goal line for the eventual game-winning points.
Back Bay (11-4), which lost twice to the Cougars this season,
spent nearly half of the final 30 minutes on L.A.’s side of the
field, but couldn’t outrun Cougar pursuers.
Zak Sepulveda and Bijan Ahmadi both made pushes toward the goal
line for Back Bay, but were knocked out of bounds.
“They play well as a team,” Vuki said of the Cougars. “They came
out ready. We tried our best.”
Similar sentiments could also be said about the Sharks, who jelled
with a mix of players trying out the sport for the first time and
those who have played it since grade school.
Vuki, a resident of Buena Park, started playing when he was in
fourth grade in his native Tonga Islands in the South Pacific.
Contrast that with players such as Lara, a Newport Harbor student
who began playing rugby about two months ago to get in shape for
football.
“I’m liking it,” Lara said. “I’ve met a lot of new people and I’m
trying to learn everything about rugby and the culture behind it.”
Bonnett said willingness to learn and unselfishness were two
traits that contributed to the team’s success.
“These guys are like sponges, absorbing anything,” Bonnett said.
“The thing that makes this team special is when I substitute a guy
onto the field, the guy coming off the field is happy for the other
guy going on. No one is saying, ‘Me, me, me.’”
Bonnett also spoke of team captain Delano McKenzie and Cameron
Eaton in high esteem.
The sound of bagpipes radiated through the sea breeze during a
pregame ceremony.
Back Bay players locked arms and gently jogged in tandem a few
feet behind the bagpipe player.
“It is a team sport, you can’t play as an individual,” Bonnett
said.
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