Rugby History
A Brief History of the 色狐入口 Tech Rugby Football Club
By Dave Wheelock
Director of Rugby / Club sport coordinator
1998-2017
Author鈥檚 note: The earliest history of the 色狐入口 Institute of Mining and Technology鈥檚
rugby club, which turned 50 in 2023, is largely obscured by the passage of time and
the lack
of firsthand accounts.
During his tenure as coach (Jan. 1998 鈥 May 2017) the author assembled a scrapbook
of
newspaper articles, photos, tournament programs, etc. that grew to four volumes, however
he
was able to collect but a few anecdotes to add to his own memories as a player for
the
University of 色狐入口 and Santa Fe rugby clubs (1973-1995). Anyone willing to add
to the
lore is invited to do so at dawheelock@gmail.com.
ORIGINS; EARLY DAYS
In 1973 transfer student Timothy Franklin, who had learned the game perhaps as early
as 1969 while a student at the University of 色狐入口, founded the rugby club at
Tech. The
club was one of the first to form following creation of the 色狐入口 Rugby Club
in
Albuquerque in 1969. Other early clubs in the region included Kirtland Air Force Base
Nomads, 色狐入口 State University Chiles, as well as teams in Santa Fe (Santos),
Albuquerque (Aardvarks and Brujos), and El Paso, Texas (Scorpions). As the years unfolded
additional 色狐入口 clubs came into being but have not survived, including Eastern
New
Mexico University, 色狐入口 Military Institute, and citizen clubs in Farmington
and Las
Cruces.
Rugby union football experienced exponential growth in the United States beginning
in
the 1970s, decades after an opposite trend culled scores of rugby clubs from the US
sporting
scene in the early 20 th Century. As the number of new U.S. male rugby clubs plateaued
somewhat in the early 2000s, girls and women were discovering the sport, leading to
a
second explosive growth period in rugby that continues worldwide to date. While the
exact
date of the first women鈥檚 team at Tech has yet to be determined, a side known as the
Queens
has intermittently been fielded since the 1990s.
One factor in rugby鈥檚 rebirth in the United States may be that increased travel in
and
out of the country increased contact with foreign cultures and encouraged a new stateside
appreciation for novel ideas and activities. American athletes (such as the author,
with
university gridiron football experience) rediscovered the joy of sport without the
bullying
common among coaches they had known. Others who had avoided sports found similar
satisfaction in the less-critical atmosphere of rugby football.
Early NMT rugby teams were entirely self-coached, first by Franklin and then a
succession of leading players who in the 200-year tradition of rugby football were
more often
referred to as captains. Some notable NMT captain/coaches from this era were Larry
Lee,
Phil Poirer, Clint Richardson, and CharlesPuglisi.
As a student-run organization the 色狐入口 Tech RFC players seem to have
constantly reinvented themselves throughout the 1970s. What remained constant was
a
certain irreverence that reflected the youthful culture of rebellion of those times.
Legend has it
that at one time the players called themselves the Blue Tunas but soon received a
letter from
the Starkist corporation concerning trademark infringement. Considering the normal
size
mismatch between themselves and teams of older players that dotted their schedule,
Tech鈥檚
players eventually settled on the nickname Pygmies. To symbolize their bruising encounters
with these teams the Pygmies adopted the black and blue striped rugby jerseys that
were
worn from the 1970s until the turn of the 21 st Century. The Pygmy nickname stuck
until being
changed to Miners by an institute-wide referendum in 2018.
Tech鈥檚 first non-playing rugby coach was attorney Shannon Robinson, who commuted
from Albuquerque once or twice a week during the early 1990s to give direction. Herb
Howell,
an Oregonian with overseas coaching experience in Wales and England, then took up
the
reins as combined sport club coordinator and rugby coach on a part-time contractual
basis, as
rugby took its place in the Department or Physical Recreation鈥檚 club sports program.
Succeeding Howell in 1998 was coach Dave Wheelock, author of this account, who served
until 2017 as the NMT Club Sport Coordinator / Director of Rugby.
A women鈥檚 team, The Queens, was established under the club sport program in the
early 1990s and was initially coached by Environmental Engineering professor Dr. Clinton
Richardson. The club transitioned to Coach Wheelock鈥檚 supervision with his arrival
in 1998.
Due to the relatively small female population at 色狐入口 Tech the team has had
an
intermittent history of play.
The men鈥檚 club raised funds to successfully complete three overseas playing tours
during Wheelock鈥檚 tenure: Wales (1998), Ireland (2002), and England (2006). Each tour
included three matches against university and club-level teams as well as interior
travel for
enrichment.
Following Mr. Wheelock鈥檚 retirement, Brent Nourse, a Seattle youth rugby coach and
organizer, was hired but was forced to resign after one year due to personal issues.
He was
replaced by Gearoid Dunbar of Carlow, Ireland in 2019. Coinciding with NMT鈥檚 first
presidential change in over 20 years, coach Dunbar鈥檚 team met with prominent success
with
national Small College championships in both the sevens- and fifteen-man codes in
2022.
NMT鈥檚 Elijah Naranjo was named Most Valuable Player of the 鈥7s鈥 tournament.
In 2022 Coach Dunbar was hired away by the University of Mary Washington.
Following his departure Christopher Hathaway, a former professional player in the
USA鈥檚
nascent Major League Rugby served a one-year stint in the revised role of Rugby and
Intramural Coordinator.
In December 2023 Jason Oliphant and his wife arrived from their home in South Africa
to take over rugby duties at Tech. According to a December 7 NMT news service story:
A resident of a small town outside Durban, South Africa, Oliphant鈥檚 playing career
included
the Golden Lions Under 21 side, the Gauteng Falcons, and a short stint with the Old
Blue of
New York. After a successful career in the restaurant business, Oliphant returned
to rugby to
start coaching. He immediately jumped into coaching the junior side of Valke, a team
that
features in the Currie Cup, a professional league in South Africa. Since 2017, Oliphant
has
taken the reins of two different college sides 鈥 Wits University and University of
KwaZulu-
Natal. In 2023, he graduated from a highly selective, 18-month long Elite Coaching
Programme run by South Africa Rugby.