The other day I received a letter from my aunt and uncle in Holland
where I was posed several questions about rugby.
Instead of writing a letter back, and making them wait the year or two
it would take my letter to find them over in Holland, I decided to write
a blog post instead. I type out my answer, click the little orange
Publish button on my screen, and three seconds later, their eyeballs can
read my words. Simple, easy, and no required purchase of a postage stamp.
Let me rephrase their question as I see it.
type of skinny, but nonetheless, I'm pretty skinny. My body's built
more for dribbling a ball around a court than for slamming into a
bunch of other bodies.
My reason?
Well, it all started on a bright sunshiny day ...
But before that, I need to give you a little background.
My family first came to Hawaii in September 2010. Since that (historic) date, I had not played a single sport.
Not one.
Well,
that isn't entirely true. I did play a few games here
and there: a soccer game in Foundation School, a basketball game, or
two, or three ... or four, with my cousin, David Amels, and one
memorable game of volleyball in
India, with brown teenagers most of whom knew no more English than 'hi'
and 'bye' and 'thank-you' ... we had great conversations together, me
and them.
(Later we all stripped and jumped in a dirty, scummy well to cool off and show off our flips, but that's another story.)
But the fact is, a game played here and there is not the same as being
part of a team, with official uniforms, and games scheduled every
Saturday. It may not sound like a big deal to some of you who haven't
touched a baseball in years, but for a teenage guy, not playing sports,
not being part of a team, that was tough.
The bottom line is:
I liked sports.
And I wasn't playing any.
So back to paragraph number ten:
It all started on a bright sunshiny
day. I was on my way to
class when I saw Ben Nonoa, a big Samoan guy, sitting down at one of the
picnic tables near my school, talking with two of my classmates.
"Hey Josh," Ben said, "We've just been talking about these guys joining my rugby team. Wanna join?"
Picture the past events of last year flashing through my brain at this
moment. The sad lack of sports. My obsessive need to do something
athletic again. My countless petitions to my parents to sign
me up for something, anything.
Rugby is a sport, right?
"Sure," I said.
After that my fate was sealed. I started to attend practices. Got to
know the team (Hawaiian guys). Figure out how the game of rugby worked.
You see, I didn't know the first thing about rugby. Literally.
My first game came around. I still didn't know the fine details of the
game. Basically all I knew about rugby was, "Get on the field and jump on people."
And that's what I did.
As the season progressed I became better at jumping on people and learned more about the game. I learned what in the
world a scrum was, how "hooker" on the rugby field was a position and
not a prostitute, how the back players ran their plays, how the forwards
plowed theirs, and generally learned how not to make a fool of myself
on the field.
It worked. (I think.)
In the end I learned that sometimes the best thing to do on the rugby
field is just to stand there and act like you know what's going on.
I
also started to work out in the weight room to build muscle. Not
bodybuilding status weightlifting, mind you, but enough to keep my arms
and legs from being ripped off by some burly Samoan.
My team, the Kona bulls, won the first game we played. And then we won
the second. And then the third. In fact, we never lost once until the
very end of the season when Waimea beat us in one brutal game. But, since they had several
players over the age of fifteen they lost by forfeit.
And then if you want to get technical, two games we had played against Hilo and won were counted as
forfeits on a technicality.
But we prefer to say that it was an undefeated season.
It sounds better.
Of
course, when I say that we had an undefeated season, you need to know
that only three Under 15 rugby teams exist on the Big Island: Kona,
Hilo, and Waimea. When the tournament came around, these were the only
teams we had to play to win state championships. And we had been playing
them, and beating them, all season long.
The
tournament for state champions came around, and so I found myself one
early Friday morning in a car heading for Hilo where the tournament
would be held. My team needed to play, and win, two games, to go on to
the state's championship game on Saturday.
Hilo
is notorious for rain. Friday afternoon, the sky decided it wanted to
be a shower nozzle. Soon, the bright green field transformed into a dull
brown muddy mess. Puddles the size of Lake Michigan formed. The grass
disappeared. The player became so muddy from tackling each other into
the mud, their uniforms were indistinguishable from the other teams.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEitgFp5tWiqvK7EJsrHEfqESOkUL32FFMZIGISJBeVkLhSj7hFJ2y34AVOyReTkLe7h01eGfVgAg-YRhJG0jkXW-urOg36clYPFxncLlsqPUseOggLfZUS6m0ILKPnTJQGtxLXoLfCgGKp5/s400/558901_352426724807800_100001214262590_1020455_1132814579_n.jpg) |
After and Before. |
Buuut ... we still played the two games. And we won them both.
Saturday
morning opened with a light drizzle. The field was still brown from the
night before, and someone had to repaint the white boundary lines over
the mud. Our game was scheduled in the afternoon, so my team spent the
day watching other teams play, passing around and playing a beat-up
ukelele and attempting to not eat too much junk food.
The time for the game came.
Coach
Ben Nonoa led the team onto the field for warm-ups. We did a few
passing drills, a few suicides, and then all joined hands for a brief
prayer. (Dear God, let us win this thing. Amen.)
The
team did a jog around the field, bowed twice to the spectators on each
side, shook hands with our opponents, and got into position on the
field.
The whistle blew.
The ball was kicked.
And the game was on.
Within minutes, there wasn't a clean uniform on the field. (Sorry Mom.)
Our
tackles were more of flops. In the mud. On the other person. (With the
exception of the beast tackle in the picture above of course.)
We played hard. We hit hard. And we won the 2012 State Championships!
In conclusion: the rugby season is now over. I have survived.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgNf0dp1_2zTa8DKN401qCrQCqvtDGTc05ZwVYnxxpm-UFlAwwDjBl4wl2TSaosOhvDiJhThkm86AFKB_PFWd13qtjdyc0sGlcqx90LDSz6GFFDGXTD1Z9v9FBFQiOVXc0azvFoWFK17Xzm/s640/P1170616.JPG) |
The trophy |