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Panther Academy Takes Four Teams to England and Wales

irish rugby tours

Panther Academy Takes Four Teams to England and Wales

The Panther Youth Boys with the boys from Barry.

The Panther Rugby Academy toured England and Wales this past month, taking four teams of different age levels on a rugby and cultural trip.

The touring group included 53 players, 12 coaches and staff, and 27 supporters for a total of 92. The Panthers fielded a Girls U18 7s team, a Boys Youth (mostly U15) team for 10-a-side, a Boys U18 team playing both 10s and 15s rugby, and a U23 men's team playing 7s.

"Our goal was to expose the players to experience what a rugby tour is and how rugby is part of the culture in England and Wales," said Program Director Mark Williams. "We also felt it was important to make sure we did more than see rugby fields and so we went to major tourist, cultural, and historical sites. For some Stonehenge is just a bunch or rocks, but once you see it you can appreciate it so much more. It's hard to describe the Roman Baths until you see it. With the Panther Rugby Academy we believe the baseline fundamentals is the most important thing to focus on. When we practiced with the Ospreys and London Irish that’s what we focused on – not get us ready for the game tomorrow."

The group toured the Tower of London, the Natural History Museum, the London Eye, Stonehenge on the Summer Solstice, the baths at Bath, Twickenham, Cardiff Castle, and a pit mine and whitewater adventure. 

On the rugby side, they attended the Gallagher Premiership final and had training sessions with London Irish and with the Ospreys.

Competition Day One

Hosted at Barry RFC at their scenic venue, the day included games for the younger teams and a touch rugby match for the U23s. The Boys Youth team won 19-5; the Boys U18s split their 10-a-side games 17-12 and 29-17, and the Girls U18s won 15-12. Emmye Harris scored the first try of the entire tour.

 

Competition Day Two

Morriston RFC were gracious hosts at their large clubhouse with a party deck. All four Panther teams won. The U23s won their game 28-12.

Competition Day Three

At Llantwit Fardre RFC hundreds of supporters came out to watch the games. They roasted a pig, sang Country Road and enjoyed themselves immensely.

The Girls U18s won their 10-a-side game 60-0. Hannah Mitchell scored three tries. They lost their second game.

The Boys Youth 10s won 21-7 and 62-14.

The Boys U18s lost their 15-a-side game 29-7.

The U23 Men played 7s and ended up tied 25-25. The game went to overtime, and the Panthers ended up losing 40-35.

 

"The U18 Boys played really well and in the last game against Llantwit Fardre," said Williams. "They lost but it was closer than the score shows. They knew how to grind us once they got inside the red zone. They would come away with points when they got close and forced us to keep working hard only to lose possession before getting points."

Lessons Learned

The speed and intensity was a learning experience, added Williams, and so was how to handle the tackle and contact area.

"We did fight back though very proud in how they responded and never gave up. Huge learning experience and I think every player on tour will return a better player. That was across the board in every team," added Williams.

The youth boys team went 4-0 on the tour and were generally more athletic than their opposition. It was a group of 12- to 15-year-olds and Williams praised them for their athleticism and also their discipline. They gave up very few penalties and received no warnings or cards, and their forwards were very strong in all aspects.

Williams said the teams worked hard on the tackle and contact area but still struggled with that part of play in games.

"Our ballcarriers lose the ball way too often," said Williams. "I believe this is the USA player's biggest weakness and there are a lot of coaches that contribute to this with our coaching styles. A perfect example is: we run unopposed team play in practice and when the coach yells tackle our ball carriers drop to the ground and recycle the ball without any thought of opposition. So in games they do the same thing – get into contact and fall down exposing the ball. While the Wales players have better instincts to fight for position and better quality possession. Also the arriving players get there faster and are better at looking for offloads or securing possession faster and harder. On the tour we often had better athletes than some of the teams but they were better at the breakdowns and ability to pass and find gaps."

Team Rosters:

Girls 7s  
Mark Jones-Coach
Josephine (Elliott) DiSalvo
Emmye Harris 
Sarah Jones
Hannah Mitchell
Shamyjae Moore
Courtney Taylor
Regan O'Neill

Boys Youth 10s
Santiago Cuccarese-Coach
Mark Patterson-Coach
Maddox Siler
Jonah Kaler
Cooper Patterson
Liam Ishizaki
Jake Orefice
Jacob Roberts
Mariano Cuccarese
Dylan Forbes-Roberts
Noah Kelley
Bishop Reilly
Gavin Trussell
Justin Albouy
Porter Kuebler
Ethan Haverstick
Grant Jones

Boys U18s 
Warren Taylor-Coach
Gavin Hooten
Maximus Orefice
Anthony Grothe Diaz
Howie Heller
Charles Hornsby
Roman Navarro
Jack Netherland
Chris Newcomb
Finnegan O'Neill
Nicholas Orefice
Jaxson Patterson
Mitchell Roberts
William Weeks
Reece Lee
Matthew Galardi
John Lake
John Avery Reynolds
Wiley Tchantz
Bryce Hogan
Hayden Mullins

U23 Men    

Match Film 1
Match Film 2

Tyree Reed-Coach
Cody Trussell
Marcus McClain
Josh Shetler
Jake  Tingom
Connor Murray
Aaron Organiscak
Ryan Pearce
Kevin Thomas
Connor Hogan