Description
Description
The story of U.S. women's rugby begins in 1972, when a group of Colorado college students took the field for the first recorded match between two women's teams. In doing so, they opened a path in a landscape where women had previously been excluded. They could not have foreseen where that path would lead: the establishment of a national team, appearances on the World Cup stage, an Olympic medal, expanded collegiate and high school programs, and, in 2025, a crowd of 81,000 spectators gathered to watch women's rugby.
The history of women's rugby in the United States is deeply intertwined with the broader social, cultural, and economic shifts of the past five decades. It is a history shaped by young women who seized the opportunities made possible by Title IX and who organized, collaborated, and persisted in the face of structural barriers simply to play the game.
More than fifty years later, women's rugby has grown into a robust national sport, with more than 1,200 teams across youth, high school, collegiate, club, national, Olympic, and professional levels. Yet at its core, this history remains grounded in individual and collective experience-stories of determination and resilience, of community and shared purpose-that continue to unfold on fields across the country.
Publishing Information
Publishing Information

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