Ottawa Citizen

RUGBY TEAM AN IMMEDIATE HIT

More than 6,000 fans attend inaugural game as Wolfpack thumps Oxford in Toronto

- NEIL DAVIDSON

The weather was poor, the venue rudimentar­y and the game churlish. But when the dust settled Saturday, the Toronto Wolfpack celebrated their first win on Canadian soil after thumping Oxford RLFC 62-12.

Inside its spartan dressing room at Lamport Stadium, rugby league’s first transatlan­tic team launched into its victory song, clapping and singing Wolfpack’s on Fire, before spraying each other with water and falling into a bouncing, jubilant mass of humanity on the floor.

It’s hard not to like this largely transplant­ed English side, which wears its heart on a very muscular sleeve. Or the bruising game it plays.

“You can see how it’s going to build into something magnificen­t,” Wolfpack coach Paul Rowley said of the marriage between rugby’s 13-man code and North America. “The fans love it. A bit of everything, as promised. So we delivered, they delivered. And welcome rugby league to Canada.

“We always labelled it as the best-kept secret and now the secret’s out of the box. I think it’s a win-win.”

An enthusiast­ic crowd, announced at 6,281, saw 14 tries, three red cards and two yellows in a game that featured several punch-ups resembling old-time hockey line brawls. Toronto finished with 10 men after Jake Emmitt and Blake Wallace were redcarded after a brawl that started in the 71st minute.

Toronto’s Sean Penkywicz was yellow-carded soon after.

“That’s what you get when you mix amateurs with pros,” said Rowley, whose fully profession­al side is currently tangling with semi-pro teams in the third tier of English rugby league.

Still there can be no excuses for Emmitt, initially yellow-carded for slapping an Oxford player as he tried to play the ball.

He took his time leaving the field before, objecting to some parting words from an opponent, the sixfoot-one 240-pound Welsh internatio­nal threw several punches and a donnybrook ensued.

Oxford captain Callum Windley was also ejected when the red mist dissipated.

Rather than dwell on his indiscipli­ne, Emmitt walked to the north side of the field and shook hands with fans standing in front of a line of beer tents.

Toronto’s Liam Kay was yellowcard­ed earlier in the half.

Rowley said the flashpoint­s were fuelled by a string of incidents that were not policed properly.

“We shouldn’t react,” he said. “But what I will say is you only get punched so many times. We’ll protect ourselves. We’re not soft, we’re not mugs. I would expect my players to protect themselves. If the officials can’t protect us, then we’ll do it ourselves. But it just ruins the game really.

“The correct manner of doing it is to deal with the perpetrato­rs from the off and that wasn’t done today, in my opinion. But we should be better, definitely.”

Andrew Dixon, Richard Whiting, Jonny Pownall and Ryan Brierley scored two tries apiece for Toronto (6-0-0) while Wallace, captain Craig Hall, Greg Worthingto­n and Ryan Burroughs added singles. Hall kicked seven conversion­s.

The last try came from Burroughs, an American army veteran whose rugby league journey has taken him from Virginia to Australia and England and now Toronto.

Casey Canterbury scored both tries for Oxford (2-3-0) with Harvey Burnett adding two conversion­s.

The Toronto home debut, on a grey moist day, came 375 days after the groundbrea­king franchise was announced.

The Wolfpack are starting life in the Kingstone Press 1 — with an eye to winning promotion to the second-tier Championsh­ip and then the elite Super League.

While ostensibly playing out of Toronto, the players live and train on the other side of the Atlantic in northern England, where rugby league is popular. Home games are actually away fixtures.

The Wolfpack is willing to spend money to make the travel work. The franchise, aided by a sponsorshi­p deal with Air Transat, agreed to pay travel and housing costs for all visiting teams until Toronto climbs its way to the Super League.

Oxford, which arrived 10th in the 16-team league, travelled 5,625 kilometres for the match. Its last road trip was 400 km to Barrow, where it lost 64-14 in the League 1 Cup.

An Oxford player said the team had been up about 24 hours before they could finally put heads to pillow in Canada. They also had to change locales after their first university residence was found wanting.

The league-leading Wolfpack has dominated its semi-pro opposition, winning all six of its matches with a 372-49 scoring edge. Its one competitiv­e loss, a 29-22 decision, came at the hands of the Super League Salford Red Devils in the knockout Ladbrokes Challenge Cup.

It’s just a short stop in Toronto this time for the Wolfpack, which leaves Tuesday for a game Friday at the Newcastle Thunder. Then it’s another plane ride and a pair of games in Toronto.

The Wolfpack home, at least to start with, is 42-year-old Lamport Stadium, a no-frills 9,600-capacity venue.

The fans were restricted to the east stand to start, but were allowed into the west stand as numbers grew. There was a festive feel to the game, helped no doubt by the craft beer tents.

Chief executive Eric Perez calls the Wolfpack “the people’s team.”

During halftime, the crowd was entertaine­d by the She Wolves, the club’s cheerleade­rs. And during the game, the PA announcer repeatedly asked the fans to howl their approval.

“I can’t believe there’s this many people, to be honest,” said Alistair Wilson, a native of Blackpool, England, now living in Canada.

A soccer fan, he came to the home opener “to see a bit of history.”

“I love it. It looks good,” added David Bailie, who drove in from Guelph to see the game. “We’d come again.”

Some fans wore Wolfpack gear and a nearby team shop was doing brisk business.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Toronto Wolfpack’s Ryan Burroughs, right, scores a try against Oxford during the team’s 62-12 win in the inaugural home opener in Toronto on Saturday.
CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Wolfpack’s Ryan Burroughs, right, scores a try against Oxford during the team’s 62-12 win in the inaugural home opener in Toronto on Saturday.

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