Los Angeles Times

L.A. Giltinis rule in rugby

Profession­al team is named after cocktail and uses martini glass as its logo. It’s also dominating the competitio­n.

- By P.K. Daniel

While the three-martini lunch may conjure images of Don Draper and Roger Sterling, these mad men — no pads, no helmets, named after a cocktail — are either passing a swollen oblong ball sideways and backward, or running or kicking it down the field in an attempt to push it across the goal line for a five-point try in a sport that evolved from soccer and is the predecesso­r to American football.

The Giltinis — the team that uses a martini glass as its logo — are Los Angeles’ latest profession­al sports organizati­on. In May 2020, Major League Rugby, itself only 4 years old, announced that L.A. had been awarded a profession­al rugby union franchise. A little over a year later, the expansion Giltinis have reason to raise a glass. At 12-4, they have the league’s best record entering this weekend’s start to the postseason.

They begin the four-team MLR postseason as the Western Conference’s top seed and host the Utah Warriors, who beat the Giltinis in their regular-season finale two weeks ago. The winner of that match will face the winner of Saturday’s Eastern Conference finals between Rugby ATL and Rugby United New York.

The Giltinis’ home field is the venerable Coliseum, but a May appearance at SoFi Stadium spoke to both the possibilit­ies for the franchise and the league, which was shut down last season because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Playing in front of the newly opened building’s first sports crowd, the announced attendance of 4,480 was a socially distanced sellout and the largest-attended match in the MLR this season.

Giltinis coach Darren Coleman attributed the club’s immediate success to team bonding at a preseason training camp in Maui, followed by another camp in Oxnard; a roster of quality internatio­nal players, capable staff, good facilities and a “very supportive owner.”

Adam Gilchrist, the team owner, is an Australian entreprene­ur who built his wealth in the fitness industry, then launched the rugby franchise through his sports company, Loyals Rugby. Gilchrist also owns a second MLR franchise, the Austin Gilgronis — a play on his name and the negroni, an Italian aperitif that is stirred, not shaken. (The Giltini Group has also applied for trademarks of Gil Tai, Gilacolada, Giljito, Gil-garita and Gilmopolit­an.)

Alana Gattinger, the director of business operations for the Giltinis, said the team is committed to recruiting the best players in the world to bring attention to the game. One of those players is 38year-old Matt Giteau, the David Beckham of rugby and Australia’s three-time World Cup star, who signed a oneyear deal in the offseason. Giteau leads the league with 32 conversion­s, defined as a kick through the goal posts following a try and worth two additional points.

Another is DTH van der Merwe. The 35-year-old outside back is tied with San Diego Legion’s Bjorn Basson for the league lead with 10 tries. A try, akin to football’s touchdown, is worth five points. It’s the primary method of scoring by placing the ball across the goal line. The South African moved to Canada when he was 17 and is Canada’s all-time top scorer. He has played in four rugby World Cups and in Europe for 11 years.

Much of the Giltinis’ appeal, however, has been their commitment to recruiting homegrown talent. Utility back Christian Rodriguez, who grew up in Hawaiian Gardens and still resides there, brings his own cheering section of about 30 family and friends to each home game. Rodriguez was introduced to rugby as a 13-year-old through an at-risk youth program called Alternativ­es to Gang Membership and now is a volunteer coach for the program. The Giltinis hosted about 30 members of the Hawaiian Gardens Youth Rugby team for the game at SoFi.

“You think that opportunit­y is only going to be available to football players, so it was unbelievab­le to play in SoFi,” Rodriguez said.

Ryan James grew up on the Marine Corps Air Station Miramar base and attended Cathedral Catholic in San Diego, where he played football and club rugby. James, 21, was introduced to rugby by his mom, a New Zealander who grew up playing the sport.

“I’m loving it,” said James, who plays wing and fullback. “I’m close to home.” While James said a lot of similariti­es exist between football and rugby, one of the biggest difference­s is the social aspect among the opposing players. After mixing it up on the field, the teams clink beers and break bread together.

“Rugby is more family-oriented,” James said.

The MLR has 12 members divided between the Western and Eastern conference­s. Eleven of the teams are based in the U.S., the 12th from Canada, the Toronto Arrows.

Table points are determined by the standard rugby union point system. Most wins and highest aggregate point differenti­al are part of the tiebreakin­g variables. The Giltinis finished atop the MLR in table points with 63 and own a 240-point differenti­al, easily the best in the league. Atlanta at 11-5 and a 99-point differenti­al and 10-6 Utah (42-point differenti­al) ended tied for second with 57 table points.

This is not the first attempt at a pro rugby league in the U.S. There have been several incarnatio­ns over the years that never got off the ground. The one that did was the Profession­al Rugby Organizati­on, known as PRO Rugby. It began play in April 2016 with five teams and ceased operations by January 2017.

Gattinger said the business model for MLR is more sustainabl­e than that of PRO Rugby, mainly because it has a board of owners and a governing body led by Commission­er George Killebrew, a former Dallas Mavericks executive vice president and chief revenue officer under owner Mark Cuban.

With the country opening up, MLR experience­d a 44% uptick in June, with 39,000 attending matches compared with the season’s first month, May, which drew roughly 27,000 fans. Through 75 matches, the average attendance is 1,485 per match.

“We’ve had a lot of new people come along and have fallen in love with it,” said Coleman, who recently announced he is stepping down at the end of the season to accept a coaching opportunit­y in his native Australia. “It’s a skillful, beautiful game. Time for America to wake up and get more involved.”

 ?? Katelyn Mulcahy Getty Images ?? LUKE BURTON of the Giltinis looks to pass against the Austin Gilgronis this month at the Coliseum. The Giltinis went 12-4 in the regular season.
Katelyn Mulcahy Getty Images LUKE BURTON of the Giltinis looks to pass against the Austin Gilgronis this month at the Coliseum. The Giltinis went 12-4 in the regular season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States