The Guardian (USA)

Tendai Mtawarira, World Cup-winning 'Beast', joins Old Glory DC in MLR

- Martin Pengelly in New York

The World Cup-winning South Africa prop Tendai Mtawarira has signed for Old Glory DC, the Washington-based team which will enter Major League Rugby next year.

“I’m really excited to come play rugby in Washington DC for Old Glory,” the man popularly known as “the Beast” told the Guardian, shortly after signing a one-year deal with his new team while on a visit to New York City.

“This conversati­on started quite a while back, it’s probably been over 10 months, chatting about the possibilit­y of pursuing a career in America.”

Mtawarira was born in Zimbabwe but played 117 times for the Springboks in a storied career which came to an end after the World Cup final against England in Yokohama last month. He played Currie Cup and Super Rugby for the Sharks, based in Durban, and also turned out for the Barbarians. The move to Washington was managed by Kyros Sports, a sports marketing company Mtawarira co-owns.

“I’ve been a loyal player to the Sharks and the Springboks,” Mtawarira said, “and I have had an amazing career. I’ve been blessed to have that longevity and eventually come out of it as a World Cup winner. I was always looking for a great opportunit­y overseas after that.

“Coming to America excited me the most. The league is still young and for me to be part of something that is still brand new and to be a mentor to young rugby players, that really excited me. I want to give back a lot more because I was given a hell of a lot from the game. It changed my life, literally.”

Mtawarira was linked to Gloucester in the English Premiershi­p but he said “the US excited me very much, above going to France [or England]. Yes, the money’s big in France and big in Europe but I wanted to be part of something that might contribute to my legacy.

“America really excites me: they say it’s the land of opportunit­y.”

Mtawarira’s trip to the US to sign for DC also brought the opportunit­y to watch LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers but he remains focused on rugby. From famously pulverisin­g English World Cup-winner Phil Vickery in 2009 – Guardian headline, “Lions show their claws but cannot tame the Beast” – to dismantlin­g Dan Cole in the World Cup final of 2019, he has been a destructiv­e scrummager and a threat around the pitch. His signing is a major coup, for Old Glory and MLR.

“To have a player like Tendai join Major League Rugby is the reason we started this team 15 months ago,” said Paul Sheehy, a former US Eagles fullback who co-owns Old Glory with Chris Dunleavy and the Scottish Rugby Union, which holds a minority stake.

“It’s going to elevate MLR to another level. So I’m ecstatic, and he’s a wonderful fit with Old Glory. We look forward to seeing him on the field. All good things come to those that are patient. Just to have Tendai interested in the United States I think validates the entire league and is a critical piece for USA Rugby and MLR.”

The MLR salary cap is low, at $500,000, and squads are dominated by players from the US and Canada. But Mtawarira, now 34, follows other former internatio­nals into the competitio­n.

Rugby United New York, rivals in the Eastern Conference, employ the England full-back Ben Foden and France centre Matthieu Bastareaud. The San Diego Legion have signed the double World Cup-winning All Black centre Ma’a Nonu while New Zealand wing Rene Ranger and Australia back Digby Ioane are with the Colorado Raptors.

The Seattle Seawolves have won both championsh­ip games so far, beating Colorado in 2018 and San Diego earlier this year. For 2020, they have a former internatio­nal of their own: the Argentina back-rower Juan Manuel Leguizamón, formerly of London Irish, Stade Français, Lyon and Jaguares.

The third season of MLR kicks off in February with five games over two weekends in Las Vegas. After the Guardian broke the news last month that Colorado may withdraw, the league has confirmed it will operate 12 teams, the Raptors among them. The New England Free Jacks and Rugby ATL, in

Boston and Atlanta, join Old Glory as expansion projects.

This week, George Killebrew, formerly in the back office for the Dallas Mavericks in the NBA, was named as the second MLR commission­er. Killebrew said Los Angeles and Dallas would launch expansion teams in 2021. Former Toulon owner Mourad Boudjellal has been linked with a team in Miami.

Sheehy predicted Old Glory would be “beyond competitiv­e” in their first season, and said the signing of Mtawarira would “put a stake in the ground”.

Joking about telling his players to deliberate­ly knock the ball on, in order to use their new prop’s scrummagin­g abilities to the max, he said fans should “really be excited about the product we’re going to put on the field”.

 ??  ?? Tendai Mtawarira at the World Cup in Japan. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian
Tendai Mtawarira at the World Cup in Japan. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian
 ??  ?? Mtawarira poses with Prince Harry, South Africa captain Siya Kolisi and the Web Ellis Cup. Photograph: David Ramos - World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images
Mtawarira poses with Prince Harry, South Africa captain Siya Kolisi and the Web Ellis Cup. Photograph: David Ramos - World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images

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