Hello all,
My name is Jon Bull I have been playing Rugby since 1991. I recently relocated from Florida to Alpena MI for family reasons and I reached out to Cd Brennan about restarting the North Shore Maulers. I started playing Rugby for the University of Massachusetts (Worcester campus) in 1991 where we went to the Div. III 1991 and 1992 New England Rugby Union Championship where we placed first and second respectively. Since then I have played for the University of NH, Div. II, (Plymouth Campus) Rugby Team, The Worcester All-Blacks and The Miami Men’s Rugby team and the Brevard Red Eye RFC in Cocoa, FL., both of which were was Div. 1 teams in 1996 to 2000. I recently relocated from Florida to Michigan and would like to restart the North Michigan Maulers Rugby Club for RFU play either in Boyne or Alpena. I would also like to see about fielding a Michigan Side for the Old Man of the Mountain Tournament hosted by the Worcester All Blacks at Cannon Mountain in NH in June of every year.
This is a three day tournament that is hosted by the Worcester All Blacks every June and also includes grilled meat, seafood (Including NE Lobster!) and of course, lots of beer. Male and Female Rugby Players from all over New England and Canada and attend every year. Overnight camping is encouraged and there are local hotels for people who prefer to sleep in a bed. The tournament is also open to Women’s rugby teams as well as Men and there are also costume competitions and theme parties as well. Let’s bring Rugby back to Northern Michigan!
Jonathan F. Bull, Esq., USMC (retired)
Be a rugger and get on the pitch this summer!

See everyone tonight for FIRST PRACTICE April 21, 2021. You don’t need any special gear to start, not even cleats, just a water bottle – but we will have extra just in case. Just show up and we’ll see you then! Rotary Park, Boyne City from 6-8pm. (Field closest to the tennis courts)

Fundraiser & Recruitment Event

STILL RECRUITING
We need numbers! Men ages 18+ No experience necessary – we’ll teach you everything about rugby. And your fitness level doesn’t matter either. That’s what the club is about – to get fit, play rugby, have fun, team competition, and drink beer afterward! It’s never too late to try something new. And very little cost involved – just a pair of cleats at some point, but you can start in gym shoes. Commitment would be 1 or 2 practices a week, perhaps a few social games this fall, but we’d like to be competitive in the league next year. But we need numbers for training scrums, line-outs, plays, and field kicking. Contact the Maulers today!

Maulers gets first major sponsor
Welcome to the first official sponsor of the Maulers RFC. Boyne City Tap room! Specializing in American craft beer and food, they will be hosting a fundraiser/recruiting event on Wednesday, July 22nd for the Maulers from 5-8 pm. 1$ of every pint bought and 10% of food will go to our club. So everyone save the date and come join us! Anyone interested in joining the team or just talking rugby? Come have a pint! PLEASE SHARE

Boyne City Tap Room
220 South Lake St
Boyne City, MI 49712
231.459.4487
Maulers are on Amazon Smile
Everyone shops on Amazon, right? Well, you can do us a huge favor by using Amazon Smile for all your purchases (same login deets as Amazon.com) and choosing the North Shore Maulers RFC as your charity. A percentage of your purchase will go to our club. That’s it. That’s all you have to do! PLEASE SHARE. Lots of thanks and love from the Maulers.
Click here to support the Maulers with all your Amazon purchases. https://smile.amazon.com/ch/85-0506235
WE MADE THE NEWS!
Maulers family, there is an article in the Traverse City Record-Eagle about the club.
Here is the transcript, but you can also find it here:
BOYNE CITY — The first professional rugby match Corinne Brennan witnessed firsthand came at Edinburgh’s 67,000-capacity Murrayfield Stadium.
Scotland against Italy. The game’s full range of national pride, rugged physicality and respectful fan bases were on display.
She hopes to bring that to Boyne City and northern Michigan.
“We’re really passionate about rugby,” said Brennan, who along with her husband Dick and Sean Lynch have started up the North Shore Maulers Football Rugby Club. “Because it’s a new sport, it’s like a family. It really is an extended family.”
The coronavirus pandemic impacted the team’s development in different ways than you’d expect.
It’s slowed down the club’s ability to play games, but the down time gave the Maulers braintrust more time to organize. The team has a store to buy team gear, wrote bylaws, submitted incorporation plans to the state, started up various social media accounts and received 501©(3) non-profit status.
“COVID really let us dive a little deeper,” said Lynch, the team’s president and also a player.
Dick Brennan, 48, started playing rugby at age 5, growing up in Australia and moving in his 20s to play in England and Ireland. The couple has boys ages 8 and 12, and the entire family has dual citizenship.
“We’re just trying to get numbers at the moment,” Dick Brennan said with a thick Australian accent. “Nothing is built overnight.”
The team had 24 players at Tuesday’s training session at Boyne City’s Rotary Park, including 11 for the men’s team. Twenty youth players showed up Thursday. That’s quite an improvement from the club’s first sessions last fall, meeting once a week as it started up.
Dick Brennan said the club would like to eventually have a women’s team as well, much like the Blues. The club, which draws players from Petoskey, Boyne City, Charlevoix, East Jordan, Harbor Springs, Boyne Falls and the surrounding areas, coordinates with the Petoskey YMCA for some youth camps.
Tony Dell’Acqua sit on the board of both teams, and the Blues and Maulers hope to have a good relationship. Many of the Maulers players are former Blues who wanted to cut down on their weekly training travel.
The Maulers expect to start in Division 4 and work up the sport’s relegation system. The Blues currently sit in Division 2.
“Everything outside of actually getting a game played has gone pretty well,” Lynch said. “We have a lot of momentum going. It’s all up from here.”
The team trains each Tuesday and Thursday at Rotary Park in Boyne City and hold a team activity each Saturday in place of games until cleared to do so by USA Rugby and Michigan Rugby Union. The Saturday events range from runs to social gatherings to watching games on television.
One hurdle that remains is finding a more permanent home.
“We’re trying to get a home field, but we’re competing against football, soccer and lacrosse,” said Corinne Brennan, who grew up in Grand Rapids before moving abroad. “There’s just not enough field space in northern Michigan. We’re competing with screen time.”
The July 11 Cherry Pit tournament hosted by the Blues was canceled earlier this week.
“We had these big plans of eight or nine games,” Lynch said, “but now we’re just hoping to get in a few sevens.”
Lynch said the team aims to set up some friendlies as things open up.
The team raised money through a can drive this spring and also has an online crowdfunding campaign located at https://www.piggybackr.com/users/maulersrugby/fundraisers/north-shore-maulers-rugby-football-club.
North Shore Fundraiser
Please help if you can! North Shore Maulers RFC is running a fundraiser! We know times are hard, but even the smallest donation helps the men’s, women’s, and youth rugby teams. We are starting from scratch, so even if you afford a cash donation, we are always looking for in-kind support and volunteers. Contact us at maulersrugby@gmail.com
** We are a 501c3 non-profit organization and any donation is 100% tax deductible.
Clink on the image below to donate. THANK YOU

RECRUITING
