Vancouver Wave

The Vancouver Wave are a Canadian rugby union team based in Vancouver, British Columbia. The team plays in the Rugby Canada National Junior Championship and draws most of its players from the Vancouver Rugby Union and the British Columbia Rugby Union, one of fourteen Rugby Unions that have rep teams in the RCSL.

Vancouver Wave
Full nameVancouver Wave Rugby Football Club
UnionRugby Canada
Vancouver Rugby Union
British Columbia Rugby Union
Nickname(s)The Wave
Founded1998?
LocationVancouver, British Columbia
Ground(s)Brockton Oval at Stanley Park (Capacity: 5,000)
Chairman
Coach(es) Colin McKenzie
League(s)RCSL (1998-2008)
RCNJC (2009-present)
1st kit
2nd kit

The Wave play their "home" games at the Brockton Oval at Stanley Park in Vancouver.

The team played under the name BC Wave for the 2006 and 2007 RCSL seasons, but later switched back to using Vancouver Wave.

On August 1, 2009, the team won their first national championship. When they defeated the Toronto Rebellion 41-21.

History

In 1998, Rugby Canada and the provincial unions agreed to form the Rugby Canada Super League. Fourteen unions and sub-unions were invited to compete in the new semi-professional league.

In 2009, Rugby Canada decided to disband the RCSL and replace it with a new U-20 league called the Rugby Canada National Junior Championship. The Wave was chosen as one of the remaining RCSL clubs to enter the newly formed league.

Season-by-season records

Season records
SeasonWLTFinishPlayoff results
Vancouver Wave
19983306th West Division--
19994203rd West Division--
20023203rd West Division--
20033304th West Division--
20044202nd West Division--
20052405th West Division--
BC Wave
20061304th West Division--
20070405th West Division--
Vancouver Wave
20081305th West Division--
20093011st Pacific DivisionWon West Final (Mavericks)
Won Championship Final (Rebellion)
Totals24261 (regular season, 1998–2009)
200 (playoffs, 1998–2009)
gollark: As I said, with some batteries you can run it on less.
gollark: I mean, you can run it on less if you have loads of storage while the fusion reactor starts up.
gollark: 19.2kRF/t for electromagnets on a size 1, the other 10 is just to heat it up.
gollark: Fusion takes about 30kRF/t to start up.
gollark: Neutron fluid is from FUSION reactors.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.