Eastern Pennsylvania Rugby Union Explained

Eastern Penn Rugby Football Union Geographical Union
Abbreviation:Eastern Penn GU
Formation:2013
Region Served:Delaware
New Jersey; Pennsylvania, United States of America
Countryflag:USA

The Eastern Pennsylvania Geographic Union (EPGU) is the Geographical Union (GU) for rugby union teams in Eastern and Central Pennsylvania, as well as Delaware and parts of New Jersey.[1] EPGU is part of USA Rugby.

History

The EPRU was the first Local Area Union to hold Level I & Level II Coaching Certification programs. Currently, the EPRU supports 82 full members and 64 high school teams. See .

The EPRU became a geographic union in September 2013 and was renamed the Eastern Penn Geographic Union (EPGU).[2]

College Championships

2004 EPRU Men's Division I Champions: University of Pennsylvania

2004 EPRU Women's Division I Champions: Princeton University

2004 EPRU Women's Division II Champions: Temple University

2005 EPRU Women's Division I Champions: Princeton University

2005 EPRU Women's Division II Champions: Kutztown University

2006 EPRU Men's Division III Champions: Harrisburg RFC

2006 EPRU Women's Division I Champions: West Chester University

2007 EPRU Men's Division I Champions: Millersville University

2007 EPRU Women's Division I Champions: West Chester University

2008 EPRU Women's Division I Champions: West Chester University

2008 EPRU Men's Division II Champions: St. Joseph's University

2008 EPRU Men's Division III Champions: Widener University

2009 EPRU Men's Division II Champions: West Chester University

2011 EPRU Men's Division III Champions: Rowan University

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: USA Club Rugby: Geographical Unions. usarugby.org/. 2014-03-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20140213045840/http://usarugby.org/geographical-unions. 2014-02-13. dead.
  2. Web site: USA Club Rugby: Geographical Unions. usarugby.org/. 2014-03-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20140213045840/http://usarugby.org/geographical-unions. 2014-02-13. dead.