Delta Rugby Club

Delta
Full name Delta Rugby Club
Union Unión de Rugby de Buenos Aires
Nickname(s) Yacaré
Founded 19 November 2009 (2009-11-19) [1]
Location Tigre, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
Ground(s) Rincón de Milberg, Tigre, Argentina
President Horacio Sanguinetti [1]
Coach(es) Gastón Boniface
Sergio Torres
League(s) Torneo de la URBA Grupo I
2016 10° of Reubicación A [2]
1st kit
2nd kit
Official website
www.deltarugbyclub.com

Delta Rugby Club, or just Delta, is an Argentine rugby union and field hockey club, located in Tigre, Buenos Aires Province. The rugby union team currently plays in the Torneo de la URBA Grupo I, the first division of the Unión de Rugby de Buenos Aires league system. Founded in 2009, Delta is the newest rugby club taking part in the union tournaments.

History

After rugby union was introduced at the club San Fernando played at the highest level of the Unión de Rugby de Buenos Aires championship until 2009, when after disputing the Top14 of Torneo de la URBA the club punished five players of the first division, banning them for periods from three months to two years. Due to that suspension the club could not play the seven tournament.

The banned players left San Fernando to establish a new club, so "Delta Rugby Club" was founded on 19 November 2009 and started to play at Grupo IV, the lowest division of the Unión de Rugby de Buenos Aires.[3]

With a team dismantled because of the exodus of its most notable players one year before, San Fernando made a poor campaign in the 2010 championship and was relegated to Grupo II (the second division) where it currently plays.[4]

Delta RC played its home games in a field property of Club San Patricio until 2011, when the club opened its own facilities, which included a field. The installations are located in Rincón de Milberg, a division of Tigre Partido.[5]

In 2013, Delta promoted to the first división when only four years had passed since its foundation. The team achieved its goal after defeating San Albano by 42-27.[6]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.