MLR Player Moves Summary: February 16th, 2026 – March 1st, 2026

Major League Rugby’s 2026 season kicks off at the end of THIS MONTH! 4 teams have announced their complete squads for the upcoming campaign, but there may still be a few surprises for the 2 remaining teams that have not revealed their full rosters: the California Legion, and the Seattle Seawolves. The California Legion left it late to begin their announcements, and the Seattle Seawolves are right at the tail end of revealing their roster for 2026!

Welcome back to NARDB’s Player Moves Summary series! This series aims to keep fans up to date on every single player announcement to, from, and all around Major League Rugby ahead of the 2026 season. This week’s article follows the same pattern as the last few weeks, but unlike the usual 1-week timeframe this edition covers a couple of weeks to account for the drop in Player Moves announced lately. As the last team to begin announcing their Player Moves (by quite some way), the California Legion are unsurprisingly the only team still going strong with their announcements, and as a result this article is very Legion-heavy. The summary graphic for Player Moves announced between February 16th and March 1st is below followed by the one BIG re-signing of the last couple of weeks:

Summary Graphic of Player Moves around Major League Rugby between February 16 – March 1, 2026!

Re-signings

Seattle Seawolves fans can breath a sigh of relief, as on 23rd February the team confirmed the return of a Major League Rugby and Seawolves legend for his NINTH season in the league and with the team, club captain Riekert Hattingh. The son of capped Springbok Drikus Hattingh and capped USA Eagle himself, Riekert developed in the Blue Bulls system before moving to the US in 2015 and is one of a dwindling number of MLR players that played in the short-lived PRO Rugby competition back in 2016, where he represented the Ohio Aviators. As PRO Rugby was replaced with Major League Rugby, Hattingh signed with the Seattle Seawolves ahead of the inaugural 2018 season, scoring his first MLR try and earning 4 appearances as the Seawolves claimed the very first MLR Shield. Hattingh was a huge part of the Seawolves’ 2nd Shield in 2019, starting all 17 of his appearances, scoring 8 tries and completing 203 tackles and gaining 1,374m in possession, both of which remain career highs through the 2025 season. Skipping forward a few years, it does need to be mentioned that Hattingh was handed a 6-month ban from August 2022 – February 2023 which ruled him out of USA Eagles selection that fall due to testing positive for Tamoxifen, a banned substance under USADA rules. The Seattle Seawolves released a statement which mentioned that “At the time the medication was prescribed, neither Riekert nor the physician who prescribed the medication were aware that the medication was on the Specified Substance list and required a Therapeutic Use Exemption.” and states that “His prescription use did not confer any competitive advantage to Riekert, as reflected in his sanction.” Hattingh accepted personal responsibility for this, and did not miss any of the 2023 Major League Rugby season as a result of this. At face value this seems like an unfortunate mistake rather than anything malicious, and should not take anything away from Riekert Hattingh’s numerous achievements in MLR. A one-club man, Hattingh is undoubtedly a MLR Great already, and likely a first ballot Hall of Famer (if such a thing existed…). Hattingh has started every single one of his 94 appearances for the Seattle Seawolves, scoring 10+ tries on 2 occasions and dotting down 48 times in total, 2nd all-time in MLR behind only Dylan Fawsitt on 65. Hattingh has gained more metres than any other player in MLR history and is one of only 5 players to record over 5,000m gained, sitting 3rd all time on 5,563m. Defensively, he’s recorded over 120 tackles in 4 seasons, and over 200 tackles twice, sitting on 950 tackles made all time which puts him 4th in league history. Now returning to the Seattle Seawolves for a 9th season, Hattingh is likely to pass 50 tries scored, 100 appearances, and 1000 tackles made in 2026! At still only 31yo and with 6 tries scored in 14 games for the Seawolves in 2025 with 139 tackles made, it’s likely that Riekert Hattingh will still be Seattle’s go-to starting Number 8, joining the likes of Marno Redelinghuys, Paddy Ryan, Callum Botchar, and Kalisi Moli as back row options for the Seawolves.

A few days later on 27th February, the Seattle Seawolves announced another returning player from their 2025 squad, veteran Major League Rugby scrum-half Nick Boyer will return for his 9th season in the competition in 2026. The Sacramento, CA native began his MLR career in the league’s inaugural season in 2018 with the San Diego Legion, having graduated from UC-Berkeley. He started 6 of his 8 appearances for the Legion, before earning his test debut for the USA as Eagle #530 when he was called up as injury cover. Nick Boyer represented the San Diego Legion for 2 seasons between 2018-2019, scoring 7 tries on 25 games (17 starts) and recording a career high with 479m gained in possession. He spent a brief season with the Colorado Raptors in 2020, adding 2 tries and appearing in all 5 games before COVID-19 shut the season down. When MLR returned in 2021, Boyer had signed with the LA Giltinis, but was traded to the Houston SaberCats before making his Giltinis debut, where he spent 3 seasons and earned 15 starts in 36 appearances and scoring another 9 tries before re-joining the San Diego Legion for the 2024 season and earning another 9 appearances. Most recently, Boyer was dropped in to the Seattle Seawolves squad late in the 2025 season, and scored 2 tries in 6 games (5 starts) and added a pair of assists to help Seattle secure a playoff spot. In his 81 game Major League Rugby career, Nick Boyer has started 38 games and scored 20 tries and 113pts on just under 1,500m gained, and completed 260 tackles on defence. The 32yo joins the Seawolves as a depth option at 9, playing behind André Warner and competing with Seattle stalwart JP Smith.

Intra-League Signings

As is tradition lately, the California Legion got things started with the first Player Move of the week on 17th February when they announced the addition of US-Eligible Tongan prop Ma’ake Muti for their 2026 squad. A native of Tongatapu in Tonga, Ma’ake Muti moved to Hawaii with his family in 2008 and was a multi-sport athlete through high school, competing in wrestling, shot put, and gridiron football as well as playing club rugby with the Kalihi Raiders. He became a US citizen in 2014 along with his brother Netane Muti who has played in the NFL as a Guard with the Denver Broncos, Las Vegas Raiders, and Detroit Lions. Ma’ake Muti played football while attending Azusa Pacific University from 2014-2019, before returning to rugby following his graduation. His pro rugby career got off to a rocky start, as he signed with the Dallas Jackals ahead of their planned entry into MLR in 2021, but when this was pushed back to 2022 he landed in Los Angeles with the Giltinis, earning 6 Major League Rugby appearances off the bench to help the team lift the MLR Shield in their inaugural season. After spending his debut professional season in MLR, the football convert joined the American Raptors in Colorado, playing with the team from 2021-2024 and representing them in the South American Super Rugby Americas competition. Following news that the Raptors would not be playing professional rugby in 2025, Ma’ake Muti was picked up by the Miami Sharks and returned to MLR for their 2025 campaign. Muti appeared in 16 of the Sharks’ 17 games in 2025 including their lone playoff appearance in the Eastern Conference Semifinal. He started 12 times and scored his first career MLR try on 78m (as a prop, remember) and completed 91 tackles in total. Tongan born, US front row now returns to California with the Legion, and is the first out-and-out loosehead prop announced by the team for their 2026 campaign.

The California Legion kept the ball rolling and on 19th February 2026, they announced the signing of a TENTH former Rugby FC LA player ahead of their inaugural season in 2023 Major League Rugby draftee Matt Anticev. A native of Staten Island, NY, Anticev played rugby under USA Eagle and former Rugby New York scrum-half, and current MLR commentator Mike Petri at Xavier High School before attending the College of the Holy Cross for his undergrad. He attended Dartmouth College between 2021-2023 to earn his Masters degree, playing rugby throughout his time there. Upon his graduation, Anticev declared for the 2023 MLR Collegiate Draft and was selected in the 1st Round, 5th overall by Rugby ATL shortly before the news came out that the RATLers were relocating to Los Angeles as Rugby FC LA. The team announced that they had signed the young Fly-half for their inaugural season, and in his rookie year he earned 6 pro appearances including a pair of starts, recording over 50m gained in total. Anticev returned for a 2nd season with RFCLA in 2025 and earned an additional two appearances to bring his career total to 8 and counting. Matt Anticev now returns for a 3rd season in MLR, joining a new team but with a very familiar feel in the California Legion. Anticev is the first Fly-half confirmed by the team, although Tas Smith did fill in at 10 at times for RFCLA.

Following their two new additions from the week of February 9-16, the California Legion would also announce the first player move of the following week when they confirmed the signing of a 2nd fly-half on 22nd February: US-eligible Welshman Steffan Crimp! Born and raised in Wales, Crimp’s mother was born in Indiana and raised in San Diego, making him US-eligible and therefore classified as a domestic player in Major League Rugby. Crimp attended Cardiff Met University and represented the USA U20s against Canada in June 2023, before first entering Major League Rugby with Anthem RC during the 2024 season. In his debut season, Crimp earned 3 starts in 4 games for the rising stars, before being named to the USA Eagles Extended Player Squad for their July tests in 2024. Crimp returned to MLR the following year, signing with the San Diego Legion and enjoying a solid season in 2025, scoring 2 tries and 26pts total (53.85% from the tee) and starting 6 of his 7 appearances, recording over 275m gained. The USA Eagles are relatively thin at the fly-half position, so fans should keep an eye on Steffan Crimp during the 2026 season. He will compete for game time with Matt Anticev as the only other fly-half announced by the California Legion so far.

The Legion followed up the signing of Steffan Crimp with another signing the following day, confirming the addition of California native Ale Lopeti for his 5th Major League Rugby season in 2026. The younger brother of capped USA Eagle Tavite Lopeti, Ale joined the NOLA Gold ahead of the 2022 MLR season after spending the fall of 2021 playing with the Austin Gilgronis academy side, the Outlaws. Lopeti earned his MLR debut and 4 appearances off the bench total during his first season in the competition, upping this to 6 the following year including his first pro start, and scored his first MLR try on just under 200m gained (194) which remains his career high. From 2024, Ale Lopeti became a regular in the NOLA Gold matchday 23. After earning 10 appearances in the previous 2 seasons combined, he earned another 14 in 2024 alone and added another pair of tries while also recording 88 tackles completed, more than double his previous career high of 38. Lopeti enjoyed another career year in 2025, breaking into the Gold’s starting XV and earning 11 of his 13 career starts in 15 appearances that season, scoring 4 of his 7 career tries on 126m gained to pass 500m in his career. Defensively, Lopeti set another career high with 111 tackles made, recording over 100 tackles for the first time in his career.

A few days later, the California Legion announced the signing of a second former NOLA Gold player in Davis, CA lock Chase Jones. A graduate of St. Mary’s College in California, Jones declared for the 2022 MLR Collegiate Draft and was selected in the 1st Round, 6th Overall by the NOLA Gold using a pick acquired from the LA Giltinis. Jones signed with the team ahead of the 2023 season and played with the NOLA Gold academy side in fall of 2022, suffering an serious achilles injury that ruled him out for the entirety of the 2023 MLR season, with recovering lasting until well after the 2024 season had begun, 22months in total. Despite this major set back, Chase Jones remained with the NOLA Gold and re-signed with them for the 2025 season, where he finally earned his pro debut. Jones scored his first MLR try that year, and started 8 of his 11 appearances, completing just under 100 tackles completed in his first real season in Major League Rugby. Like Ale Lopeti, Jones now returns home to California to join the Legion for their inaugural season following the withdrawal of the NOLA Gold from MLR and is the first lock confirmed by the California Legion ahead of the 2026 season.

Averaging an announcement a day over the last week, the Legion announced the addition of another front row on 25th February with the signing of Scottish tighthead prop Michael Scott for his 2nd Major League Rugby campaign in 2026. The Scotsman developed in the Glasgow Warriors system, progressing through their academy before playing with the Ayrshire Bulls in the Super 6 competition from 2021-22. In 2023, he headed to Australia and joined the Northern Suburbs in the Shure Shield competition, representing the Norths between 2023-24 and must have impressed, as he was called up the the NSW Waratahs in Super Rugby as injury cover in 2024, earning his Super Rugby debut against the Moana Pasifika in Round 14. After a couple of years in Australia, Scott signed with the Houston SaberCats for the 2025 MLR season. In his first year in North America, Michael Scott appeared in 18 of the SaberCats’ 19 games, helping the team to a 14-2 regular season record and appearing in all 3 post-season games for Houston, including their 2025 Championship Game defeat to the New England Free Jacks. He earned 3 starts in 18 appearances, and recorded over 75 tackles made before the SaberCats’ surprise withdrawal from Major League Rugby. Now joining the California Legion, Michael Scott will compete for game time with Justus Tavai, the only other tighthead prop confirmed by the team so far.

The Legion continued to monopolise the Player Moves when they announced the addition of Fijian born Major League Rugby veteran Keni Nasoqeqe to their 2026 squad on 26th February! The 32yo lock/back row started is US rugby journey with Belmont Shore RFC in 2015, representing the California club until 2019 when he signed with the San Diego Legion at MLR level scoring 2 tries and starting 12 of his 13 games, earning three MLR Team of the Week selections to help the Legion advance to the 2019 Championship Game against the Seattle Seawolves. He would represent the San Diego Legion for 3 seasons between 2019-2021, earning 28 MLR appearances (22 starts) and scoring 5 tries. Following the 2021 campaign, Keni Nasoqeqe left California for Texas, signing with the Houston SaberCats and representing them for 4 seasons between 2022-2025. Nasoqeqe was a regular in the SaberCats’ matchday 23, and enjoyed a career year in 2024 when he scored a career high 4 tries in 17 games (13 starts) and gained 407m in possession (another career high) while completing 107 tackles in defence, his 3rd 100+ tackle season. Nasoqeqe earned 17 appearances in 3 of his 4 seasons in Houston, including both 2024 and 2025, and is closing in on 100 appearances in his career. He has earned 54 starts in 91 appearances across 7 MLR seasons to date, scoring 10 tries on just under 1,800m gained, and completing 630 tackles. Keni Nasoqeqe now returns to California to join the new-look Legion for their inaugural season in 2026. Although he primarily played in the back row for the SaberCats, the California Legion list Nasoqeqe as a lock (where he does have experience). He would be the first lock announced by the team for 2026, but it is likely that he will serve as a reserve for both the second and back rows of the Legion pack.

Believe it or not, the California Legion weren’t done there! Later on the 26th, the Golden State franchise announced the signing of their ELEVENTH former Rugby FC LA player: Australian loosehead prop Declan Leaney! A native of New South Wales, Leaney played with the famous Randwick Galloping Greens between 2019-2024, a favourite recruiting ground of California Legion (and former RFCLA) head coach Stephen Hoiles. Leaney was a part of the Shute Shield winning Randwick team in 2023, playing through a foot injury after entering the Championship game early. He headed to California to join Rugby FC LA ahead of the 2025 season, and started 2 of his 7 Major League Rugby appearances, earning a Team of the Week Selection on his debut in Round 8. He scored a first MLR try and recorded over 50m gained as well as 57 tackles made to help RFCLA qualify for their first, and only, playoff appearance. Leaney now returns for a 2nd MLR campaign for the California Legion’s inaugural season, and will be competing with new aquisition Ma’ake Muti for the Legion’s ‘1’ jersey in 2026.

Retirements & Departures

Early on 25th February, Missourian prop Alec McDonnell announced his retirement after 6 seasons of professional competition in Major League Rugby. Capable of playing both tighthead or loosehead, McDonnell developed in the famous Lindenwood Lions rugby program, attending LU between 2015-2019. Following his graduation, McDonnell headed to New York and signed with Rugby United New York ahead of the 2020 season where he earned his professional debut off the bench before the season shut down due to COVID-19. When MLR returned for the 2021 campaign, McDonnell had signed with the Houston SaberCats and spent three years in Texas, earning 10 starts in 25 appearances, playing 16 games for the ‘Cats in 2023. Following his time in Houston, McDonnell headed to Florida to join the Miami Sharks for their inaugural season in 2024, earning 16 appearances for the 2nd season in a row, starting 4 times and gaining a career high 101m in possession. He returned for a 2nd season with the Sharks in 2025 and enjoyed a career year, earning a personal best 10 starts in 15 games to pass 50 Major League Rugby appearances across his career and completing 55 tackles, marking the 4th season in a row where he recorded over 50 tackles made (55, 56, 52, 55, talk about consistent!). With the Miami Sharks withdrawing from Major League Rugby during the 2025/26 offseason, McDonnell has made the decision to call time on his playing career after 6 seasons and 24 starts in 57 appearances across 3 teams. This is a shame, as at only 29yo, he is entering prime front row age and had caught the eye of the National Team after a solid 2025 season, having been named as a non-travelling reserve for the Eagles’ July tests following the season. Unfortunately, with significantly fewer roster spots available in MLR in 2026 compared to previous years, playing professionally is no longer a viable career path for players like McDonnell. Regardless, Congratulations Alec on a fantastic career in MLR, and all very best of luck in your next chapter!

In a bit of a jaw-dropping development, on 26th February Old Glory DC announced the departure of starting scrum-half Connor Buckley, thanking him for his contributions to the team just a month out from the start of the 2026 MLR season! This shock departure comes just over a month after Old Glory DC announced that Buckley would return for the 2026 season back on January 20th, and Buckley was included when the Flags confirmed their complete 2026 squad just 2 weeks ago on 16th February. As mentioned in the Player Moves Summary article that covered his re-signing, Buckley has earned 40 starts in 61 appearances across his 5 seasons in Major League Rugby, recording over 200 tackles made and 600m gained, scoring 11 tries. Buckley is a MLR Champion, having lifted the Shield with New York in 2022, and started 21 of his 30 appearances with Old Glory DC from 2024-25. NARDB understands that although Connor Buckley has not officially retired, the New York native will not participate in the 2026 season and may be pursuing opportunities away from professional rugby. Without Buckley, the Flags are now down to John Levfevre and 2024 draftee and academy call-up Aidan Ridgway at scrum-half. Lefevre has experience in the 9 jersey in MLR, but may struggle as a regular starter and Ridgway is yet to make his MLR debut.

Old Glory DC got to work immediately and signed a replacement for Buckley the following day, announcing the addition of New Zealand scrum-half and former Houston SaberCat, Jay Renton for their 2026 squad. A former All Blacks U20 player, Renton played with the Southland Stags in New Zealand’s National Provincial Championship competition between 2017-2024. He first entered Major League Rugby with the Houston SaberCats during the 2nd half of the 2024 season, starting both of his appearances that season and scoring his first MLR try. The following season Renton was a regular in the SaberCats 23, starting 7 times and appearing in 17 of their 19 games, including all 3 playoff contests and finishing as a Major League Rugby runner-up following defeat to the New England Free Jacks in the 2025 Championship Game in Rhode Island. Renton added a 2nd MLR try that year and a pair of assists recording just under 250m gained in possession. Re-entering MLR after playing with the Tasman Mako for the 2025 NPC season, Renton will likely slot in as Old Glory DC’s starting scrum-half with John Lefevre acting as reserve with a handful of starts, and Aidan Ridgway a 3rd string option. The fact that Renton is not classed as a domestic player will make things tricky for DC, but he is a great last minute replacement for Connor Buckley.

Wrapping Up

Unlike recent Player Moves articles, this edition covers the last fortnight of Player Moves rather than just the last week due to the general decrease of announcements across the league, which does make sense given that training camps have begun! This doesn’t apply to the California Legion however, who are yet to announce roughly a third of their roster, even though these players have surely turned up in camp in California. As a result, this week’s article is remarkably Legion-heavy, with 8 of the 13 moves involving new additions for the California Legion’s inaugural squad. However, the Seattle Seawolves helped to mix things up with a pair of re-signings including club legend Riekert Hattingh, and Old Glory DC had to scramble to replace Connor Buckley, who is pursuing opportunities outside of rugby. The California Legion will no doubt still be busy with their Player Moves as we are under 4 weeks out of their opening game against Anthem RC to kick off the 2026 season!

Thank you, as always, for reading this week’s Player Moves Article! We’re no doubt at the tail end of Player Moves ahead of the 2026 season. Be sure to check back here next week (dependant on player moves…) to find out more about all of this week’s news. If there are any Player Moves that you notice, or just to say what you think about these articles or the site in general, you can let NARDB/James know on social media: @MLRStats on Instagram/Threads, JamDelay & @NARugbyDB on Twitter/X, and @JamDelay@NARDB on Bluesky! Alternatively, you can reach out to NARDB via the ‘Contact’ tab on this site.

Finally, if you’re looking to pick up some new rugby gear, visit rugbynow.com and use code ‘MLRSTATS’ at checkout for 15% off of your order!

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