Tag: California Legion

MLR Player Moves Summary: January 19th, 2026 – January 25th, 2026

Already almost a month into the new year, and the build up to the 2026 Major league Rugby season is flying past thanks in part to plenty of activity from almost every team. We have 1 complete roster (Anthem RC), with the other 5 remaining MLR teams steadily announcing their squads for a critical 2026 season which kicks off in just over 2 months! A jersey reveal must be coming any day now but until that day comes, we have plenty of Player Moves to talk about following another busy week around the league.

Welcome back to NARDB’s Player Moves Summary series! These weekly articles aim to keep fans up to date on every single player announcement to, from, and all around Major League Rugby ahead of the 2026 season. As always, let’s start with the summary graphic for Player Moves announced between January 19th and January 25th, 2026, followed by the re-signings section:

2-Page Summer Graphic of all Player Moves around MLR between January 19-15, 2026

Re-Signings

Old Glory DC kicked off the week’s Player Moves on 20th January when they confirmed the return of New York native Connor Buckley for his 3rd season with the team and 6th in Major League Rugby in 2026. The Iona College alum earned a Rudy Scholz nomination in 2020 but went undrafted that year, with the scrum-half instead signing with Rugby New York as a free agent for the 2021 MLR season. Buckley only earned 3 appearances off the bench in 2021, but became a regular option for the 9 jersey from 2022 onwards. He earned 8 starts and 13 appearances and completed over 50 tackles during New York’s Shield-winning 2022 season, and would improve across the board for the following season with 11 starts in 15 games in 2023, scoring his first 3 MLR tries with 188m gained and 66 tackles made which remain his career highs in both. After the Ironworkers withdrew from MLR in late 2023, Buckley signed with Old Glory DC for the 2024 season and has represented the Flags ever since. He has scored 8 of his 11 career tries in his 30 games for DC (21 starts), and has 61 Major League Rugby appearances in total, starting 40 times and gaining over 600m with 211 tackles completed in his career. With Ethan McVeigh now moving to the New England Free Jacks, Connor Buckley is almost definitely going to serve as Old Glory DC’s go-to scrum-half, backed up by John Lefevre.

Intra-league signings

Not content with the return of their regular scrum-half Connor Buckley, later that same day Old Glory DC announced that they had picked up former Miami Sharks hooker Kirby Myhill for his 3rd season in Major League Rugby in 2026. The capped Welsh international first signed with the Sharks ahead of their inaugural season in 2024, starting 6 of his 7 games in their debut year and scoring his first MLR try on 222m gained as the Sharks held their own. Myhill returned the following year and had a far better year almost across the board. He started 10 of his 15 appearances and scored 4 tries including 1 in the Miami Sharks’ first (and as it turned out, only) MLR playoff game in the Eastern Conference Semifinal against the New England Free Jacks. Although Myhill made less ground in 2025 than the previous season with 117m gained, he more than tripled his tackles completed total from 34 in 2024 to 114 in 2025. It’s a pleasant surprise to see Kirby Myhill remain in Major League Rugby after the Miami Sharks withdrew from the league earlier in the offseason. Old Glory DC will be hoping his leadership and experience is worth using a valuable foreign player spot, as the Welshman slots into the middle of the Flags front row as the first hooker announced by the team for 2026.

Old Glory DC were not the only MLR side to announce a new hooker for the 2026 season last week, however. Late on 20th January, the California Legion announced that they had added USA Eagle #466 Joe Taufete’e to their squad! The American Samoa-born forward has the distinction of being the only Men’s Player from a ‘Tier 2’ nation to ever be nominated for World Rugby Player of the Year while he was playing for the Worcester Warriors when the shortlist was announced for the 2019 award ultimately won by South Africa’s Pieter-Steph du Toit. Following his time in England and a stint in France, Joe Taufete’e entered Major League Rugby with the LA Giltinis in 2022, starting 7 of his 8 appearances and scoring 2 tries on just shy of 300m gained before the Giltinis were disqualified prior to the 2022 postseason. ‘Big Joe’ would sign on with the Houston SaberCats part-way through the following season, scoring double the number of tries as the previous season in fewer games (6 starts in 7 games), earning his first MLR postseason appearance as a replacement as the SaberCats fell to the Seattle Seawolves in the Western Conference Eliminator. During the 2023/24 offseason, the Houston SaberCats traded Joe Taufete’e to those Seattle Seawolves in a blockbuster deal that saw Seattle’s star fly-half AJ Alatimu head to Texas. Taufete’e would double his try total again, with a career high 8 tries scored in 14 games (12 starts) for the Seawolves including a try in the 2024 Championship Final as Seattle fell to the New England Free Jacks. The 2024 campaign was Taufete’e’s best in MLR to date, with over 400m gained and just shy of 100 tackles made, as well as 8 tries to take his career total to 14. He would increase this to 16 as a member of the NOLA Gold in 2025, mainly as the back-up hooker behind Ale Lopeti with 3 starts in 10 games. Across his MLR career so far, Joe Taufete’e has scored 16 tries in 39 MLR games (28 starts) acrodd 4 different teams with just under 1000m gained and just over 250 tackles completed. The USA Eagle was the 3rd player ever announced by the California Legion behind Christian Poidevin and Jason Damm, and marks his 5th Major League Rugby team in as many seasons.

@CalLegion via Twitter/X

Not done there, a couple of days later on the evening of 22nd January, the California Legion also announced that they had signed California native Ryan James for the 2026 MLR season. A native of San Diego, CA, James first entered Major League Rugby with the Colorado Raptors, earning his pro debut off the bench in a single appearance before the COVID-19 pandemic shut the league down after only 5 games rounds. He joined the LA Giltinis for their inaugural season in 2021, scoring 5 tries and starting 6 of his 15 appearances including coming off the bench in the 2021 Championship Final to help the Giltinis secure the Shield. James represented the Giltinis in 25 games over 2 seasons from 2021-22, gaining over 900m total and scoring 6 tries in 12 starts. Following their disqualification and subsequent folding, Ryan James returned to Colorado and spent 2023 representing the rebranded American Raptors in the Super Rugby Americas competition, before returning to California and signing with his hometown MLR team, the San Diego Legion. He started all 27 of his appearances with the San Diego Legion between 2024-25, recording over 800m gained and 80 tackles completed in each of his 2 seasons there and scoring 6 tries. To date in MLR, Ryan James has 12 tries on over 2,500m gained in 53 appearances (39 starts) over 5 seasons, with just shy of 250 tackles completed as a winger. With the California Legion, James joins fellow former San Diego and Giltinis player Christian Poidevin under a familiar ex-Giltinis/Legion coaching staff of Stephen Hoiles, Dave Dennis (both formerly Giltinis), and Dave Clancy (former SD Legion).

The Chicago Hounds began their Player Moves for the week on January 21st when they announced that they had signed Brazilian international front rower and Major League Rugby Champion Wilton Rebolo for their 2026 campaign. Rebolo earned his test debut for Brazil against Germany back in 2015, and was still a regular in the Brazilian pack for their autumn internationals in 2025. The São Jose dos Campos native entered Major League Rugby with the Austin Gilgronis in 2020, featuring for the AGs in the pre-season but suffering a knee injury that ruled him out of the COVID-shortened year. He returned the following year with Rugby New York, becoming the first Brazilian to play in the league and earning 12 appearances (2 starts) as well as scoring his first MLR try. Rebolo returned with the Ironworkers in 2022 and enjoyed his best season to date, starting 5 of his 15 appearances and adding a 2nd career try on over 150m gained with 89 tackles made (both career highs) to help the Ironworkers advance to the 2022 Championship Final and secure their first Shield over the Seattle Seawolves. Rebolo started all 3 of the Ironworkers’ playoff games en-route. Following the MLR season, Rebolo was picked up by the Western Force in Super Rugby, playing with Northland in New Zealand’s National Provincial Championship (NPC) in the fall of 2022 before earning his Super Rugby Debut for the Force in Round 15 of the 2023 season, becoming the first Brazilian player to ever feature in Super Rugby. Rebolo would return to MLR mid-way through the 2024 season, signing with Rugby FC LA and starting 2 of his 7 appearances during their inaugural season and during the offseason, RFCLA traded Rebolo to the Houston SaberCats in exchange for the 8th overall Draft Pick in 2025 (used to select Ieremia Ieremia). Rebolo would score his 3rd MLR try for the SaberCats in one of his 10 appearances for Houston, also appearing off the bench in all 3 of their playoff games that season as they advanced to the 2025 Championship Final, where they fell to the New England Free Jacks. Through his 4-season MLR career so far, Wilton Rebolo has started 9 of his 44 appearances, scoring 3 tries and gaining exactly 350m gained, with over 200 tackles completed, and is both a MLR Champion (2022) and MLR Runner-Up (2025). Primarily a prop but also capable of playing hooker, the 30yo will be joining a highly experienced Chicago Hounds front row, with the likes of Charlie Abel, Oti Pifeleti, and Jake Turnbull all competing for gametime.

@chicagohoundsrugby via instagram

The very next day the Chicago Hounds announced that they had also signed a former Miami Sharks forward for their 2026 squad: Capped USA Eagle Tomas Casares! The Argentina-born back row attended Thomas More University and was drafted 17th overall in the 2022 MLR Draft by the New England Free Jacks. He never represented the Free Jacks at MLR level however, and was selected by the Miami Sharks during the 2023 expansion draft ahead of their debut 2024 season. Casares earned his pro debut for the Sharks in 2024, started 6 of his 8 appearances during their inaugural season and scoring 2 tries including a game-winning 7-pointer against his former side, the New England Free Jacks. Following an impressive season with the Sharks, Casares was included in the USA National Team squad for their 2024 Autumn tests, where he earned his international debut as Eagle #583 in a hard fought 21-17 victory over Portugal. Tomas Casares returned for a second MLR season with the Sharks in 2025, earning another 14 appearances and doubling his starts from 6 in 2024 to 12 in 2025, recording an impressive 139 tackles which very nearly doubled his total from 2024 as well, passing 200 tackles made in his career. Casares now heads to Chicago following the withdrawal of the Miami Sharks from MLR, and will likely serve as a depth role in a stacked Hounds back row, playing behind the likes of Maclean Jones, Lucas Rumball, and Mason Flesch.

Not wanting to miss out in the intra-league signing spree, the Seattle Seawolves announced the addition of test capped Canadian lock Callum Botchar for their 2026 campaign. Born in Ontario but raised in British Columbia, Botchar attended the University of British Columbia playing with the UBC Thunderbirds as well as the Pacific Pride and Canada U20 side. He also represented the Toronto Wolfpack Rugby League side in their 2021 Canada Cup exhibition game against the DC Cavalry. Botchar got a chance to represent his country at test level before even entering Major League Rugby when he was selected for the Canada squad for their 2022 November tests, earning a pair of caps against the Netherlands and Belgium. Botchar headed to New Zealand for 2023, playing with the New Plymouth Old Boys in the Taranaki Premier Division, and was signed by the Toronto Arrows for the 2024 season before their unfortunate withdrawal following the passing of their talismanic owner, Bill Webb. Botchar was selected by the NOLA Gold in the subsequent dispersal draft, and finally earned his Major League Rugby debut for the Gold in 2024. He started 9 of his 16 appearances for the Gold, featuring in all but 1 game including the first (and as it turned out, only) playoff game in franchise history against the Chicago Hounds. He scored 2 tries in his debut season, gaining 167m and completing over 100 tackles on defence, and was named as the 2024 NOLA Gold Shawn Riley Heart of Gold award recipient, honoring MLR and NOLA Gold alum, Shawn Riley. Botchar returned for a second season with the Gold in 2025, starting 6 of his 8 appearances and passing 200m gained in his 23 game (12 start) MLR career so far. He now heads back towards his home in Vancouver to join his (sort of) local MLR team, the Seattle Seawolves following the withdrawal of the NOLA Gold. Botchar will join Seawolves veteran Rhyno Herbst and fellow new acquisition Harrison Mataele in the middle of the Seattle pack.

@seawolvesrugby via Instagram

New Additions

On January 22nd, Old Glory DC announced that they had added the 2nd Round draft pick from 2024 to their squad for the 2026 Major League Rugby campaign, Aidan Ridgway! A native of Johannesburg, the South African scrum-half attended Arkansas State University from 2020-2024, representing the Red Wolves throughout. Following his graduation in 2024, Ridgway declared for the 2024 MLR Collegiate Draft and was chosen as one of the top 50 prospects to attend the MLR Rising combine to give MLR sides a better look at potential draftees. This clearly paid off for Ridgway as he was drafted in 15th overall in the 2024 Draft by Old Glory DC. Following his selection, he spent the fall of 2024 in the Old Glory DC pathway, playing with the Young Glory academy side as well as the Washington Irish club side, but did not feature at MLR level for the Flags in 2025. Instead, the not quite US-eligible Ridgway returned to Arkansas State University for another year with the Red Wolves. Now fully US-eligible on residency, Ridgway returns to the Flags and is hoping to make his pro debut in 2026. He will have to fight for that though, with Connor Buckley and John Lefevre likely both ahead of him for the 9 jersey.

Later that day, the Chicago Hounds added a new face of their own when they announced that they had promoted Academy product Mathis Demandolx to their MLR squad for the 2026 season. Also a scrum-half, Washington State native Demandolx played with the Rhino Rugby Academy in California, attending in 2021 and again in the World Tens Series in 2024, sandwiching a stint at Central Washington University during the 2022/23 season. After moving to Chicago and playing with the Lions in the Midwest Rugby Premiership, Demandolx headed to New Zealand and spent the summer of 2025 playing premier grade rugby with Whakarewarewa Rugby Community Sports Club in the Bay of Plenty, hleping them to the 2025 Bay Wide Championship title, the club’s first in 19 years. Following this time in New Zealand, Demandolx returned to the Chicago Lions with a taste for Championships, and helped the club to the 2025 Midwest Rugby Premiership title while also proving a standout with the Chicago Hounds Fall Performance squad. At just 22, Mathis Demandolx serves as proof that pathways and academy systems work, and now the young scrum-half will be playing behind regular USA National Team starter, Ruben de Haas.

@chicagohoundsrugby via Instagram

Also on a busy 23rd January, the California Legion announced that they had signed their first ever MLR Collegiate Draft pick to a Major League Rugby contract for the 2026 season! Selected in the first round using the 5th overall pick out of Central Washington University, US-eligible Australian winger Oscar Treacy joins the Legion after a stellar college career with the Wildcats. Born and raised in Melbourne, Treacy attended CWU from 2021-2025, during which time he was named a 2x CRAA All-American represented both the USA Falcons and USA U23s at Sevens levels. To cap off his college career, Treacy was named as the 2025 recipient of the prestigious Rudy Scholz award, recognising the top collegiate rugby player in the US each year. Oscar Treacy is the 5th player announced by the California Legion for their inaugural 2026 season and of those 5, he is already the 2nd winger after Ryan James, who is covered earlier in this article. There has already been a lot of buzz around Treacy as a player, so Legion fans should be excited about him representing the state of California in 2026.

Wrapping Up

It seems like Major League Rugby teams got last week’s Player Moves announced just before much of the USA and Canada was blanketed by a dump of snow, resulting in plenty of moves at the start of the week but a quiet weekend just gone. It was still a busy week for intra-league transfers, with the Chicago Hounds keeping busy and the California Legion really getting rolling on their Player Moves. A busy week for Draftees and academy standouts as well, earning their first pro rugby contracts and congratulations to them!

Thank you very much for reading this week’s Player Moves Article! Another 2-page summary last week shows that Player Moves are experiencing a bit of a second wind to start off 2026, with no doubt more on the way this week. Be sure to check back here next Monday (2nd February) 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, 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 jump into the January sales or pick up some discounted merch, visit rugbynow.com and use code ‘MLRSTATS’ at checkout for 15% off of your order!

MLR Player Moves Summary: January 11th, 2026 – January 18th, 2026

In previous years, by mid-January training camps would have opened and fans would be being bombarded with photos of players in camp as the hype would be really ramping up towards the season kicking off! However, 2026 is not a ‘normal’ season as fans of Major League Rugby have come to know it. we are still roughly two and a half months away from the season kicking off, but thankfully the California Legion have finally started to announce their Player Moves for the 2026 season, which should give NARDB plenty to talk about over the next few weeks!

There’s been an increase in Player Moves from around the league compared to the last few weeks which means there’s plenty of news to talk about: Welcome back to NARDB’s Player Moves Summary series! These weekly articles aim to keep fans up to date on every single player announcement to, from, and all around Major League Rugby ahead of the 2026 season. As always, let’s start with the summary graphic for Player Moves announced between January 12th and January 18th, 2026, followed by the re-signings section:

2-Page Summary Graphic for all Player Moves around MLR between January 11-18, 2026!

Re-signings

The Seattle Seawolves got last week’s Player Moves started on January 12th, when they announced the return of South African prop Dewald Donald for his 5th season with the team in 2026. The former Springboks U19 man and Blue Bulls Currie Cup player first entered Major League Rugby with the Seawolves in 2022, representing Seattle in each of the 4 seasons since then. Donald has earned 22 appearances to date including a high of 8 in the 2024 season when the Seattle Seawolves finished as MLR Runners-Up, a year where Donald also earned a career high 4 starts that year. the 6’1, 270lbs front row has started 7 of his appearances for the Seawolves, gaining over 200m (not bad at all as a depth prop) and completing 86 tackles in his career so far. Donald will compete with fellow returning Seawolf Mason Pedersen and new signing Ezekiel Lindenmuth in the Seattle Seawolves front row, with no doubt more props to be announced by the team in the coming weeks.

@seawolvesrugby via Instagram

A few days after the re-signing of Dewald Donald, the Seattle Seawolves confirmed their 2nd returnee of the week for the 2026 campaign, MLR Draftee Calvin Liulamaga! the Rudy Scholz nominee and 2x All-American was selected 11th overall by the Seattle Seawolves, his local team, in the 2024 MLR Draft out of Central Washington University. He spent the 2025 season with the team and although he did not earn his pro debut, he was named the 2025 Seattle Seawolves Young Player of the Year. Calvin Liulamaga will be hoping to earn his pro debut during the 2026 season, joining the likes of Dan Kriel and Mark Bennett in the Seawolves midfield.

Joining Seattle with a re-signing last week were the Chicago Hounds, who coincidentally announced the return of a former Seattle Seawolf on 13th January 2026. 6’3, 275lbs tighthead prop Koby Baker will return for his 2nd season with the Hounds in 2026, and 3rd in Major League Rugby after representing the Seawolves in 2024. Baker represented the American Raptors during the 2024 Super Rugby Americas season before being brought in as injury cover by the Seawolves towards the end of their 2024 campaign. He earned 5 appearances off the bench for the Seattle Seawolves that year, 3 of which were playoff appearances including the 2024 Championship Final against the New England Free Jacks, finishing his debut MLR season as a runner-up. Following the season, Baker joined the Chicago Hounds academy team during the fall of 2024 and has remained with the team since, earning an MLR deal and 2 additional appearances for the Hounds in their 2025 campaign, before a stand-out fall with Chicago’s Autumn Performance Squad against the likes of the Midwest Thunderbirds and Canada’s Pacific Pride in 2025.

Intra-League Signings

In a busy week for the team, the Seattle Seawolves also announced the addition of former Brumbies U19 hooker Liki Chan-Tung to their 2026 roster on 13th January 2026 after the 24yo spent the 2025 season with the San Diego Legion. Prior to entering MLR, Chan-Tung was playing in the ACTRU Premier Division with the Gungahlin Eagles, winning the John I Dent cup with the team in 2023. Having been raised in Australia but born in Hawaii, he is US-eligible and therefore a valuable domestic player in Major League Rugby, found by the San Diego Legion who snapped him up for their 2025 campaign. Chan-Tung earned his pro debut and 3 appearances off the bench for the Legion during his first season in North America, gaining 29m and completing 14 tackles, and was an unused reserve in an additional two matches as the Legion would miss out on the post-season by a single point. With San Diego merging with RFCLA to create the California Legion, Liki Chan-Tung heads north and joins the Seattle Seawolves, where he will compete for the 2 jersey with Canadian international Dewald Kotze and recently capped USA Eagle Sean McNulty in 2026.

On January 15th, the Chicago Hounds announced their first intra-league signing of the week, adding 2022 Major League Rugby Draftee Jason Tidwell to their squad for the 2026 season! Selected late in the 2022 Draft at 36th overall by the Dallas Jackals out of Texas A&M University, Tidwell spent his first two years in the league with the Jackals, earning his pro debut and 3 appearances off the bench in his rookie season, before enjoying a breakout year in 2024. He started 7 of his 16 games for the Jackals that season, scoring 3 tries and gaining over 600m to help the Jackals qualify for the postseason for the first (and only) time in team history, advancing to the Western Conference Final where they took the Seattle Seawolves right to the edge. Following the withdrawal of the Dallas Jackals from MLR in the offseason, Tidwell moved to Charlotte and signed with Anthem RC for the 2025 season, representing the Rising Stars in 10 games that year, starting every time and scoring another 3 tries with 324m gained to take his career total to 6 tries and over 900m gained in 29 MLR games (17 starts)! Tidwell will have plenty of competition for game time in Chicago, joining USA Eagle Noah Brown and MLR Rookie of the Year Peyton Wall, as well as Canadian international Brock Webster and Chilean international Santiago Videla at the back. Tidwell will be hoping that Videla plays fly-half more often than not, and Webster fills the 15 shirt.

@chicagohoundsrugby via Instagram

To wrap up the intra-league moves from last week, on 18th January Old Glory DC announced the addition of NOLA Gold veteran Ross Depperschmidt for his 8th Major League Rugby season in 2026! Born and raised just outside of Dallas, TX, Depperschmidt grew up playing football and baseball, before picking up rugby at the University of Alabama, graduating in 2018. He signed with the NOLA Gold ahead of the 2019 MLR season following an open tryout, but would have to wait until 2020 to earn his pro debut. Depperschmidt earned 2 appearances (1 start) in 2020 before the COVID 19 pandemic shut the season down after 5 rounds. He returned in 2021 and earned 2 starts in 3 appearances before earning a regular roster spot the following year. In 2022, Depperschmidt started more games (6) than he had appeared in the previous 2 seasons combined (5). He earned 12 appearances during the 2022 season and scored his first 2 tries with 297m gained which remains his career high. Over the 3 seasons between 2022-2024, Depperschmidt scored 5 tries and earned 41 appearances (23 starts) for NOLA, recording over 200m gained each year and 164 tackles including a high of 68 in 2024. Over 7 seasons with the Gold, he has earned 49 MLR appearances asnd passed 200 tackles made in 2025, also sitting just under 1000m gained in his career (930m). Depperschmidt will represent a MLR team other than NOLA for the first time in his career in 2026, where he is almost guaranteed to earn his 50th MLR appearance. He joins a healthy NOLA Gold alumni contingent at Old Glory, comprised of Aidan King, Paul Mullen, Bart Vermeulen, and Harley Wheeler.

New Additions

This next Player Move created a bit of a headache. After months of silence, the California Legion finally started announcing their 2026 roster on 14th January, starting with a player from the San Diego Legion. Given that the California Legion is a new entity, is this an intra-league signing? Given that the branding, moniker, and likely fanbase is going to be largely the same as San Diego, is this a re-signing? Because NARDB is treating the California Legion as a new Major League Rugby franchise, and some elements will be new to Rugby FC LA and San Diego Legion players, any and all Legion signings for 2026 will fall into the ‘New Additions’ section. Moving to the player himself, the first player ever announced by the California Legion was USA Eagle #593, Christian Poidevin!

A 2021 Champion with the LA Giltinis, Australian back rower Poidevin (the son of Wallabies legend Simon Poidevin) has now represented 3 Californian Major League Rugby franchises across 6 seasons including 2026, and was even selected by the precursor team to Rugby FC LA, Rugby ATL in the Giltinis expansion draft. Poidevin has scored 18 tries in his 59 game MLR career so far, including 8 in 14 games (8 starts) during the 2025 campaign with the San Diego Legion, where he recorded his 4th 100+ tackle season and 3rd with 150+ tackles, recording 170 that year to take his career total to 695, which is an average of 11.8 per game. Not just a solid defender, Poidevin passed 1,500m gained in possession during the 2025 season, and recorded a career high of 513m gained in 2023, his first season in San Diego. Although born and raised in Australia, Poidevin qualifies for the USA thanks to his mother who was born in Chicago, and he earned his test debut for the USA as Eagle #593 against England in July 2025. With 6 weeks until the Legion kick off the 2026 MLR season against Anthem RC on 28th March, fans can expect roughly a player a day from the California Legion!

@legion.rugby on Instagram

Not finished there, on 16th January the California Legion also announced the addition of Major League Rugby veteran and USA Men’s National Team Captain Jason Damm for the 2026 season! Born in Georgia, Damm first entered MLR with the Glendale Raptors in the fall of 2018, earning his pro debut for the team during the 2019 campaign, with 3 appearances and 1 start. Following the 2019 season, Jason Damm returned home to Georgia and signed with the Rugby ATL expansion team, where he would spend 4 seasons. He earned 4 appearances for the RATLers before the COVID-19 pandemic shut the season down after 5 rounds, but the following year is when Damm really began to stand out. During the 2021 campaign, Jason Damm scored 5 tries on 865m gained in 15 games (12 starts), completing 165 tackles to earn a 2021 All-MLR 2nd XV selection and help Rugby ATL advance to the Championship Final, where they fell to the LA Giltinis. In total, Damm scored 8 tries in 30 games (21 starts) with Rugby ATL between 2020-2023, and moved with the team following their relocation to Los Angeles under new ownership. Damm captained the now-rebranded Rugby FC LA from 2024-2025, and proved a standout. He earned 31 appearances (29 starts) for the team, scoring 7 tries in each season and recording well over 150 tackles completed, including a career high of 199 tackles in 2025, helping RFCLA to earn their first (and only) MLR playoff appearance. For his efforts, Jason Damm was named to the All-MLR 2nd XV for the second time in 2025. He joins Christian Poidevin in an already formidable looking Legion pack.

The California Legion weren’t the only team to announce a new addition last week, however. On 15th January Old Glory DC announced that they had added their 1st Round pick from the 2025 Draft to their Major League Rugby roster for the 2026 campaign. Selected 4th overall in 2025, Texan Prop Connor Devos attended Lindenwood University from 2021-2025, where he was named a Collegiate All-American in 2024 and helped the Lions to finish in the NCR D1A Final Four 3 times during his time there. The promising 22yo front rower has already represented the USA at both U20 and U23 levels, touring South Africa with the latter in the summer of 2025. Following his successful draft, Devos spent the fall of 2025 with the St. Louis Bombers, earning his D1 Club debut in October. New to the professional game, Devos will likely serve as a depth tighthead option for Old Glory DC in 2026 behind MLR veteran Paul Mullen and Patrick Beattie, with Canadian international (and fellow draftee) Cali Martinez able to play both sides of the scrum. Devos is the 7th draftee from the 2025 MLR Draft Class confirmed for 2026.

Departures

Right at the start of the week there was news from Japan about the signing of a 2025 Major League Rugby standout, as Japan Rugby League One – Division 1 side the Yokohama Canon Eagles announced the addition of former Utah Warriors hooker Liam Coltman for their 2025/26 campaign. The soon-to-be 36yo capped All Black only spent 1 season in Major League Rugby, but made a huge impact representing the Utah Warriors, who finished as the top team during the regular season thanks in part to Coltman’s efforts. He started 14 of his 16 appearances for the Warriors including both of their playoff games during the 2025 postseason, completing 172 tackles in total, more than any other front row player during the 2025 season (next closest was Seattle Seawolves’ Cam Orr on 161). Although he did not score in the playoffs, Coltman recorded 10 tries in his 14 regular season games in 2025, and was one of four Utah Warriors named to the All-MLR First XV for his performance that year. Unfortunately, with the withdrawal of the Utah Warriors from Major League Rugby, and the league’s shift away from foreign players, fans will not see him back in MLR in 2026. NARDB wishes Liam Coltman the very best of luck playing in Japan!

On 15th January 2026, the reigning Super Rugby Americas Champions Peñarol announced their squad for the 2026 SRA season. On it was former Miami Sharks stand-out Manu Ardao, who previously represented Peñarol when they won the 2023 SRA title, before heading north to join the Sharks. Back rower Ardao joined the Sharks for their inaugural MLR season in 2024 having just represented Uruguay at the 2021 Rugby World Cup in France, and was a regular in the starting XV in Florida. He scored 10 tries in 26 games as a Shark (25 starts), recording over 1,100m gained in possession and 273 tackles completed including a high of 155 during in 14 games during the 2025 season, helping the Sharks qualify for their first (and only) MLR playoff appearance. That year, he was the only Miami Sharks player to earn All-MLR honours, earning a First XV selection for a superb season in which he led the entire league with a monstrous 27 turnovers won at the breakdown. Manu Ardao now returns to his native Uruguay and joins fellow MLR alumni and 2025 Peñarol Captain Manu Diana (TOR, 2020-21).

With Major League Rugby re-defining their definition of ‘Domestic Player’ to no longer include Canadians for the 2026 season and beyond, the 47 Canadians who contributed to the success of Major League Rugby teams in 2025 will fall dramatically, and the amount of Canadian players confirmed for 2026 is currently in single figures. As a result, many Canadian players are looking elsewhere to play in 2026. The Canadian Men’s Sevens team announced their roster for the HSBC SVNS D3 tournament in Dubai his month, which included a pair of 2025 MLR-ers that will not be returning to the league in 2026. Josiah Morra returns to the Sevens setup after last featuring at the Rugby Americas North (RAN) 7s in 2024, following a switch to the XVs game and signing with the New England Free Jacks for the 2025 season. Morra earned 1 appearance with New England before being loaned to the Miami Sharks to give him more game time, where he scored 2 tries and started 8 of his 9 games with Miami and gained over 300m in his 10 MLR appearances that season. Returning to the Sevens team alongside Morra for the first time since the 2024 RAN 7s is MLR Draftee Jack Shaw. The Bishop’s University graduate was selected 22nd Overall in the 2022 MLR Draft by Rugby ATL and spent 3 seasons in the league, representing the RATLers in 2023 before following the team to LA when they relocated under new ownership and became Rugby FC LA. Shaw scored 9 tries in 27 MLR games, starting 24 times and recording over 1,200m gained with 124 tackles completed in his MLR career. Morra and Shaw join fellow MLR alumni Lockie Kratz (NOLA, 2021) and Brenden Black (TOR, 2023) in the Canadian Sevens squad. While it is a shame that fans will not get the chance to see these players in Major League Rugby this season, it is great to see them still representing the Maple Leaf, and very best of luck to them and the entire Canada squad!

@rugbycanada via Instagram

Retirements

As well as the above moves, last week also saw the retirement of perhaps one of Major League Rugby’s most underrated players after 8 seasons in North America’s top flight and over 75 games played across 3 different teams. On 12th January, Seattle Seawolves flanker Devin Short announced his retirement on social media. The Nevada native was a Major League Rugby original, having featured in every season of the competition between 2018-2025. Short’s pro career began with the San Diego Legion in MLR’s inaugural 2018 season where he featured in all but 1 of the Legion’s games, starting all of his appearances and putting in a full 80 minutes during their semi-final defeat to the Seattle Seawolves. He would represent the Legion for 3 years between 2018-2020, scoring 3 tries and starting 19 of his 23 appearances for San Diego despite missing a chunk of the 2019 season with injury. He gained well over 500m in possession and averaging 8 tackles per game for 184 completed in total. Short was tipped for an Eagles cap in the near future but this was ruined by the COVID-19 pandemic, which shut down play after only 5 rounds of the MLR season. When the league returned in 2021, Devin Short had moved on from the Legion and signed with the NOLA Gold where he played for another 3 seasons. For the Gold, Short started 24 of his 31 appearances between 2021-2023, gaining over 1,300m and completing 282 tackles. Most of this was achieved during a stand-out 2022 season, where Devin Short recorded career highs across the board as well as becoming the youngest player in MLR history at the time to reach 50 appearances, the 21st player to do so in league history. He started all 15 of his appearances for the Gold that season, completing 195 tackles and scoring 3 tries on 903m gained, almost tripling his previous career high of 325m set the previous year.

Just as it appeared that Devin Short had arrived on the scene, his 2023 season was hugely affected by injury, and he started 3 of his 4 appearances that year. Following the 2023 season, the NOLA Gold traded the flanker to the Seattle Seawolves in exchange for the 11th overall pick in the 2023 MLR Draft (used to select Gabriel Mahu’inga). Things would get worse for Short before they got better. An autoimmune disease ruled him out for roughly half of the 2024 season, but he made his Seawolves debut in Round 12 and started all 6 of his appearances in the back half of the season including twice in the playoffs, starting both the Western Conference Semifinal against the San Diego Legion, and the 2024 Championship Game against the New England Free Jacks. Despite health issues limiting his game time, Short still recorded 72 tackles and over 225m gained during the 2024 season, and returned to the Seawolves for 2025, where he enjoyed a resurgence. In what would prove to be his final season in Major League Rugby, Devin Short appeared in all 17 of the Seawolves’ games, setting a career high. He started 8 times and recorded just shy of 100 tackles, scoring 2 tries. Across his 8 seasons in MLR, Devin Short recorded 636 tackles completed and gained well over 2,000m in possession, scoring 8 tries and 44pts in in total in 77 games, starting 57 times. Devin Short is one of the great ‘what ifs’ of American rugby. He is a proven stand-out in the back row when healthy, but health issues and a pandemic prevented him from putting in consistent performances year-in, year-out. These factors meant that Short became one of the more underrated players in Major League Rugby, but when he was in the lineup you knew that he would perform. Devin Short is arguably one of the best players to never represent the USA at test level, and we wish him the very best in retirement.

@devinshort_ via Instagram

Wrapping Up

Following 2 weeks of relative calm regarding Player Moves around Major League Rugby, it seems that things have started to pick up again! Anthem RC announced their full roster and the Chicago Hounds and New England Free Jacks coming to an end of their announcements, while Old Glory DC and the Seattle Seawolves continue announcing at a steady pace, and the California Legion are getting started at long last! There should be plenty of Player Moves to discuss until training camps open in early February, and maybe even some more after that.

Thank you very much for reading this week’s Player Moves Article! As mentioned, it seems like things are picking up again on the Player Moves front so be sure to come back next Monday 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, you can let NARDB/James know on social media: @MLRStats on Instagram/Thread, 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 jump into the January sales or pick up some discounted merch, visit shopmlr.com OR rugbynow.com and use code ‘MLRSTATS’ at checkout for 15% off of your order!

MLR Player Moves Summary: July 21 – August 17, 2025

As the young 2025/26 Major League Offseason approaches it’s first big event in the MLR Collegiate Draft scheduled for August 21st, the League will be painfully aware that much of the discourse surrounding Major League Rugby has not been about the 2025 edition of the draft lately, and barely about any players at all.

With news that the San Diego Legion and Rugby FC LA are merging to form the California Legion, as well as the withdrawals of the NOLA Gold and Miami Sharks all but confirmed (although not by the League themselves, and there has been no word from the Sharks at all), NARDB is hoping that the worst is now behind us. As things stand, MLR will move forward with a 8-team competition in 2026 but of course, those teams need players, which brings us to the purpose of this article.

Welcome back to the latest edition of NARDB.com’s Player Moves Summary! These articles will keep MLR fans up to date on all the retirements, signings, re-signings, and departures of players to and from Major League Rugby teams for the 2026 season. Typically these articles will be released weekly on Monday’s, but due to a lack of moves over the last few weeks, this article covers the period from 21st July to August 17th, 2025. Obviously with news of the league’s contraction still very fresh, player moves might take a while to pick up, but these articles will keep up up to date, nevertheless! As with the end of every season, some players have decided that they have played their last campaign, and have called time on their career. This article will start by recognising the MLR legends that have done just that.

Source: @MLRStats on Instagram

Retirements

Beginning in Chicago, where a USA Eagle and Hound #1 has hung up his boots. Bryce Campbell, Eagle #497, announced his retirement on instagram after 3 seasons with the Chicago Hounds where he scored 4 tries and started 45 of his 48 appearances in green & white, and Captaining the side through their inaugural season in 2023. Prior to the Hounds, the Indiana University grad represented both the Glendale Raptors in 2018, and the Austin Gilgronis from 2021-2022, where he also captained the AGs through the 2021 season. Outside of MLR, Campbell spent two seasons with London Irish, helping them earn promotion from the Championship back to the Premiership, playing there for the 2019-20 season. In total, Campbell earned 84 MLR appearances across 6 seasons of competition, starting 81 times and scoring 11 tries. He racked up over 4000m gained in possession and 730 tackles completed including a career high of 158 in 2025, his final season. Internationally, Bryce Campbell earned his test debut against Romania in 2016, and earned 47 appearances for his country in total, representing the Eagles at the 2019 Rugby World Cup in Japan. All the best in your retirement, Bryce!

Unfortunately for the USA, Campbell was not the only Eagle to announce the end of his playing career in the last few weeks. On 23rd July 2025, Christian Dyer announced the end of his playing career on instagram at the age of 27 after spending 4 seasons in Major League Rugby between the Houston SaberCats (2022-2024) and Rugby FC LA (2025) in his home state of California. Having played rugby and gridiron football through high school, Sacramento native Dyer continued to play rugby at UC Berkeley before signing with the Dallas Jackals for the 2021 MLR season. This was a big year for Dyer, who earned his international Sevens debut in Vancouver, and his test debut as Eagle #539 against England in July, the first of his 14 test caps. Dyer had to wait for his MLR debut however. Once the Dallas Jackals deferred their entry to 2022, Dyer was selected by Rugby New York in the dispersal draft, but didn’t end up signing in the Big Apple. He signed with the Houston SaberCats ahead of the 2022 season, and scored 19 tries in 45 games across 3 seasons for the ‘Cats, including a high of 9 in 2023. Following 3 seasons in Texas he returned to his home state, signing with Rugby FC LA for the 2025 season, helping them qualify for the postseason for the first time in club history and scoring 2 tries in 6 games in California. In total, Dyer scored 21 tries and 109pts in 51 MLR appearances, starting 48 times and recording just shy of 2000m gained (1,987m) in possession, and 287 tackles. Very best of luck in what’s next, Christian!

Source: @usarugby via Instagram

Departures

Maybe Christian Dyer had an idea about what was going down with the creation of the California Legion, who knows? Staying on the subject of Rugby FC LA, they are also be saying farewell to 2024 MLR Back of the Year Reece MacDonald. The kiwi fullback will be plying his trade in Japan after signing with the NEC Green Rockets Tokatsu in JRLO Div 2. MacDonald won two Shields with the New England Free Jacks from 2023-2024, scoring 12 tries and 86pts in 30 games including 10 in his Back of the Year season in 2024 when he also gained 1,535m in possession. MacDonald made a high-profile move to Rugby FC LA for the 2025 season, and still scored 3 tries and 33pts in 10 games (6 starts) despite missing a hefty chunk of the season with injury. In his career, Reece MacDonald score 15 tries and 119pts in 40 MLR games, starting 34 times and gaining 3,331m in possession.

Source: @nec_gr_official via instagram

MacDonald isn’t the only Green Rockets signing that will be familiar with MLR fans, as on the same day that the club announced his signing, they also announced the addition of Utah Warriors stalwart Dylan Nel for their 2025/26 campaign. Nel, the 2024 Utah Warriors Forward of the Year, spent two seasons at Zion’s Bank, scoring 6 tries and completing 362 tackles in 27 games (26 starts) including a high of 234 in 2025, finishing 3rd League wide. Nel was a significant contributing factor to the Warriors finishing as the top team in MLR during the regular season and earning a spot in the postseason for the first time since 2021. He started both of their playoff games in 2025, defeating the Seattle Seawolves to advance to the Western Conference Final where they fell to the Houston SaberCats. Nel follows his father-in-law to Japan, former Utah Warriors head coach Greg Cooper, who now serves as head coach of the Green Rockets.

Moving to the other side of the California merger but sticking with Japan, Australian fullback Rhian Stowers has signed with Tokyo Gas in the Japanese 4th tier, the Top East League. Stowers played his debut MLR season with the San Diego Legion in 2025, starting 6 of his 10 appearances and scoring 3 tries while racking up 590m gained including 150m in a single game for the Legion in Rd 12.

Best of luck in Japan to Reece, Dylan, and Rhian!

Although he converted from football relatively late in his career, the meteoric rise of former Portland State University Defensive Lineman Tonga Kofe continues! The 6’2, 300lb+ giant signed with the Utah Warriors ahead of the 2024 MLR season, earning his professional debut as he came off the bench 6 times in his debut season. In his sophomore season in 2025 however, Kofe proved a fearsome scrummager. He earned his first pro start, starting 14 of his 16 games and completing over 100 tackles to help the Utah Warriors top the league during the regular season, making it all the way to the Western Conference Final where they fell to the Houston SaberCats. Kofe’s strong performances earned him a call up to the national team for the USA’s July tests, where he earned his test debut as Eagle #587 as a starter against Belgium. He earned 3 caps for the Eagles in July, and was included in their squad for the 2025 Pacific Nations Cup. On 16th August 2025, Prem Rugby side Leicester Tigers announced the signing of Tonga Kofe for the 2025/26 Prem season, marking the next chapter in Kofe’s short but already storied rugby journey. Best of luck with the Tigers, Tonga!

Source: @leicestertigers via Instagram

Temporary Departures

In addition to the confirmed departures above, there was one move that was slightly more unusual. Jeremy ‘Missile’ Misailegalu is spending the Major League Rugby offseason with RC Arka Gdynia in Poland’s professional league, the Ekstraliga. Misailegalu finished as a MLR runner-up with the Houston SaberCats in 2025 and for any ‘Cats fans concerned about his departure, his agency (Westsyde Pathways) strongly suggests that this move is just for the offseason, hence this move is in it’s own ‘Temporary Departures’ section.

Misailegalu, a 2018 MLR Champion with the Seattle Seawolves, has finished as a MLR runner-up twice. He played with Rugby ATL in their 2021 season when they fell to the LA Giltinis in the Final, and represented the Houston SaberCats in 2025, who fell to the New England Free Jacks in the 2025 Championship. To date, Misailegalu has scored 11 tries in his 61 MLR appearances for 4 teams across 6 seasons of competition, starting 47 times. He’s recorded over 2000m gained in possession and just shy of 300 career tackles (293). Best of luck in Poland, Missile!

Source: @westsydepathways via Instagram

Misailegalu wasn’t the only MLR player to head elsewhere for the offseason, however. Rugby FC LA saw another pair of names heading overseas, starting with MLR veteran Jurie van Vuuren. The South African lock signed with the Boland Cavaliers for their 2025 Currie Cup campaign. Van Vuuren has played in MLR since 2020, representing the Utah Warriors from 2020-2023 before moving to RFCLA for two seasons from 2024-2025. In total he scored 10 tries in 68 games, starting 60 times. He recorded over 1800m in possession and 717 tackles completed including a high of 199 in 2021. The Currie Cup doesn’t overlap with the MLR season so it’s a possible that van Vuuren returns in 2026, should he sign with the California Legion.

In a similar boat to Jurie van Vuuren is US-eligible Irish age grade representative prop Alessandro Heaney, who signed a short-term deal with the Cornish Pirates in the English 2nd tier, Champ Rugby, for the remainder of 2025. Heaney stepped up in a big way for RFCLA after their forward pack was hit with a wave of injuries. Despite not earning a start in 2024, he started 12 of his 15 games in 2025 and completed 118 tackles to help LA qualify for the postseason for the first (and as it turns out, last) time! Heaney went to school in the south of England so it’s a move that makes sense, but he has value as a domestic player in MLR so we could see him back for 2026 should he sign with the California Legion.

Source: @cornishpirates via Instagram

Wrapping Up

These Player Move Summaries are few and far between at present, but will pick up speed as the 2025/26 Major League Rugby offseason rumbles on. Although this is only the 2nd of the offseason and the 2025 MLR Collegiate Draft is only a few days away, there were a handful of moves to cover, and no doubt there will be plenty more as the fallout from a frenetic few weeks is realised.

Thank you for reading! These articles will pick up in regularity as the player moves do, with the articles coming out every Monday at their peak. NARDB continues to strive to keep fans informed and aware of the goings on around both the league and around each team.

If there are any player moves that you notice, 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 jump into the End of Season sales or pick up some discounted merch, visit shopmlr.com and use code ‘MLRSTATS’ at checkout for 15% off of your order!

Mayhem in Major League Rugby!

The 2025 Major League Rugby Championship is barely a month old, but the MLR silly season has well and truly begun! A trio of groundbreaking announcements shocked the league and it’s fanbase within a week. This article will cover of those as well as addressing .

Welcome back to NARDB.com! With two huge announcements now public and a third imminent, we’ll take a look at where we go from here and what the 2025 Draft (set to take place on August 21st) will look like now, and what changes we can expect to the 2026 season. For those that prefer to listen, a video covering the California Merger and NOLA Gold withdrawal is available below and on the NARugbyDB Youtube Channel:

Pooling resources in California

The first bombshell to hit was over in California. On 30th July 2025 the San Diego Legion, a founding member of Major League Rugby and the winningest team in League history by games won, Rugby FC LA, and Major League Rugby announced that the two California teams were merging to create 1 professional rugby team for the state of California that would begin play in the 2026 MLR season and be known as the California Legion.

Major League Rugby issued this press release on their website about the merger. The release confirms that the California Legion would be splitting their home games between San Diego, Los Angeles, and Orange County, with the possibility of also playing a home game in northern California as well. Assuming a 16 game Major League Rugby regular season in 2026, this means that each city will only host 2/3 home games per season. Even though you are now appealing to the whole of California and it’s 40 million people, with only a couple of games a year in each location it’s going to prove incredibly difficult to establish a loyal fanbase, and that’s just the start.

The above Instagram post seems to suggest that there may be different Legion branding for each city (including Long Beach, which isn’t mentioned anywhere in any press release regarding this merger). While this may help to establish ‘fan chapters’ in each city similar to what the Free Jacks are enjoying in New England, it’s hardly going to save on costs and again, with only a couple of games in each location how are fanbases going to grow?

How will season tickets work for this bold move? Given the traffic situation in Southern California, it doesn’t sound like many fans will be willing to travel even the roughly 100 miles between LA and San Diego to watch games in other cities. Season ticket numbers could plummet. Perhaps the Legion could sell ‘City Packs’ for all games in each location?
On the subject of fan willingness to travel, many San Diego fans are already viewing this as Los Angeles taking another of their professional sports teams, and are justifiably outraged. With the NBA’s San Diego Clippers moving to Los Angeles in the 1980s, and the NFL’s Chargers making the same move in 2016, San Diegans are sick of their teams turning their back on the city and heading to the City of Angels, and many in the Legion’s fierce fanbase have seen it all before and had enough.

That is not necessarily the case. NARDB understands that it was either merge or fold, resulting in potentially zero teams in California which has, as newly appointed California Legion CEO Adam Freier stated ‘the most registered rugby players in the United States’ so it would be a disaster if there was no professional team to tap into that market. To try and sell fans on this being the plan all long however, is doing them a disservice. The question of ownership is another talking point. Owner of the San Diego Legion Ryan Patterson also serves as Chair of the MLR Board. Is he still chair? Are Patterson and RFCLA owner Pete Sickle now equal partners or is there a majority owner? As usual, MLR is as clear as mud.

“Major League Rugby will always prioritize long-term growth of the game in the U.S., delivering an exceptional on-field product and an incredible fan experience, and The California Legion is a way to showcase that in Southern California,” – MLR CEO Nick Benson – 30th July, 2025

The above quote from Major League Rugby CEO Nick Benson (named as MLR Commissioner in the official press release, which would be a title change for Benson) suggests that MLR are aware of the importance of maintaining a professional team in the Golden State to the long-term growth of rugby in the US, and that this merger was the only way to sustain that. The release tries it’s best to put a positive spin on it but the bottom line is that California now has 1 professional team rather than 2, and MLR has 1 fewer team for the 2026 season.

We will have to wait for their home opener to see what the impact to the fanbase is, but there are some questions lingering that need answering long before then. With two rosters merging into 1 team, there are obviously only so many spots available. Who will make the California Legion roster? Who will be the head coach? Are any multi-year contracts signed with San Diego/RFCLA still valid? Questions like these will be answered in time as the team begins unveiling their 2026 roster, but are worth keeping in the back of your mind when thinking about what the team will look like next season.

In a more pressing matter, where with the California Legion draft? The 2025 MLR Collegiate Draft has been confirmed for August 21st, just over 2 weeks away. The San Diego Legion already traded their 1st Rd pick (3rd overall) to Anthem RC. Will Anthem get to keep that pick? Will the Legion draft as if they were an expansion team which would put them 1st overall? As usual, only time will tell.

Even though this merger is a first in Major League Rugby, it is easy to see through. There has been an argument floating around that this merger is part of a bigger plan to split out into 2/3 teams in the future. If that is indeed the plan, why not say it? Instead, we have been fed this story about how pooling resources will allow the team to better capitalize on the large California rugby market. A market that is easily capable of supporting at least two fanbases. Although nothing has been confirmed, it is far more likely that this is a case of merge or die, than part of some larger plan.

There is only a short press release from 30th July to go off and nothing since. This California merger clearly has a lot of moving parts, as shown by things like the new team’s website is still copyright of RFCLA, and the media contact is an RFCLA email address. For now, MLR fans are left with more questions than answers. Hopefully in the coming weeks, we’ll be given answers to at least some of these. The California Legion means that professional rugby remains in the Golden State at least for 2026 which is at it’s core a good thing. The Legion might think themselves lucky that the 2nd bombshell of the week took the spotlight off of them.

No More NOLA

On the same day that Major League Rugby announced the merger of their two California franchises, another of the League’s founding members, the NOLA Gold, posted the following statement to their website:

“NOLA Gold has informed the League that we do not intend to participate in the 2026 season. Discussions are ongoing with the League regarding future opportunities and potential pathways forward.”

After weeks of rumours and speculation about the future of New Orleans’ professional rugby team, this short statement confirmed that the NOLA Gold would not participate in the 2026 MLR season. Fans who supported the team through 8 seasons of competition, players who gave their all for the white & gold, and staff that worked tirelessly to create fantastic gameday atmospheres weren’t thanked or even mentioned. Just a vague two line statement that heralded the end of the Gold’s participation in Major League Rugby without even mentioning MLR itself.

Source: @nolagoldrugby via Instagram

San Diego Legion fans are entitled to be angry at another local team moving away from their city, but NOLA Gold fans are outraged. Given what has happened with the team in the last year they might be justified. Following the 2024 MLR season in which the NOLA Gold finally earned their first ever postseason berth, the team received an influx of French investment with Intervalle Capital becoming the new majority owner of the team and Partner Thierry Daupin becoming Chairman. Remember that name. In November 2024, the NOLA Gold unveiled ‘Vision 31’, a 7yr roadmap to revolutionise the franchise, making it the standard for professional rugby in the USA by their home World Cup in 2031.

Intervalle Capital’s comprehensive Vision 31 stated that ‘Over the next 7 years, we are committed to transforming NOLA Gold into a dominant force in US rugby’ but less than a year after this ‘vision’ was published, the Gold have withdrawn from Major League Rugby.

“This isn’t just a plan; it’s our commitment to lead rugby’s growth in America. We’ve poured our hearts into creating a 70-page game plan that captures years of dedication, collaboration, and ambition. Vision 31 represents a turning point—not just for NOLA Gold but for the sport itself.” – NOLA Gold Chairman Thierry Daupin – 22nd November, 2024

From a commitment to rugby in the USA and the NOLA Gold in November 2024, to withdrawing from MLR in July 2025. It seems impossible that Intervalle Capital thought that investing in MLR would be a short term money making scheme, so why pull the plug just 1 season in after creating a 7yr roadmap for the team? NOLA Gold Chairman and Intervalle Capital Partner Thierry Daupin is intimately familiar with Major League Rugby, he’s been here before. Daupin was involved in the Austin Elite ownership group back in 2020, pulling out at the 11th hour causing MLR and Commissioner George Killebrew (at the time) to scramble to find other investors, coming up with a certain Adam Gilchrist. I’m sure plenty of MLR fans still shudder at that name, so no need to go any further there. Clearly Daupin is a smart guy, and having been involved with the League in the past he would have known the financial status of MLR heading into this. Is this just the Austin situation all over again? Who knows.

Along with a great many long term commitments, Vision 31 also includes an ambitious ‘Stadium Project’ which seems to hint at either creating a new purpose-built home for the Gold, or refurbishing the Shrine on Airline to create an entertainment hub ‘operating 7 days a week’. What is interesting here is that the hints at a new venue for the Gold were echoed in the team’s 2025 end of season statement from CEO Alexandre Maumont less than a month before their withdrawal announcement.

Source: @nolagoldrugby via Instagram

Despite a tough season on the pitch, this end of season statement shows that the NOLA Gold made some significant strides on the business side. Statements such as ‘More than 4,500 local children were introduced to rugby’, ‘Our high school rugby championship expanded’, and critically ‘On the professional front, we saw a 30% increase in ticketing revenue’ caused fans across the league to applaud the Gold, and gave no indication of the heartbreak that was to come. Circling back to the stadium hints, the statement goes on to say that NOLA’s ‘long-term vision for a permanent home for NOLA Gold continues to advance, and we look forward to sharing significant updates soon’. Unfortunately, those updates were never shared. Nor was the promise of ‘sharing additional updates with our fans and partners in early July, including a detailed roadmap for the 2025-2026 season and beyond’. Instead, the Gold withdrew from MLR in late July.

“We are moving forward with determination, clarity, and the full support of a committed ownership group that believes in what we are building for this region” – NOLA Gold CEO Alexandre Maumont – 9th June, 2025

There is a glimmer of hope for Gold fans. Even after their 2-line statement, rumours persist that the NOLA Gold are sitting out on the 2026 season, with plans to return in 2027. This would be hugely ambitious and very optimistic, given that they would essentially be starting from scratch. With teams that have withdrawn in the past, we see a statement posted, and then everything goes silent. If the Gold plan to return to Major League Rugby in the future, they would essentially be starting from scratch as an expansion team. Why not say that, though? It can’t hurt to have some of the fanbase looking forward to your return. Looking into the idea of a return in 2027, the NOLA Gold’s home in Metairie, LA, the Shrine on Airline, affectionately known as the Gold Mine, is undergoing major renovations later this year to finish converting it from a baseball stadium to a rectangular field, and would not have been finished in time for the 2026 MLR season. There was also rumblings that the Gold had their eyes on another facility in the New Orleans area that was also undergoing renovations, that would be complete in time for 2027. To add to this, there are rumblings that the team’s deal for a temporary home for 2026 fell through at the last minute that contributed to the withdrawal, but this is nothing but rumour.

Are the NOLA Gold are just sitting out the 2026 season to save costs as they had nowhere to play, and do plan to return with a shiny new venue in 2027? It’s possible, but don’t hold your breath. If the Gold maintain a presence during the offseason and through 2026, it would show that someone is still paying to keep the lights on, and improves the chances of a return. If it goes silent, it is likely that the Gold have sadly joined the list of defunct Major League Rugby franchises. With GM Ryan Fitzgerald already joining the Loyola University New Orleans rugby program, it’s leaning towards the latter.

Miami Makes it Three

One of these announcements would have been enormous, two on the same day is almost cataclysmic for the League, but less than a week later on 6th August 2025, it was confirmed that a third team had pulled out of the 2026 MLR season: The Miami Sharks.

Just a couple of days after Major League Rugby announced Miami Sharks CEO Milagros Cubelli the inaugural winner of a new award for MLR Executive of the Year, decided based on ‘the success of the team, operational excellence, business growth, community engagement, innovation, and leadership.’ The sister of Sharks player Tomas Cubelli, Milagros was voted for by her peers, League Office, and select media members, and was the winner by a landslide. The Miami Sharks were a very impressive organisation both on and off the field in 2025 under Cubelli’s leadership, but now they too have withdrawn despite a good year. Will this award be rescinded? It seems strange to give the Executive of the Year to the CEO of a team that has withdrawn that same year. No-one looks good with the Sharks pulling out so soon after this award was given.

Source: @usmlr via Instagram

Despite being owned by Marcos Galperin, Argentina’s richest man with astronomical personal wealth, financial strain and lack of control were given as reasons for the withdrawal. NARDB understands that expansion teams had in the past needed to commit to at least 3 seasons of competition, the Miami Sharks withdraw from Major League Rugby after only 2 seasons in Florida and MLR is down 3 teams for the 2026 season. The Sharks qualified for the playoffs in the 2025 season but rumours of their withdrawal began to circulate even before the regular season finished.

At the 2025 Championship Game, Miami’s ownership had been calmed and they were back in the fold for the 2026 season. However, news of other the California merger and NOLA Gold’s withdrawal in late July likely spooked the Sharks ownership who might’ve seen MLR as a sinking ship and pulled the plug. NARDB understands that Miami Sharks players were informed of the team’s withdrawal on 6th August 2025 with an announcement coming shortly afterwards. With such a heavy South American presence, it is likely that many Sharks players will be seen in Super Rugby Americas next season, and MLR will be worse for it.

What does the 2026 Season look like?

As of the publication of this article, Major League Rugby has contracted from 11 teams in 2025, to just 8 teams in 2025. The last time the League consisted of single-digit teams was in their sophomore season way back in 2019. This was before the introduction of the conference system, where each team played every other team both home and away to make up a 16 game season. It’s possible that this season structure is what the league returns to for the 2026 campaign with a move away from the conference system, resulting in a 14 game regular season . Should MLR do away with the conference system, the top 4/6 teams qualifying for the postseason would still make sense.

The playoff structure is almost guaranteed to change as well. There are now only 4 teams in each Conference and under the 2025 playoff structure, 4 teams from each conference qualify. This means that every team is already guaranteed to make it. It’s possible that this is changed to the top 3 or even two from each conference will make it. A 6-team playoff isn’t unheard of, and was the norm for the 2022-2023 season with the Top seed earning a bye to the Conference Finals, and the 2 & 3 seeds playing an ‘Eliminator’ game. Even a 4-team playoff was the norm from 2018-2021, although both of these options would reduce the number of playoff games and with it, the all important gate revenue.

As of right now, the 2025 MLR Collegiate Draft is set to be the smallest draft in League history assuming it follows the same structure of all previous years. With only 8 teams in the competition, this would mean 24 picks over 3 rounds. This may increase to 26 picks due to picks already traded by the NOLA Gold and San Diego Legion, however. Does Major League Rugby choose to add a 4th round to this years’ draft? This would mean 32/34 picks across 4 rounds but, with minutes hard to come by for rookies, does this just add to the log jam? Maybe. MLR might consider reducing the foreign player slots per team from 10 to 7-8, adding 15-25 more opportunities for domestic talent across the league each week. Have they thought of this? Probably. Will they go for it? Who knows.

A Silver Lining

Losing teams is never a good thing, and the MLR fanbase is unfortunately all too used to that in it’s short history. However, Major League Rugby is down but not out. AS difficult as it may be to picture right now, the League could come back from this stronger.

It seems that MLR may have expanded too much too fast, and falling back into single-digit teams could serve as a ‘soft reset’ for the league. NARDB understands that the League is already planning to do away with undeclared ancillary benefits going forward (additional player benefits other than base salary) in order to better control costs and League spending in a failed attempt to keep the Miami Sharks in the competition. If MLR chooses to expand the draft and reduce international slots, this may also help with costs as a domestic player, especially a rookie, is generally cheaper than importing international talent. Major League Rugby can use the 2026 season to consolidate around a strong core of owners, stabilise, and look to grow slowly and surely with plenty of time left until the 2031 World Cup.

Although it might be hard to see right now, this is an opportunity to strengthen rugby in the United States. The comparisons to the early years of the MLS are always made, with teams joining and leaving regularly, but as Major League Rugby’s 10th season begins to come into sight on the horizon, will they take this opportunity? As with many things in this article, only time will tell.

Thank you very much for reading. With a few huge pieces of news to cover this article is longer than most others on the site and as you may be able to tell, this is my first foray into writing so I hope you found it interesting, informative, and entertaining. NARDB continues to strive to keep fans informed and aware of the goings on both for each team, and around both the League. You can stay up to date with all the MLR news by following NARDB and/or James 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 jump into the End of Season sales, visit shopmlr.com and use code ‘MLRSTATS’ at checkout for 15% off of your order!