It is a rare thing to see a mid-season #1 vs #2; it happens, but it is rare.
This week we get one of those games, with Xavier of New York meeting St. Ignatius of Cleveland in a neutral site in Pennsylvania.
Xavier rose to the #1 ranking after they opened their season with a 34-14 defeat of Gregory the Great. GGA had previously beating Gonzaga, GRR's preseason #1. While that wasn't enough ... yet ... to get the Knights to #1, they followed that up with wins over St. Edward, Staples, Fordham Prep, and Greenwich. Last week Xavier won two games on the same day, running out wins over Chaminade and St. Joseph by-the-Sea.
So that's five wins over ranked opponents, with an average score of 36-10. The games weren't what you'd call blowouts, really. The winning margins were led by defense, with none of those five teams scoring more than two tries in a game. Points against in those five games have been, in order, 14, 10, 12, 7, 7. That's pretty consistent and speaks to how the team is working well as a unit.
"I think we are a team who are enjoying their rugby and enjoying the camaraderie of playing with each other," said Head Coach Greg Norris. "Sometimes the team culture is one of the strongest factors of the team and that in itself can do a lot. We have a lot to work on still and we are certainly not exactly where we would ultimately like to be. But we are still five weeks away from Nationals—so peaking now is not really in our best interests. We have a nice tour coming up and so we will put in a lot of work whilst we are together 24/7 for 10 days. Hopefully we can fix some of our ongoing mistakes."
Mistakes?
“We make silly passes and have too many handling errors, especially in the wind,” said Xavier center Conor Gangemi. “But moving forward, I think that our defense is going to continue to shine.”
It will have to, because, as you will see.
The St. Ignatius journey to #2 is a little different. They, too, have won games against ranked teams, beating Pendleton, New Trier, St. Edward, three opponents on tour in Spain, and then St. Xavier of Cincinnati. How they're done it is a little different, and that could be illustrated by their victory against the one opponent Ignatius and Xavier have shared, St. Edward. In that game, Ignatius led 36-27 with less than 10 minutes to go ... and scored four tries in those closing moments to win 62-27. That pattern has repeated itself in other games. The game might seem close, but the Ignatius offense has been a coiled spring.
The only reason they beat Pendleton "only" by the score of 35-6 was because a windy, cold day and lots of tries out wide meant for zero conversions. Only Real Ciencias (19-12 Ignatius victory) kept the Wildcats under 30. Their average score is 48-11. The points against is impressive on the face of it, but their coaches aren't thrilled with the Iggy defense. Even so, the reasons behind the success are similar to those of Xavier.
"Our Varsity group has been a pleasure to work with," said Head Coach Dan Arbeznik, whose five teams (Varsity Gold A and B, Varsity Blue, JV, and Freshmen) will play well over 60 games this spring. "We have a group of guys who are really hard working and who want to be good. The internal leadership has been about the best that I've ever seen within our club. The guys are close with each other and are always pushing themselves and each other to keep the standard high. So in that sense, it's a group that is capable of growing so much more. We have so many 'work-ons' that it would be impossible to touch on all of them. But I think our biggest issue has been defense. We're leaking so many penalties that are giving up possession and territory. We did well to shut out one of our Spanish counterparts on tour but have yet to reach that standard on American soil. We'll need to become much stouter if we're going to make a serious run this year."