Bingham Rugby

Bingham Rugby




⚡ ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Bingham Rugby
It looks like you were misusing this feature by going too fast. You’ve been temporarily blocked from using it.

It looks like you were misusing this feature by going too fast. You’ve been temporarily blocked from using it.



2014 Season
x

Regular Season



Seasons

Regular Season


Regular Season












Spring 15's









High School











Bonneville Conference











Bingham Rugby Club













High School

Varsity Girls

9/10

7/8 Open

Middle School u120







Snow Conference

Wasatch Conference

Oquirrh Conference

Bonneville Conference

SUN







Bingham Rugby Club

Herriman

Summit Academy

West Jordan

Wasatch HS

United

Crusaders






Home


Roster




Game Schedule




Player Stats


Team Stats



Standings




Photos




Videos




Posts






Days until preseason game


0
Days









This website is powered by SportsEngine's

Sports Relationship Management

(SRM) software, but is owned by and subject to the Utah Youth Rugby privacy policy.

©2022 SportsEngine, Inc.




Privacy Policy









You can keep informed by: Facebook: BIngham Rugby Club and on Twitter: BIngham Rugby
We want you!! Practices are starting. Get registered as soon as possible!

Create your free account or log in for more features.

Please enter email address to continue


Please enter valid email address to continue






Chrome






Safari


Continue

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.

September 11, 2021 / 4:15 AM
/ CBS San Francisco

SAN FRANCISCO (KPIX 5) -- Twenty years ago, terrorists hijacked four planes heading to California. Two planes crashed into the Twin Towers at the World Trade Center in New York. Another plane plowed into the Pentagon. The fourth plane - United Flight 93 - was the only aircraft not to hit its intended target.
On that flight was a Bay Area executive and a star rugby athlete named Mark Bingham who left a legacy both on and off the field.
Bingham was a rugby star at Los Gatos High School, where he was captain of the team. At Cal, he played championship rugby. He was known as being very aggressive and an excellent star flanker. He stood well over six feet and weighed well over 200 lbs.
When he graduated, Bingham came out as gay to his family and friends. He began a successful public relations firm known as The Bingham Group and joined a rugby club known as The San Francisco Fog . Founded in 2000, it was the first all-gay, inclusive rugby club on the West Coast.
"It's been a shining light for people around the world," recounted the Fog's coach Dany Samreth.
"He had the gusto of life and I think that he was able to channel that gusto into the game," recollected Fog player Stewart Bennett.
The sport suited his personality. Bingham was a vicious competitor, but off the field he was a teddy bear, friends say.
"You know, the thing about rugby is you kick the snot out of each other on the pitch, and then you'll go have a beer together afterwards. You just all get along," said Todd Sarner.
Sarner was one of Bingham's best friends. They grew up together and played on the same high school rugby team. Bingham was Sarner's best man at his wedding.
In late August 2001, Sarner dropped Bingham off at San Francisco International Airport to catch a flight to New York where Bingham had opened an office. On September 10, Bingham called to tell Todd he was coming back to San Francisco. The next morning, he overslept and was late for his flight. Bingham ended up as the last person to board Flight 93 in Newark, New Jersey.
Soon the attacks would begin with hijackers who took over cockpits and threatened passengers with boxcutters and claims of bombs on board. There were no bombs. The hijackers turned the planes all full of fuel into weapons of mass destruction.
Fear spread coast-to-coast and Bingham's friends in San Francisco all started to worry. Bennett told KPIX 5 that an email started going around asking about Bingham's whereabouts. Everyone knew he was taking an early flight back to San Francisco.
On Flight 93, some of the passengers called loved ones to tell they had been hijacked, and their family and friends told them about the attacks on the twin towers and the Pentagon. Bingham's mother Alice Hoagland called him and left a message telling him about the hijacking and to do whatever he could to overpower the hijackers.
The passengers and crew then took a vote and formed a plan to wrest control of the plane from the hijackers. It was a team effort. Bingham was front and center along with three other businessmen who were athletes: Tom Burnett, Todd Beamer and Jeremy Glick. Some of the flight attendants boiled water to use as weapons.
Bingham's friends had a premonition.
"Everybody who knew Mark came to the same conclusion before there were any stories about what the passengers did," said Sarner. "And that was beyond any shadow of a doubt. Mark did something because that's just what he was to the bone."
Flight recordings documented how the passengers rushed the cockpit door. The hijackers decided to abort the mission which was to plow into the U.S. Capitol building and instead crash the plane in a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania. All 44 people on board died including the four hijackers. The brave men and women on board saved countless other lives that day. Their story is told at the National Park's Flight 93 Memorial .
"It was okay to talk about being gay and being a rugby player and being a hero all at once," said Bennett.
"I'd get notes from parents saying we just watched a story about your friend on TV and my kid turned to me and said I want to be like him," recounted Sarner.
Twenty years ago on 9/11, players with the Fog gathered at the Pilsner Inn in the city Castro District. They go there after most practices. Above the jukebox, there is a plaque in Bingham's honor.
On Saturday, September 11, the club plays a tournament called the Bingham Stein Cup in his honor. They are playing against Mendocino at the Crocker Amazon Park beginning at 11 a.m. All are invited.
Also, an award-winning documentary called " The Rugby Player " will stream for the first time. The film explores Bingham's life but also that of his mother. Alice Hoagland is the other hero of Flight 93.
After his death, Hoagland turned her profound loss into action for the LBGTQ community. She became an inspirational mother figure for many members of the club.

First published on September 11, 2021 / 4:15 AM


© 2021 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.

©2022 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Romeo I Belong To You
Wife Filming Husband Fucking
French Girl Masturbating

Report Page