1.) Coaching Staff
Head Coach
See profile below
(613) 850-0006
Email: srobinson@wilcom.on.ca
Team Manager
Email: john_delong@hotmail.com
Assistant Coach
Email: ltrappit@rogers.com
Assistant Coach
Email: milhouse_uofo@yahoo.ca
Team Trainer
Email: newfie_prop@yahoo.ca
Strength and Conditioning Coach
Email: stephane.robert@uottawa.ca
2.) Click here to access your
WebMail account
3.) Profile of the Head Coach
“Coaches Corner starring Mr. Rugby”
Stuart Robinson shares his long and illustrious coaching history
By Joanne Markle
Sportscommunity.ca Staff
Dec. 9, 2003

Don Cherry may well be recognized as Mr. Hockey, but if there's anyone whose expertise, experience, promotion and love of the game parallels his in another sport, it's Stuart Robinson, a.k.a. Mr. Rugby.
Robinson eats, sleeps and breaths rugby. For more than 30 years, this
dynamic 60 year-old, husband to Cheryl and father of two girls, Amy and Nancy,
has been a head coach and guest coach to many local high school teams in the
greater
Currently, Robinson is the head coach of the
"My first touch of a rugby ball was when I was about that age but it wasn't very serious. It was just socializing with the guys. It wasn't until I was a little bit older that I actually played a bit with the Blackheath third seed, a very low level," said Robinson.
In the beginning, Robinson found himself socializing with the football club more than anything. Surprisingly, his main interest was in rowing in which he obtained junior and senior status.
"Rowing was my first love.
At the age of 26, Robinson, the sporty and outdoorsy Brit, came to
"I started to play, but I was just a third division player and
socialized more than anything. And then I got really into it. That's what
happens. You get the bug," said Robinson. "You make new friends in a
new country. Lots of Irish guys, English guys, Welsh and Canadians. And rugby
was in its infancy here in
In the early 1980s, Robinson went on to reign as president of the Ottawa
Irish Club. While there was a strong calling and need for high school rugby
coaches, Robinson began to contemplate a coaching career of his own. But before
pursuing one, Robinson helped coach the
"I'm inclined to go to for level four or five, but I also have to consider that I'm 60 years old. Are there any benefits of doing that? What would I get out of it? But it's the interest, right. Obtaining more knowledge to pass onto your team," said Robinson.
For Robinson, it's not the glory or the travel for which he has reaped the most rewards. It's the players who have highlighted his long and illustrious rugby-coaching career.
"Definitely the most rewarding is to see the players grow and excel in
their sport, become better, to become more elite at their sport and to move on
and play at a higher level. That's what it's all about," said Robinson.
"They are the most important. To me progress is your product. And the
product is the player. If I can move them on to play at a higher level or
wherever they want to play and have fun and enjoy it and get the rewards out of
that. Better the sport; better the sport for
Apart from playing, Robinson encourages his Gee-Gees to attack the sport from all sides through coaching and referring.
Away from the field, Robinson, a Director of Sales for Wilcom
Systems Ltd., an information technology/information management, professional
services company, admits he's a homebody who enjoys watching TV and movies and
walking his dogs Winston and Churchy. In the wintertime, he is a downhill-ski
instructor at nearby
"Really, my life is my little family, my wife and two daughters. I think it's fun to relax a little and do a number of things, but do them equally," he said.
Congratulations to Robinson for having such a beneficial impact on the development of rugby and the sport's future stars in our nation's capital.
Stu’s Top Ten Coaching Tips:
1.
Keep
the ball in hand at chest level
2.
Pass
before or in contact
3.
Support
from depth and in numbers
4.
Move
the ball wide as quickly as possible
5.
Play
to space
6.
Observe
proper defense lines and tackle with your heart
7.
Do
not unnecessarily commit players to rucks and mauls
8.
Play
the game in quick tempo especially when you are playing the heavies
9.
Run,
run and run and think for yourselves
10.
Enjoy
yourselves.