The “Tabo“, as its members like to call it, is a rugby club that was born in the city of Córdoba.

The club had its beginnings in the 60s, as part of the curriculum of the sports activities of the Gabriel Taborín School and continued until the late 90s, when the club decided to merge with the Círculo de Antiguos Cadetes to give birth to Córdoba Rugby.

It was not until February 2015 that, thanks to the commitment and mutual effort of the Taborín alumni, that the club re-emerged with its own identity so as not to let the flame that was always there go out.

Today, the Taborín Club has a young board of directors, men’s and women’s rugby teams of different ages, new facilities with three hockey pitches and a huge commitment to offer itself as an alternative in the southern area of the city of Cordoba.

Cha Roga is a rugby club born in the city of Santa Fe and based in the town of Santo Tomé. The name comes from an expression used by the Quiloazas, a native group of the Santa Fe region, and means “Our House”.

The club has a history of more than 70 years, with its beginnings in 1952, when the players decided to create the first rugby-only club in the city. That same year, they were crowned champions of the First Division Championship of the Rio Parana Rugby Union.

From that moment on, they began to train at the Cancha Universitaria de Santa Fe as an all-male rugby team, adopting the blue, red and white Crab as their mascot or logo. It was not until the 1990s that “the pioneers”, a diverse group of women interested in the sport, started a women’s rugby division. This allowed Cha Roga to position itself as one of the two clubs in the province of Santa Fe with a women’s rugby team at that time.

Today the club does not stop its growth and its members maintain the will to continue contributing everything they can to carry out the matches, the infrastructure and many other needs for Cha Roga to continue its existence.

Founded in 2002, Club Pumai is an organisation dedicated to rugby in the municipality of Maipú, in the Argentine province of Mendoza.

Pumai grew out of a group of rugby players and their wives who started their activities thanks to the donation of a piece of land to play on. This generous donation enabled them to join the Cuyo Rugby Union and establish themselves as one of the most exclusive rugby clubs in the region. The name of the club was created from the pronunciation given by changing the order of the syllables of “Maipú”.

Today, the club is also dedicated to hockey, but its forte continues to be rugby, adding more and more players to both the men’s and women’s teams, and advancing in regional and national tournaments.

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