Origins The roots of the American National Rugby League date to 1997, when Super League America was formed to organize a
national team, establish an amateur domestic competition, and build the sport in the United States. The organization was initially established by
Rupert Murdoch's
News Corporation in an attempt to spread rugby league to the United States. The organization was run by former professional player
David Niu, who had come to
Philadelphia in 1992 and had been active in promoting the sport there. Super League America's domestic competition began its inaugural season in 1998, and was contested by six teams all in the Northeastern United States: the Glen Mills Bulls (later the Aston Bulls), the
New Jersey Sharks (now the Bucks County Sharks in the USARL), the
New York Broncos (now the New York Knights in the USARL), the
Philadelphia Bulldogs (now the Philadelphia Fight in the USARL), the Boston Storm, and the Pennsylvania Raiders. In December 1999, Super League America announced a reorganization. The league headquarters moved to
Jacksonville, Florida, with Jacksonville marketing executive Steve Gormley made the organization's new president; David Niu would serve as CEO and maintain the northeastern branch. The USRL was successful in attracting foreign teams and advanced the U.S. national team to the
Rugby League World Cup qualifiers for the first time; however, it was soon beset by internal strife. Complications over a deal with the British
Rugby Football League led to a dispute that bankrupted the USRL. Later that year Gormley sold the USRL's assets to the Rugby Football League, leaving the AMNRL as the sole rugby league body in the United States. Expansion of the domestic league became a major goal for the organization, and new teams were added every few years. The
Wilmington Vikings (later the New York Raiders) joined the competition in 2002, bringing the number of teams back up to six. The following year the
Connecticut Wildcats of
Norwalk, Connecticut and the
Washington D.C. Slayers joined. In 2006 the league expanded once again to include the
Jacksonville Axemen, the
New Haven Warriors, and the
Boston Braves. After the end of the season, however, the Boston Braves folded, and two charter teams, the
Media Mantarays and the Philadelphia Fight, announced they were merging. The
Fairfax Eagles joined the competition in 2007, and the Boston Thirteens joined in 2009. Another charter franchise, the Bucks County Sharks, suspended operations in 2010, while the
Pittsburgh Vipers were added. In 2010, the AMNRL entered into a relationship with the Star Group to rebrand the league, its assets, and its teams. In 2012, the AMNRL entered into a partnership arrangement with Grand Prix Entertainment to promote and grow the game in the USA, in return for ownership of the league and TV rights to World Cup matches in 2013. This led to complications regarding the ownership of the league.
Expansion plans The AMNRL announced various plans for future expansion at different times. Beginning in 2001 the league announced plans for a Western American National Rugby League (WAMNRL) to develop the sport on the
West Coast of the United States. The AMNRL has revisited these plans several times since. In 2009 league officials announced the creation of a new, fully professional league, the National Rugby League USA (NRLUS), which originally hoped to launch in 2010. The AMNRL would serve as an amateur and semi-professional feeder league for the new competition. However, the new league never got off the ground, with officials blaming the
Great Recession.
AMNRL/USARL split and collapse On January 12, 2011, seven teams announced they were breaking with the AMNRL to form a new league, the USA Rugby League (USARL). Officials cited the lack of club involvement in the AMNRL's decision-making as the reason for the split; the USA Rugby League implemented a constituency which involved member clubs in its administration. The departing teams were the Boston 13s, the D.C. Slayers, the Fairfax Eagles, the Jacksonville Axemen, the New Haven Warriors, the Philadelphia Fight, and the Pittsburgh Vipers (later the Pittsburgh Sledgehammers). Five of these teams (all except Fairfax and Pittsburgh), along with three new teams, participated in the USARL's inaugural
2011 season. The AMNRL struggled over the next few years due to the competition from the USARL. The RLIF stepped in to work with the leagues toward an ultimate goal of reunification, but were unable to find a solution. The AMNRL put its domestic competition on hiatus after the 2013 season, though it continued to organize games for the national team, including the U.S.'s first ever appearance at the
Rugby League World Cup in
2013, in which the Tomahawks reached the quarter-finals. The split between the leagues cost the U.S. its automatic qualification to the
2017 World Cup. In August 2014, the AMNRL announced it would cease operations to end the rift and allow the USARL to seek status as the national governing body. ==Commissioners and presidents==