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Social media sensation Ilona Maher set for Bristol Bears debut

By PA
New Bristol Bears women signing Ilona Maher is presented to the Ashton Gate crowd last month (Photo by Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

Social media sensation Ilona Maher is set for her Bristol Bears debut after being named on the bench for Gloucester-Hartpury’s visit to Ashton Gate on Sunday. The American back has more than eight million followers combined on Instagram and TikTok.

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Her three-month Bristol contract begins against the reigning Premiership Women’s Rugby champions in a repeat of last season’s final. More than 8,000 tickets have been sold – almost double Bears’ previous record attendance for a women’s game – with Maher set to feature as a replacement.

The 28-year-old arrived back in the west country on Wednesday after spending a week at the club in early December and she has already made a significant impact, generating a considerable increase in replica shirt sales while Bristol’s Instagram following has risen from 21,000 to 67,000 since her signing was announced.

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Nick Mallett questions SA teams Champions Cup participation

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Nick Mallett questions SA teams Champions Cup participation

Head coach Dave Ward said: “With a crowd of nearly 8,000 expected at Ashton Gate on Sunday, it is a hugely exciting occasion and we are hoping to give them something to cheer about. We understand the importance of the game in the context of our season, and the quality of the reigning champions, but we head into the game with confidence and relishing the occasion and the challenge.”

Maher, who can play at both at centre and wing, won an Olympic 7s bronze medal with the United States in Paris and then went on to become the runner-up on Dancing with the Stars, the American equivalent of Strictly Come Dancing.

 

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A post shared by Ilona Maher (@ilonamaher)

She has not played in 15s since 2021, but is hoping to reacquaint herself with the format in the hope of earning a place on the USA squad, who will travel to this summer’s Rugby World Cup in England. She first played 15s in college at Quinnipiac University and earned two international caps during the Pacific Four Series four years ago.

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PWR chair Genevieve Shore said: “We are excited to have Ilona in the PWR at Bristol Bears. We believe she will have an incredibly positive impact on the Bears, PWR and women’s rugby in general. Ilona is such an impressive person and, as we have seen, takes on every challenge presented to her in an incredible way.

“Playing in PWR is her next challenge, alongside many of the game’s superstars, and she is going to have a great time with us. One of the great things we love about women’s rugby is that there are some really different characters in the game and that they are allowed to express themselves perhaps more than the male athletes are, so we all have to embrace Ilona’s time with us.”

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1 Comment
B
BC 8 days ago

Yet to be a sensation in the 15s game.

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Mzilikazi 24 minutes ago
How law changes are speeding up the game - but the scrum lags behind

Regarding the scrum, I would pick up on your point made below, Nick. "....reffing the scrum is not easy at all, prob the single most difficult area in the books." Those of us who have coached the scrum, and /or refereed, would fully agree. And I have read on the pages of rugby forums for years now the opinion of experienced international props. "I could not detect exactly what happened in that particular scrum"


Ofc the problem is heightened when the referee has not played in the pack, has never been in a scrum. It is very clear, at least to me, that many top level referees don't begin to understand the mechanics of the scrum.


I feel the laws are adequate as they stand to a great extent. The problem, as I see it, is that referees right up to top level just don't apply them in the the letter of the law or in the spirit they should .


Any significant downward pressure by a prop to cause a collapse should be penalised. For example look at the scrum clip at 54.49 mins. It is the Leinster LH who forces downwards first, then the Munster TH "pancakes" I believe the Leinster prop is the offender there.


I also think that with most of the wheels in those clips, it was Leinster who are the offenders. That can be hard to pick though in many cases. Another point is the hooker standing up. That was being penalised 3/4 years ago. So Kellaher would have been penalised back then in that first clip at 04.17.


I think the directive should be given now to referees at all levels to stop giving penalties simply because a team is being moved backwards. And the directive should be "order the team with the ball to clear it, and within 3 secs."


It would help if a change was made to remove the option to take another scrum after a penalty is awarded. Must take a tap or a kick.

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