MLR Week Review: Did Old Glory Expose Chicago's Weakness? Seattle vs Free Jacks Turns Personal
The show begins in Washington, D.C., where Old Glory DC looked poised to hand the league-leading Chicago Hounds their first loss of the season. Chicago struck first, with their powerful forward pack immediately making their presence felt, but DC responded with pace, support running, and relentless pressure, keeping the Hounds on the back foot for much of the contest. By halftime, Old Glory held a 19-14 lead, and around the 60-minute mark, they had stretched that advantage to 32-19, forcing penalties and threatening to pull off one of the biggest upsets of the MLR season. So what happened? Did Old Glory expose a blueprint to beat Chicago, or did the Hounds prove that dominant forward play and elite ball retention are enough to survive even when everything else isn't going your way? The hosts debate whether this one-point escape should concern Chicago fans heading into the playoffs.
Next, Anthem RC welcomed the California Legion in a clash between two teams committed to playing fast, expansive rugby. Both sides came out determined to attack from sideline to sideline, but early lineout struggles and handling errors disrupted the flow. While Anthem showed impressive defensive grit and spent large stretches of the match inside Legion territory, California's experience ultimately made the difference. The Legion consistently turned scoring opportunities into points, securing a bonus-point try before halftime and building a commanding lead through sharp offloads, space creation, and clinical execution. Anthem's young roster never stopped fighting, producing a late surge that earned a valuable try bonus point, but was youth and inexperience the deciding factor? Or does the final scoreline unfairly overlook how competitive parts of this match actually were? Austin and Dietrich discuss whether Anthem is closer to becoming a legitimate contender than the standings suggest.
The main event takes us to Starfire Stadium, where the Seattle Seawolves hosted the New England Free Jacks in a match that felt personal from the opening whistle. The intensity was evident immediately, with Nate Salmon delivering a massive hit on JP Smith before later finding himself in the middle of controversy after receiving a yellow card following a frightening collision with Davey Coetzer. A scuffle shortly afterward left no doubt that emotions were running high, and what followed was one of the most physical contests of the season. Turnovers piled up, scoring opportunities were limited, and neither side could establish sustained momentum. As the game evolved into a tactical chess match, Seattle's scrum began to dominate in the second half, gradually creating the platform the Seawolves needed to break the deadlock. Was this the moment Seattle announced themselves as genuine championship contenders, or are the Free Jacks still dangerous despite their struggles? The guys break down the turning points, key collisions, and whether the famous Seattle "Seawall" defense could be the difference-maker when the postseason arrives.
Plus, playoff race implications, standout performers, controversial moments, tactical analysis, and the biggest questions facing Major League Rugby as the regular season enters its final stretch.
Do you think Old Glory proved Chicago can be beaten? Is Anthem's rebuild ahead of schedule? And was Seattle vs New England the most physical match of the MLR season so far? Let us know your thoughts in the comments and join the debate.
Follow for Major League Rugby analysis, rugby news, match reviews, highlights, player discussions, and weekly MLR coverage on TikTok (@ad.podcast) and Instagram (@ad.podcast0).
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