Once there was a world that did not know what a computer was, where American was an English dialect and the moon was made of (Dutch) cheese. In that world, on a beautiful day in 1930, H. Bohlmeijer & T. Wijch, two members of the Amsterdamsche Athletiek Club decided to start playing rugby as well. Until that day, rugby had been an students-only sport in the Netherlands. That was all going to change. October 1
st, 1931, captain Puck van der Heyden leads AAC in the very first match against A.R.V.C. (lost narrowly by 14 to 18). Things were only going to go better after this start or AAC Rugby. In 1940 the club wins it's first of 11 national championships (and there will be more!).
During the war years rugby in the Netherlands is all but dead, only to rise again after liberation. In 1946 already, a visit is paid to Liverpool to thank our liberators. Way before the time governments started to think of a Europe without borders, AAC visits the farthest corners of the continent (on both sides of the Iron Curtain). AAC happily returned the compliment by hosting foreign clubs from all over the world in Amsterdam.
As rugby flourishes in The Netherlands, so does AAC. Since 1984 there are not just men playing the beautiful game in Amsterdam, women show their skills to. And not without merit. AAC becomes a steady supplier for the international side and the ladies establish themselves as a top side in Dutch rugby. They deservedly win a bunch of sevens and beach rugby titles. No doubt the national championships will theirs in the very near future too.
It's not just 15-a-side rugby that makes AAC tick. The very first Dutch sevens championship is won in 1953 (a feat the club will repeat for another 14 times). No wonder the club organises the first international AAC sevens tournament in 1972. A tournament that has blossomed and flourished from day one. I do not doubt Bohlmeijer & Wijch imagined quite a future when they started AAC Rugby in 1930, but I think it was beyond their wildest dreams that 75 years later it would turn out to be such a success.
AAC 75 years & still going strong!