On January 26th, the Birmingham Rugby club, known as the Vulcans, will commemorate the official renaming of its home field at Erskine Ramsay Park in honor of Alfred E. “Eddie” Krebs. Eddie, who succumbed to cancer in 2012, was the youngest of the six Krebs brothers, who founded the club in 1967.
The renaming of Krebs Field, officially approved by the Birmingham City Council, will be observed with a ceremony at 11:30 on Saturday prior to the club's season opening match. The ceremony will be attended by Eddie's brothers Chris, Mark, Van, Tom and Paul and other surviving family members and friends as well as City Councilwoman Valerie Abbott, Park and Recreation Board members, and current and former officers, coaches and players for the Vulcans.
Following the ceremony, Eddie's legacy will be celebrated as he would have liked with the Vulcans opening their spring season versus the Chattanooga Rugby Club. The match will kick off at 1:00 p.m.
The public is invited to join the Vulcans for the ceremony and the match, for which admission is free. Erskine Ramsay Park is located at 700-758 Montclair Rd. Birmingham Alabama 35213.
Submit your team Press Releases and rugby team features to Rugby Rugby. CLICK HERE to send a report to the Rugby Rugby Newsroom. Info about Alfred Edward Krebs (Ed): - Ed was born in Birmingham, Alabama August 16, 1951. After a brief battle with cancer, Ed passed away in Birmingham on July 28, 2012.
- Ed and his brothers founded the Birmingham Rugby Club in 1967.
- Ed’s playing days with Birmingham were much more and longer than any of the other Krebs brothers, playing virtually every position for 18 years.
- Ed participated in the club in one form or another for all 47 years of its history. Those years he did not play he was involved with the team as an officer, supporter or active participant in the after match parties.
- Ed used his engineering and construction background to support the field design and maintenance for regular matches and tournaments. He worked tirelessly to improve and upgrade the Rugby field. Many was the night he was found watering the grass or replacing lights.
- Ed Krebs was the one who carried the Rugby club's responsibilities to support the Birmingham community.
- As Birmingham Rugby’s Recruitment Director and PR Director, Ed was blind to peoples’ ethnicities, color, and any other differences during a period when that could have created issues in Birmingham and the Deep South. Ed opened the door for Birmingham Rugby to be a racially barrier free community and ensured that it never closed.
- Community Service: Ed contributed his time to several charitable organizations including the Salvation Army, YMCA events, and several theater groups. He especially enjoyed utilizing his culinary skills in preparing a low country boil for the Jimmie Hale Mission residents. He was often in attendance of various Arts association fund raising events.
- Ed received his BA from UAB where he was an active member of the theater arts and foreign affairs programs with the latter leading to various special assignments associated with the U.S. Government in the Middle East as a specialist in Arabic affairs.
Info about the club:
Early History: - Birmingham Rugby is one of the oldest continuous rugby Clubs in the south. It was founded in 1967 by the Krebs Brothers. The six brothers are Chris, Ed, Mark, Tom, Paul, and Van.
- The original name of the team was the Birmingham Parkers. The team was named after the Birmingham Park and Recreation Board because of the tremendous amount of support the board provided, along with Mayor George Seibels.
- One particular event that quickly raised popularity was the halftime entertainment of the August 8, 1970 exhibition match between the New York Jets (with Joe Namath) and Buffalo Bills (with OJ Simpson) at Legion Field. The Birmingham Parkers and the Memphis Rugby Club entertained the crowd of 55,000 with a hard hitting bloody battle. About that game Van Krebs wrote, “It is my remembrance that when we took the field for an abbreviated match (10-13 minutes), the fans had no idea of who we were and what the sport was. Approximately 20 minutes later, the fans were roaring and then booing the Pro players who were trying to take the field. The pros had been out of the locker room long enough to watch us and that was when Emerson Boozer said to me "You guys really play that s#!+ for free?" The fans continue to cheer the rugby players and boo the pros. We had quite a few people join the club in the week to follow.” Birmingham won that abbreviated match 5-0.
- Early Accolades: Won the Duke University seven-a-side tournament three years in a row (1967 – 1969). Won every seven-a-side match for a three year period.
- Former Football Stars: Some notable University of Alabama and Auburn University football players to later play for Birmingham Rugby are Tom Somerville, Lou Green, and Wayne Owen. Countless others played college football before playing for Birmingham Rugby. In fact, Tom Krebs and Van Krebs both played football at the University of Virginia.
Recent History and Present: