Ealing Trailfinders Rugby Club

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Ealing Trailfinders
180px
Full name Ealing Trailfinders Rugby Club
Union RFU
Founded 1871; 153 years ago (1871)[lower-alpha 1]
Region West Ealing, London
Ground(s) Trailfinders Sports Ground (Capacity: 3,020 (1,000 seats))
President Dick Craig
Coach(es) Ben Ward
Kieran Power
Captain(s) Danny Kenny
League(s) RFU Championship
2015–16 11th
Team kit
Official website
www.ealingrugby.co.uk

Ealing Trailfinders Rugby Club is an English rugby union club, located in West Ealing, London. The club's first team play in the Greene King IPA Championship RFU Championship after they won National League 1 in 2014–15, the third tier of the English domestic rugby union league system.

Structure of the club

The club's registered playing name with the RFU is Ealing Trailfinders. The club is a Mutual Society registered with the FSA, and run on behalf of its members and the game. The club is located at Trailfinders Sports Ground, just south of the A40 at the upper end of West Ealing.

The Club has a first team squad, men's section, academy section, youth section, mini section and referees section. The Ealing Trailfinders first team team finished as champions in National League 1 for season 2012–13 and won promotion, for the first time, to the second tier of the English rugby union leagues, the RFU Championship. After one season they finished in twelfth place and were relegated back to National League 1.

The men’s section runs four teams, competing in The Shield and the Middlesex Merit Leagues, and veterans rugby. The academy and youth sections are for players aged 13 to 23 and now incorporates the new academy section which feeds players directly into senior rugby. The youth teams cater for boys and girls at all levels of ability and currently have players representing the county at all age group levels, as well as players just being introduced to the game. The youth play in the Hertfordshire and Middlesex leagues and, in season 2011–12, were league winners at U14 level as well as winning Division Three at U16 level. The club is active at all levels. The mini and youth sections have teams in several age groups with over 750 registered players, making it the biggest club in Middlesex and one of the largest in the country.[citation needed] The club's junior teams are regular winners of County Festivals, and champions of the Herts and Middlesex Leagues for Youth Rugby.[citation needed]

The club has developed a pathway for female players starting at 10 and running through to U18. Known as the Emeralds, this section has provided players to the England Elite Programme. The club has also seen players develop through the new structures to play for England and U.S.[citation needed]

History

1869 – 1995

The team played its first match in 1869[lower-alpha 1] on Ealing Common, prior to the founding of the Rugby Football Union in 1871. The early years saw regular fixtures against the likes of Wasps, London Irish, Harlequins, Richmond and Blackheath with 75% win rate for a long period.[citation needed]

Between 1894 and 1958 the club moved location numerous times – Hanger Lane – West Middlesex Polo Club – Gunnersbury ParkDrayton GreenSyon Lane, Horsenden Hill.

Ealing Rugby Club's centenary match was played against Harlequins in 1970. In the 1970s and ’80s Ealing supplied many county level players for Middlesex. In 1987 the club finished top of London Division 1 and during the next six years was never lower than 2nd in London 1 nor higher than 10th in National 5. Ealing won the Middlesex cup three times in this period.

1995 – present

In 1996 Ealing were relegated from London 1. In response, the club formed youth and minis sections, and moved to a new ground at Trailfinders Sports Club in 1999. The Club has been awarded two RFU Presidents Awards, the first in 2007 for its work on referee development that has extended into a national programme, and the second in 2008 for coaching excellence. In 2009, the club fielded two first team players who had been developed through the Juniors.

In the 2009–10, season the Club was the only team in the National Leagues to score more than 1,000 points, averaging more than 36 in each game. The club narrowly missed out on promotion to National One by losing to Barking RFC by 2 points and Rosslyn Park by 1.

In 2010–11, the club started its Community Rugby programme providing coaching support and access to the game to schools and other groups throughout Ealing and West London. During this season, Ealing's winger Phil Chesters scored 70 tries which is the record for the most tries in an English Rugby season.[2]

2007–08: National Division 3 South, 3rd place Mounts Bay 1st; Cinderford 2nd
2008–09: National Division 3 South, 3rd place London Scottish 1st; Rosslyn Park 2nd
2009–10: National League 2 South, 3rd place Barking 1st; Rosslyn Park 2nd[3]
2010–11: National League 2 South, 1st place Jersey 2nd
2011–12: National League 1, 2nd place Jersey 1st
2012–13: National League 1, 1st place Esher 2nd
2013–14: IPA Greene King Championship, 12th
Midway through the season long-serving director of rugby Mike Cudmore announced that he would be stepping down at the season's end. Head coach and fly-half Ben Ward was appointed director of coaching from the start of the 2014–15 season. After fighting against relegation for the majority of the season, Ealing Trailfinders were eventually relegated on the final day of the season by one point after they lost at home to Rotherham Titans, while Jersey won away to Bedford Blues
2014–15: National League 1, 1st
Ealing Trailfinders quickly established themselves in first place in National 1 and they won the title with a haul of 136 points, nine ahead of their nearest rivals Rosslyn Park.

Club honours

Current standings

2015–16 RFU Championship Table watch · edit · discuss
Club Played Won Drawn Lost Points for Points against Points diff Try bonus Loss bonus Points
1 Bristol Rugby (CH) 22 20 0 2 718 397 321 14 1 95
2 Doncaster Knights (RU) 22 15 2 5 588 470 118 10 5 79
3 Yorkshire Carnegie (SF) 22 14 0 8 655 466 189 15 7 78
4 Bedford Blues (SF) 22 12 0 10 623 599 24 10 6 64
5 London Welsh 22 11 1 10 442 528 –86 9 3 58
6 Jersey 22 11 1 10 465 466 –1 5 6 57
7 Nottingham Rugby 22 10 0 12 494 483 11 9 7 56
8 London Scottish 22 10 0 12 463 453 10 2 7 49
9 Cornish Pirates 22 8 1 13 530 570 –40 8 7 49
10 Rotherham Titans 22 8 0 14 454 621 –167 3 3 38
11 Ealing Trailfinders 22 6 1 15 523 605 –82 5 6 37
12 Moseley (R) 22 4 0 18 416 715 –-299 6 4 26
  • If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:
  1. Number of matches won
  2. Difference between points for and against
  3. Total number of points for
  4. Aggregate number of points scored in matches between tied teams
  5. Number of matches won excluding the first match, then the second and so on until the tie is settled
Green background are promotion play-off places. Pink background is the relegation place.
Updated: 13 May 2016
Source: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Current squad

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

2015–16 Note: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-WR nationality.

Player Position Union
Karl Gibson Hooker England England
Rhys Lawrence Hooker Wales Wales
Matt Thompson Hooker England England
Alun Walker Hooker Scotland Scotland
Nathan Buck Prop Wales Wales
Will Davis Prop England England
Michael Holford Prop England England
Jamie Kilbane Prop Ireland Ireland
Steven Neville Prop England England
Alex Penny Prop England England
George Porter Prop England England
Sam Rodman Prop England England
Nathan Hannay Lock England England
Llewelyn Jones Lock Wales Wales
Carwyn Jones Lock Wales Wales
Adam Preocanin Lock England England
Paul Spivey Lock England England
Alex Bradley Flanker England England
Arthur Ellis Flanker England England
Iain Grieve Flanker England England
Harrison Orr Flanker Australia Australia
Eoghan Grace Flanker Ireland Ireland
Danny Kenny Number 8 Ireland Ireland
Chris York Number 8 England England
Player Position Union
Tom Bliss Scrum-half United States United States
Alex Davies Scrum-half England England
Alex Walker Scrum-half Wales Wales
Jonny Bentley Fly-half New Zealand New Zealand
Tristan Roberts Fly-half England England
Sam Stanley Fly-half England England
Danny Barnes Centre Ireland Ireland
Toby Howley-Berridge Centre England England
Joe Munro Centre England England
Andy Reay Centre England England
Tom Wheatcroft Centre England England
Phil Chesters Wing England England
Rhys Crane Wing England England
Chris Kinloch Wing Scotland Scotland
James Stephenson Wing England England
Callum Wilson Wing England England
Luke Daniels Fullback England England
Will Harries Fullback Wales Wales
James Love Fullback England England

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 According to Ealing Traifinders official website, the club played its first match in 1869 but the official date of establishment was set up in 1871.[1]

References

External links

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.