Maidstone FC

Maidstone
Full name Maidstone Rugby Club
Union Rugby Football Union
Founded 1880 (1880)
Ground(s) William Davey Memorial Ground - The Mote
President Jim Tinsley
Coach(es) Paul Hathaway, Steve Milward, Mike Hebden
Captain(s) Ben Williams
League(s) London 1 South
2015–16 N/A
Team kit
Official website
www.maidstonerugby.org.uk

Maidstone Rugby Club is an English rugby union club based in Maidstone, Kent. The club plays in the London 1 South league, winning the London and South East 2 competition for the 2014-15 season.[1]

History

One of the oldest rugby clubs in the country, the club was formed in 1880, and originally played at a ground close to the centre of the town owned by a Dr. Monckton. The club faced many strong teams from 1886 onwards, such as Middlesex Wanderers, Harlequin F.C., Richmond, Eton House, London Scottish and Old Merchant Taylors' FC. Within this period they found a surge of numbers in players who had formerly been pupils of Maidstone Grammar School. The club moved to The Mote in the early 1950s and have played there ever since. During the 1970s and 80s, Maidstone had become one of the premier clubs in Kent and reached the finals of the county cup for 7 years running between 1974 and 1980, winning twice and once again in 1987. During the 1970s, they reached the finals of the Middlesex Sevens at Twickenham three times in four years and in 1980 were the only junior club to be invited to play in the London Senior Clubs Rugby Festival at Twickenham. Alongside Scottish Club Heriot’s FP, Lansdowne from Ireland and French Champions Bagneres, the club reached the semi-finals where they were beaten 6-0 by London Scottish.

League History

At the formation of the leagues in 1987, Maidstone were unanimously voted by the seven counties of the London Division to go straight into National League Three, along with the Metropolitan Police. After six seasons in the national leagues until 1993, the club suffered four relegations in four seasons and arrived in London 3 South East in 1996. At this point the committee took the decision to appoint a Director of Rugby and new management and coaching structure, the slump was stopped. Promotion was achieved within three seasons and in 2000, the final of the Kent Cup was lost in the dying moments to National League side, Westcombe Park. In 2003, they were relegated to London 2, but were promoted back to London 2 as unbeaten champions in 2005.[2]

During a match against Gravesend R.F.C. On the 17th of January 2010, a Maidstone player allegedly gouged (although this was never fully proven) Gravesend player, Clarence Harding. After a Rugby Football Union hearing on the 12th of January 2011, the club were fined £2000 and found Maidstone guilty of "conduct prejudicial to the interests of the game".[3] They were also docked 50 points, and while the hearing judged the gouging was a deliberate action, they were unable to identify the guilty player. The club accepted the RFU's decision. Moving forward, the club looked to rebuild after a turbulent couple of seasons. After finishing 4th in London 3 in the 2011-2012 season several changes have been made at the club. Their long term aim being to return to London 1 rugby within the next few seasons. The 2012-13 season was an incredibly successful one for Maidstone. They won London 3 SE with 5 games spare and ended undefeated in the league. This saw them return to London and SE 2 for the 2013-14 season. In their first season back at Level 7, the club finished a strong 2nd place behind leaders Charlton Park. Maidstone lost the promotion playoff to Gosport and Fareham, who they had beaten 8 months before in a pre-season friendly.

For the 14-15 season, wholesale changes were made both on and off the pitch for a variety of reasons. The restructure has led to one of the best league seasons in the club's history. The first team went undefeated, only missing out on a perfect season with a draw against second placed Medway. This will see the club return to London One South after a lengthy absence. The club is looking to build on this success for the 15-16 season and push on for a return to the National Leagues as part of a 5-year plan.

Recent Cup History

The club has had relative success in the past 4 years in various cup competitions. In 2011-12, the club reached the national semi-final of the RFU Senior Vase but lost to eventual winners Wells RFC.

The club again reached the semi-final stage in 2012-13 and were very confident in going one step further and making amends for the previous season. However, despite the home draw Maidstone missed out again and went down narrowly to Drybrook RFC. In the 2013-14 season, Maidstone traveled to Blackheath RFC in the semi-final of the Kent Cup. Despite the difference in leagues, Maidstone pushed the national one team all the way, eventually losing by a single point.

The club has had fantastic success in cup competitions during the 2014-15 season. In the Kent cup quarter-final Maidstone beat national three side Westcombe Park to set up a clash with Old Elthamians. However, due to a fixture clash, the club had to withdraw from the cup. Now competing in the RFU Intermediate Cup, Maidstone have had a brilliant run beating Harrow, Medway, Diss and Chiswick to set up a semi-final with Gloucester-based Coney Hill RFC.

With the memory of the previous near misses in their minds, the club put on an incredible performance to win 44-13 to finally book at place at the Twickenham Final against Bridgnorth RFC. The final, held at Twickenham Stadium on Sunday 3 May saw an incredible day out for the whole club. In excess of 7000 supporters travelled to the home of England Rugby to watch Maidstone beat Bridgnorth 31-18 to lift the RFU Intermediate Cup and round off an unbeaten season.

Club Honours

Current squad

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
Josh Pankhurst Hooker England England
Josh McKenzie Hooker England England
Matt Vickers Hooker England England
Ben Williams (c) Prop England England
Luke Debnam Prop England England
Joel Byford Prop England England
Nathan Fitzpatrick Prop England England
Will Fox Prop England England
Andi Petelo Prop Australia Australia
Steve Doughty Prop England England
Nick Bunyan Lock England England
Hugh Cowan Lock Australia Australia
Adam Knight Lock England England
Ben Massey Lock England England
Kenny Murray Lock Scotland Scotland
Ian Lee Lock England England
Matt Cooper Lock England England
Gareth Ellis Lock England England
Jack O'Connell Flanker Ireland Ireland
Sam Weston Flanker England England
Miles Huppatz Flanker England England
Matt Davies Flanker England England
Jake Johnson Flanker England England
James Corbyn Flanker England England
Richie Bowen Flanker England England
Olly Nevin Flanker England England
Charlie Williams Flanker England England
Jake Eaglesham Number 8 Scotland Scotland
Player Position Union
Ben Pitkin Scrum-half England England
Lucian Morasan Scrum-half Romania Romania
Rory Beech Fly-half England England
Tom Holmes Fly-half England England
Sam Mann Fly-half England England
Harry Millar Fly-half New Zealand New Zealand
Craig Webb Centre England England
Dane Smith Centre Australia Australia
Alfie Paea Centre Australia Australia
Craig Webb Centre England England
Alex Eastwood Wing England England
James Douglas Wing England England
Alex Clark Wing England England
Olly Newton Wing England England
Jordan Ring Wing New Zealand New Zealand
Jason Smith Fullback England England
Tom Waring Fullback England England

Former players

List of former players who have gone onto represent professional clubs.

  • England Piers Francis. Auckland, Waikato, Edinburgh, Doncaster Knights, Counties Manukau
  • England Dan Caprice. Saracens, Blackheath, Biarritz, Northland, London Welsh
  • England David Flatman. Saracens, Bath, England

References

  1. "Regional results". The RUGBYPaper. 13 April 2014. p. 36.
  2. http://www.maidstonerugby.org.uk/history.html
  3. "Maidstone Rugby Club fined over eye gouging". bbc.co.uk. 2011-01-13. Retrieved 2013-01-31.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, May 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.