Scottish Rugby Union
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Scottish Rugby Union | |
Founded | 1873 |
IRB affiliation | 1886 |
FIRA-AER affiliation | ? |
President | Andy Irvine (2005-) |
Men's coach | Frank Hadden (2005-) |
Women's coach | Lee Adamson |
Official website | |
www.scottishrugby.org | |
The Scottish Rugby Union (SRU) is the governing body of rugby union in Scotland.
Contents |
[edit] History
The Scottish Football Union (SFU) was founded in 1873 and was a founding member of the International Rugby Board in 1886 with Ireland and Wales. England joined in 1890. In 1924 the SFU changed its name to become the Scottish Rugby Union. International games were played at Inverleith from 1899 to 1925 when Murrayfield was opened.
The SRU owns Murrayfield Stadium, which is the main home ground of the Scottish national team, though in 2004 international rugby games were played at Hampden Park in Glasgow and McDiarmid Park in Perth, as part of the SRU's campaign to reach out to new audiences outside the traditional rugby areas.
When the Heineken Cup was suggested SRU officials were concerned that Scottish club sides could not compete against the best teams from France and England and that centrally funded so-called 'super-district' teams might do better.
The four traditional districts—the South (renamed Border Reivers), Edinburgh, Glasgow and the North & Midlands (rebranded as Caledonia Reds)—were given the go-ahead to take part in Europe. For the first two seasons, players were still released to play for their clubs in domestic competition, but eventually the districts became full-time operations.
Then financial difficulties—the SRU's high debt, partly as a result of the redevelopment of Murrayfield—called for retrenchment. After two seasons, financial difficulties forced the SRU to merge the four teams into two. Edinburgh merged with the Border Reivers to form a team to be known as Edinburgh Reivers. Glasgow merged with Caledonian to form a team to be known as Glasgow Caledonian.
The Borders was resurrected in 2002 and joined the second season of the Celtic League. As a consequence Edinburgh Reivers became simply Edinburgh Rugby and Glasgow became Glasgow Rugby. In 2005, all three teams adopted new names. The Borders readopted the name Border Reivers; Edinburgh became Edinburgh Gunners, but would revert to Edinburgh in 2006; and Glasgow became Glasgow Warriors. Caledonia will be re-established when the SRU believe financial circumstances permit.
[edit] Personnel
Phil Anderton was the Chief Executive Officer (resigned January 2005), and on July 14, 2005 a new Scottish Rugby Board was created. Allan Munro is the new chairman, with Fred McLeod (deputy), Tom Inglis and Brian Kennedy alongside as non-executive directors.
The President since 2005 is now Andy Irvine, the former player.
The head coach of the Scotland national rugby union team is currently Frank Hadden, who was appointed following the departure of Matt Williams after the 2004/2005 season.
[edit] See also
- Rugby Union in Scotland
- Scotland national rugby union team
- Border Reivers
- Edinburgh Rugby
- Glasgow Warriors
- Murrayfield Stadium
- BT Premiership Division One
- BT Premiership Division Two
- BT Premiership Division Three
[edit] External links
- SRU accused of becoming dictatorship - the crisis of January 2005 when David Mackay was removed by the general committee
- Scottish Rugby Union - official website
- SRU Annual Report 2003-04
- Guide to Scottish Rugby (The Scotsman)
- Fans Forum (Now the SRU web site has closed their forum)
First tier
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Second tier
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Third tier with World Cup experience
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Third tier without World Cup experience
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