Richmond F.C.

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Richmond
Full name Richmond Football Club
Founded 1861
Location Richmond, London, England
Ground(s) Athletic Ground
Capacity ~2,000
Chairman David Corben
President Michael Hess
Coach Flag of England Brett Taylor
League National 3 South
2007-08 1st (London 1)
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Team colours
Official website
www.richmondfc.co.uk
Flag of England

Richmond Football Club is a rugby union club from Richmond, London. It is a founding member of the Rugby Football Union, and is one of the oldest football (of any code) clubs. It fields teams in both men's and women's rugby, with the men's first team playing in National Division Three South, and the women's first team playing in the women' premiership.

Contents

[edit] History

Formed in 1861, it is one of the oldest football clubs in the world. It holds a significant place in the history of Association football, playing in the first ever match on December 19, 1863, against the Barnes Club, even though it was not a member of the Football Association. In 1878 it hosted the first ever floodlit match and in 1909 played in the inaugural match at Twickenham Stadium, the home of English Rugby.

[edit] Professional Era

In 1996, the then third division club was bought by financial markets trader and Monaco tax exile Ashley Levett. Levett turned the club into the first professional team in England, and began buying in big names to push the club up the leagues, including Ben Clarke from Bath Rugby, the first £1million signing. The club outgrew the Richmond Athletic Ground and became tenants at the Madejski Stadium stadium in Reading. But the crowds and revenues from competition meant that Levett was continually financing the club, and so he placed it in to administration in March 1999.

The professional Richmond club and professional London Scottish F.C. were both merged into London Irish, who continued to play at the Madejski.[1] This period of hesitancy and uncertainty resulted in many of the professional players leaving the club pre-merger, and returning to their original home-teams. The amateur club was reformed in 2000, and the club rejoined the leagues as an amateur club at the bottom of the pyramid.

[edit] Post-Administration

After the professional era, hooker Andy Cuthbert remained at the club and captained the side for several years. Despite its lowly league position, Richmond has still managed to attract some top class players - former South Africa captain Bobby Skinstad joined for the 2005-6 season, Chilean fly-half Sebastian Berti joined in 2006 and England Students' wing Joe Ajuwa was a regular starter in the 1st XV. The club climbed through the lower ranks of the England rugby divisions, from Herts & Middlesex 1 (ninth level) to London 1 (fifth level) in four years, amassing a perfect record of 83 straight wins in league play in the process. However, the club seemingly stalled at that level, continuing to put together winning seasons, but failing to gain promotion in 2005-6 and 2006-7

In the 2007-8 season, Richmond laid out a serious plan for promotion - something they had failed to achieve in the past two seasons, one reason being they had not had any semi-professional players on their books. For the 2007-08 season, the club recruited a number of semi-professional players to boost Richmond's promotion chances. One of these players was USA international Jon Hartman. Richmond eventually achieved promotion, winning all but one of their League games, suffering a 1 point defeat away to the runners up, Worthing, in the penultimate game of the season, after promotion had already been guaranteed. Thus, the team will play in National 3 South for the 2007-8 season. The coach, Brett Taylor, has also laid out plans for the club to be in National League 2 in 2 seasons, and attempts are being made to structure the colts teams into an effective feeder system for the 1st XV.

[edit] Youth

Richmond's youth section is also highly successful - London Irish fullback Delon Armitage was a member of the mini section, and Dominic Waldouck made his debut for Wasps at outside centre against London Irish in 2006 having progressed through the agegroups at Richmond. On 5th January, 2007, London Wasps No.8 Hugo Ellis, another product of Richmond's youth section, captained England U19s in their 18-11 victory over Italy, scoring 2 tries, and again in their 29-5 victory over France, this time scoring a hat-trick. In the same match, another product of the Richmond youth system, now also playing at Wasps, Joe Simpson, started at scrum half and scored a try. He was named in the England Sevens squad for the first round of the 2007-8 World Series, sevens being an important stepping stone for the development of the best youth talent.

[edit] Home Ground

Richmond play at the Athletic Ground, Richmond, which borders Royal Mid Surrey Golf Club, and is close by to other sporting facilities such as Richmond Swimming Pool, Old Deer Park and also a gym. The complex includes two pitches (pitches 3 & 4) by the front gate, the 1st team pitch and perpendicular to that, pitch 2. The site also has a disused driving range behind the 1st team pitch which has three pitches on it, and a disused bowls club. One side of the pitch has a large concrete all-seater stand, under which are the changing rooms, a canteen, shop, physio room and two bars. Also on this Southern side of the pitch is a disused cricket pavilion which also contains several more changing rooms and showers. During the early professional years, a temporary stand was erected along the north side of the pitch.

Later on in the professional era, Richmond 1st team moved to the Madejski Stadium, Reading, where they played until bankruptcy. The stadium would later become London Irish's home ground, and was an early example of London rugby clubs playing in football grounds - London Wasps played at Loftus Road before moving to Adams Park, and Saracens moved to Vicarage Road.

[edit] Rivalries

Richmond contested the first ever rugby match with Blackheath, and though the clubs are not in the same league, they play an annual pre-season friendly to uphold the tradition.

Richmond share the Athletic Ground with London Scottish, and this rivalry is very intense. Both sides experienced a high point at the beginning of the professional era and played in the Premiership. Both teams also fell into administration and dropped down to a level well below the national leagues, and though the routes taken have been slightly different, both clubs have battled their way up the leagues.

Richmond also have a local rivalry with Barnes who they have recently frequently played as both sides sought to move into the national leagues.

At youth level, Richmond's strongest rivalry tends to be with nearby Rosslyn Park. A Richmond vs Rosslyn Park game is always surrounded by controversy of some sort. This rivalry should continue in the 2008-9 season when the 1st XVs will meet each other in the league.

[edit] Honours

  • Surrey Cup titles: 6
    • 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007

[edit] Current Squad

Nat. Position Player
Flag of England HK E.Rosa
Flag of England HK M.Bolton
Flag of England HK D.Burr
Flag of England PR B.Macnamara
Flag of England PR D.Parkinson
Flag of England PR T.Nutall
Flag of England PR O.Gregory
Flag of England LK T.Wesley
Flag of England LK T.Williams
Flag of Ireland LK C.O'Keefe
Flag of England LK M.Siddons
Flag of Ireland LK H.Head
Flag of England FL J.Bucknall
Flag of England FL S.Barlow
Flag of the United States FL J.Hartman
Flag of England FL P.Kyriacou
Flag of South Africa FL A.De Villiers
Flag of England N8 T.George
Nat. Position Player
Flag of England SH T.Drewe
Flag of England SH J.Platt
Flag of England FH L.Cousins
Flag of England FH S.Flynn
Flag of England CE J.Goatley
Flag of England CE T.Cook
Flag of England CE A.Maclennan
Flag of England CE A.Cox
Flag of England WG N.Piggot
Flag of South Africa WG F.van Schalkwyk
Flag of England WG T.Stokes
Flag of England WG J.Ajuwa
Flag of England WG K.Bingham
Flag of England FB M.Hart (Captain)
Flag of England FB M.Brown

[2]

[edit] Notable Former Players

[edit] References

  1. ^ Sugar daddies Four for whom the game turned sour The Independent - January 23, 2005
  2. ^ Nat. shown here indicates sporting nationality as defined by the IRB

[edit] External links

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