Caledonian Thebans RFC

Caledonian Thebans RFC
Club information
Full name Caledonian Thebans Rugby Football Club
Nickname(s) The Thebans
Website http://www.thebans-rfc.co.uk/
Colours Navy Blue and White
Founded 18 May 2002
Current details
Ground(s)
  • BT Murrayfield Stadium
Chairman Owen Greechan
Coach(s) Jim Reilly, Jim Whitehouse
Captain(s) Neil Fox
Competition Union Cup, Bingham Cup

Caledonian Thebans Rugby Football Club is Scotland's leading inclusive rugby club and represents Scotland in international rugby union tournaments for inclusive teams.

Established in 2002, the Thebans are based at Edinburgh's BT Murrayfield Stadium and have over 40 registered players. The club supports its players and supporters - whether gay or straight, experienced or new to the game - to enjoy rugby at a competitive level.

Through twice-weekly coaching sessions and regular matches against both mainstream and inclusive clubs (whose members are often drawn from the LGBT community), the Thebans aim to develop confident players and encourage participation in rugby union from groups who may have been under-represented in the sport.

History

The Thebans started life as a club primarily for gay and bisexual men who wanted to play rugby, but may have lacked the confidence to join a mainstream team. The club came to life on 18 May 2002 when Colm Cunningham, a gay man from Northern Ireland, put up a poster in the Laughing Duck - a now defunct Edinburgh gay bar.

Since then, the Thebans have gone from strength to strength and now benefit from extensive facilities at BT Murrayfield Stadium, including the latest 4G artificial pitch and a clubhouse. The club's playing squad now also includes a diverse mix of gay, bisexual and straight players - reflecting the Thebans' aim of promoting inclusion and encouraging participation in the game.

International competition

Caledonian Thebans RFC has represented Scotland at international tournaments for inclusive clubs since 2002.

The Thebans have been most successful at the biennial Union Cup, the European championships for inclusive teams. In the 2014 tournament, held in Brussels, a strong Thebans squad finished as runners-up in the Silver Plate final - losing 8-7 to hosts Straffe Ketten.

May 2016 will see the Thebans travel to Nashville, Tennessee to fight for inclusive rugby's world cup, the Bingham Cup, which takes place every second year. Unable to attend the 2014 tournament, held in Sydney, the Thebans are raising funds to send a full squad to Nashville and ensure Scotland is once again represented in this global competition.

Affiliation

The Thebans are affiliated to the Scottish Rugby Union and are also part of umbrella club Murrayfield Wanderers FC, with whom the club has built strong ties. The Thebans are also part of the International Gay Rugby Association and Board.[1][2]

Name

The club's name is a reference to the Sacred Band of Thebes,[1] an elite and highly successful military unit in the Theban army of ancient Greece, which was made up of male couples.[3] The Sacred Band of Thebes was completely annihilated, however, by Alexander the Great under Philip II of Macedon in the Battle of Chaeronea in 338 BC.[3]

External links

References

  1. 1 2 Official page "About Us" retrieved 27 July 2009
  2. IGRAB members retrieved 27 July 2009
  3. 1 2 Paul Walter Ludwig, Eros and Polis: Desire and Community in Greek Political Theory. Cambridge, 2002.
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