Leicester Football Club
(nicknamed Leicester Tigers
) is an English rugby union club that plays in the Guinness Premiership. The club has been the most successful English club of the professional era, winning the Heineken Cup twice and the league five times under the captaincy of Martin Johnson, all in the space of 7 years.
Leicester are one of only four teams never to have been relegated from the top division, and they have never finished a league season below 6th position. They are also the only English side to have qualified to play in every Heineken Cup in which English teams have participated. The club's turnover for 2007/08 was £15.65 million. [1]
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LEICESTER TIGERS TICKETS
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History
Early years
Leicester Football Club was formed in a meeting held in the city's George Hotel on August 1880 by the merger of three smaller teams: Leicester Societies AFC, Leicester Amateur FC and Leicester Alert. That October, the new club wore black for their first game against Moseley at the Belgrave Cricket and Cycle Ground.
It was not until five years or so later that the nickname "Tigers" was first used, the
Leicester Daily Post
reporting that "the Tiger stripes were keeping well together". The origin of the nickname is uncertain, but it may have come from
The Royal Leicestershire Regiment, which received the nickname after serving in
India. An alternative theory is that the team wore a brown and yellow striped shirt. In their early years, they were also known as "The Death or Glory Boys". The now-famous scarlet, green and white jerseys were not introduced until 1891, although these were in a vertical stripe formation until the distinctive hoops were first worn in September 1895.
They moved in 1892 to their present ground at
Welford Road,
Leicester. Having won the
Midlands Cup every year from 1898 to 1905, they dropped out "to give other teams a chance".
In the 1926/27 season, Leicester started using letters to identify their forwards, expanding the practice by 1931/32 to the whole team.
Post war
With the arrival of
Chalkie White in 1968, things began to improve significantly. He was a very progressive coach who demanded high standards of fitness and tactics. His unique style of coaching brought success on the pitch, and with that success came increased attendances.
Leicester started to grow as a club towards the end of the 1970s. At the start of the decade, the club had just 600-700 members and gates were less than 1,000. By 1980, the Tigers had reached their first cup final, and the club was on its way towards a substantial period of growth.
During 1970s the team played in front of a packed stadium during the annual
Boxing Day Barbarians event (in contrast with the usual 750-2,000 spectators). With the advent of professionalism in the mid 1990s, with league fixtures being played over the Christmas period, regular games against the Barbarians have stopped.
A first Twickenham final appearance ended in defeat by Gloucester in the
John Player Cup in 1978, but the Tigers won the next three against Moseley (15-12), London Irish (21-9) and Gosforth (22-15). This meant they were allowed to keep the trophy. The fifth final was a loss to Bristol in 1983.
In August 1980, Leicester became the first English club to go on a tour in the southern hemisphere, where they played six games in Australia and Fiji to mark the club's centenary.
In the 1980s, the club still enjoyed the benefits of amateur rugby, with nights away and Easter tours, although off the pitch the Tigers were taking their first steps towards corporate sponsorship. When they beat
Waterloo on the last day of the 1987/88 season, the Tigers became England’s first official champions.
Nineties and onwards
The early 1990s saw the emergence of Leicester's renowned ABC Club, so called because of the letters the front row players wore on their backs, with
Graham Rowntree, hooker
Richard Cockerill and
Darren Garforth.
Leicester began one of the greatest winning streaks of any team. This streak started when a young pack helped Leicester to defeat Harlequins 23-16 in the 1993 cup final. They were English champions again in 1995, won the Pilkington Cup in 1997 (9-3 against Sale) and were the first English team to get to the Heineken Cup final before losing to
Brive in the same year. In the 1996 cup final, Tigers lost to Bath (which was just finishing its own great domination of English rugby) after
Steve Lander gave a contentious penalty try to in the last minute which sealed their victory. After the match
Neil Back pushed over Lander landing himself a six month ban.
From 1999 to 2002, under the captaincy of
Martin Johnson and the management of
Dean Richards, who became Director of Rugby for the club in February 1998, they won four consecutive Premiership titles and the first Zürich Championship play-offs
[2], bringing their total of league championships to 6 — tied with Bath for most wins.
They also won the
Heineken Cup in 2001 and 2002 — the only side to date who have managed to win the competition in consecutive seasons. Leicester defeated
Stade Français (34-30) in 2001, and
Munster (15-9) in 2002.
Leicester during this time had a very good home record; they went 57 games unbeaten at home in a period that stretched from 30 December 1997 to 30 November 2002 and included 52 successive wins. During these four seasons Leicester lost only 14 games out of the 92 they played.
In the
2003 Rugby World Cup, the club had seven representatives in the winning
England squad:
Martin Johnson (captain),
Neil Back,
Martin Corry,
Ben Kay,
Lewis Moody,
Dorian West and
Julian White. However whilst these players were away Leicester's form suffered and they were 11th in the league and dumped out of the Heineken cup in the group stages when they decided to sack
Dean Richards who was succeeded by the forwards coach John Wells.
Post Richards Era
In
John Wells' first full season in charge of the team Leicester finished the regular season top of the league, also progressing to the semi-final of the Heineken cup before defeat to Toulouse at the
Walkers Stadium. In Martin Johnson and Neil Back's last game for Leicester they lost the Premiership Final to
Wasps. After this game John Wells left Leicester to take up a position in the RFU's coaching academy, eventually rising to England forwards coach. He was succeeded by
Pat Howard
In 2005/06, the Tigers finished second to the
Sale Sharks in the league before losing to the same team in the Premiership final. They again proceeded to the knockout stages of the Heineken Cup, again they lost at the Walkers Stadium to Bath. In the new
Anglo-Welsh Cup Leicester won their group but lost in the semi-finals to Wasps at the
Millennium Stadium in
Cardiff,
Wales.
Over the summer of 2006, they added a number of promising forwards especially
Jordan Crane, the Number 8, who arrived from
Leeds Tykes with a good reputation following the
U21 World Cup in
France.
Leicester won their first piece of silverware for five years on 15 April 2007, beating the
Ospreys 41-35 with tries from
Tom Varndell,
Tom Croft,
Ben Kay and
Alesana Tuilagi to win the
EDF Energy Cup at
Twickenham Stadium. This was quickly repeated with
Guinness Premiership success on 12 May at Twickenham with a 44-16 win over
Gloucester. However Leicester failed to win an unprecedented treble, by losing the
Heineken Cup Final at Twickenham on 20 May to
London Wasps.
It was announced on 28 December 2006 that the head coach
Pat Howard would leave the club at the end of the season, to return to his native
Australia.
[3]. He was succeeded by the then-head coach of
Argentina,
Marcelo Loffreda after the
2007 Rugby World Cup.
[4] Loffreda guided Leicester through the group stages of the EDF cup to the semi final where they defeated
Wasps in a knock-out game for the first time since the 1980's. This set up a rematch of the previous years final against the Ospreys, which Leicester lost. After losing all away games in the Heineken Cup that season Leicester failed to progress to the quarter finals. In the league Leicester struggled until a last minute last day try by
Tom Varndell beat
Harlequins to set up a rematch of the previous seasons Premiership Final against Gloucester. Once again Leicester were successful late on, this time utilising
Andy Goode's kicking to secure a last minute victory. In the final they had no such luck losing to perennial rivals London Wasps. After this final; despite guiding Leicester to two Twickenham finals and only being in the job 7 months Loffreda was sacked.
Heyneke Meyer was the boards choice to replace Loffreda, however unfortunate family circumstances led to his resignation. Richard Cockerill took over until the end of the season, having guided Leicester to a home Heineken Cup quarter final against Bath. He was appointed head coach on 17 April 2009.
[5]
On Sunday 3 May 2009 Leicester Tigers made history in their Heineken cup semi-final against
Cardiff Blues when a place kicking competition was required to decide the outcome for the first time. The teams were drawing 26-26 after normal time and there was no score during extra time. As both teams had scored two tries the place kicking competition was the decider. Leicester won this 7-6. In the 2009 premiership final Leicester beat London Irish 10-9 with neither team at their best.
Leicester hold the record for the biggest wins in both the Heineken Cup (90-19 demolition of
Glasgow in 1997), and the Guinness Premiership (83-10 defeat of
Newcastle Falcons in 2005). Leicester also hold the record for most titles (7), the most consecutive Premiership Final appearances (5), most (first) away semi-final victories in the Premiership play-offs.
Stadium
The club plays its home games at
Welford Road Stadium, the address of which is actually Aylestone Road. The ground was opened in 1892 and the first stands accommodated 1100 spectators. The Members' and Crumbie Stands were built after WW1. The Alliance and Leicester Stand was opened at the Welford Road end in 1995. The total ground capacity is currently 17,498 (2008/09 season).
On 23 November 2004, the club announced that it had entered into a 50-50 joint venture with the city's main
football club,
Leicester City, to purchase City's current ground,
Walkers Stadium. If the purchase had gone through, the Tigers would have surrendered their lease on Welford Road and moved into Walkers Stadium.
[6] However, after several months of talks, the two clubs could not agree as to which side would have priority at Walkers Stadium, and they ended any ground share plans in July 2005.
[7]
On 11 June 2007 the club announced plans that it was working with AFL, who were involved in redeveloping Manchester United's Old Trafford stadium for a redevelopment plan which will raise the capacity of their Welford Road stadium from 17,498 to 25,000 by 2011.
A new temporary stand at the clubhouse end increased the ground capacity to 17.498 from the 2007/08 season.
On 20 February 2008 Leicester Tigers received planning consent for the £60million redevelopment of their Welford Road home.The first phase of the development would include space for 10,500 supporters in a new North Stand (Granby Halls side), taking capacity up from the present 17,498 to 23,500. After full renovation it will have a capacity of 30,000.
[8]
In the summer of 2008 Work began on the construction of the new North Stand which to be called the "Caterpillar Stand" after the club's main sponsor. The work is due to be complete before the start of the 2009/10 season.
At the end of the 2008/09 season three home games were played at the
Walkers Stadium due to demolition of the old north stand.
Premiership play-offs
In the last five seasons Leicester have reached the final of the
Premiership, finishing first in the regular season league table in 2004/05, second in 2005/06 and 2006/07, fourth in 2007/08 and first in 2008/09. They lost their first two finals to
London Wasps and
Sale Sharks respectively. On 5 May 2007, Leicester defeated
Bristol 26-14 to reach the Premiership play-off final for the third consecutive year, where they defeated
Gloucester 44-16 at
Twickenham to win their first ever title via the playoffs.
[9]. On 18 May 2008, Leicester defeated
Gloucester at
Kingsholm to become the first team to win a Guinness Premiership semi-final playoff away from home. However this season also ended in defeat as
London Wasps won their sixth title, fourth via the play-offs.
These five consecutive finals is a record for consecutive appearances in a play-off final under the current format.
London Wasps have appeared in five consecutive finals.
Current Standings
| 2009-10 Guinness Premiership Table
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| Club
| Played
| Won
| Drawn
| Lost
| Points For
| Points Against
| Points Difference
| Tries For
| Tries Against
| Try Bonus
| Losing Bonus
| Points
|
1
| Bath Rugby
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
2
| Gloucester Rugby
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
3
| Harlequins
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
4
| Leeds Carnegie
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
5
| Leicester Tigers
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
6
| London Irish
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
7
| London Wasps
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
8
| Newcastle Falcons
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
9
| Northampton Saints
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
10
| Sale Sharks
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
11
| Saracens
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
12
| Worcester Warriors
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
| 0
|
If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:
# Number of matches won
# Difference between points for and against
# Total number of points for
# Aggregate number of points scored in matches between tied teams
# Number of matches won excluding the first match, then the second and so on until the tie is settled
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Green background are play-off places, and receive berths in the 2010–11 Heineken Cup. Blue background are clubs that do not make the play-offs, but will receive Heineken Cup berths. Pink background is the relegation place. Reference : Updated 26 April 2009 --- Current English Leagues
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Leicester Tigers Guinness Premiership Champions 2008/2009
Players
Current squad
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[Nat. shown here indicates sporting nationality as defined by the IRB]
Players In
- Anthony Allen (Gloucester)
- James Grindal (Newcastle Falcons)
- Geoff Parling (Newcastle Falcons)
- Billy Twelvetrees (Bedford Blues)
- Jeremy Staunton (London Wasps)
- Joe Duffey (Nottingham)
- Robbie Harris (Nottingham)
Players Out
- Santiago Bonorino (Northampton Saints)
- Martin Corry (Retiring
)
- Ayoola Erinle (Biarritz Olympique)
- Will Hurrell (Coventry, Loan
)
- Ben Pienaar (Nottingham)
- Greg Sammons
- Greig Tonks (Nottingham)
- Tom Varndell (London Wasps)
- Tom Youngs (Nottingham)
- Seru Rabeni (Gloucester)
- Julien Dupuy (Stade Français)
- Benjamin Kayser (Stade Français)
- Ben Herring (Retiring
)
- Derick Hougaard (Saracens)
- Marco Wentzel (Leeds Carnegie)
Current England Elite Squad
- George Chuter
- Jordan Crane
- Tom Croft
- Louis Deacon
- Harry Ellis
- Toby Flood
- Dan Hipkiss
- Ben Kay
- Julian White
Current England Saxons Squad
- Richard Blaze
- Dan Cole
- Lewis Moody
- Sam Vesty
- Ben Woods
Notable former internationals
- Garry Adey
- Neil Back (B&I Lions)
- Richard Cockerill
- Martin Corry (B&I Lions)
- Leo Cullen
- Les Cusworth
- Paul Dodge (B&I Lions)
- Darren Garforth
- Will Greenwood (B&I Lions)
- Dusty Hare (B&I Lions)
- Austin Healey (B&I Lions)
- Pat Howard
- Fritz van Heerden
- Shane Jennings
- Martin Johnson (B&I Lions)
- Craig Joiner
- Ken Jones
- Josh Kronfeld
- Rod Kafer
- Dave Lougheed
- Leon Lloyd
- Eric Miller (B&I Lions)
- Darren Morris (B&I Lions)
- Tony O'Reilly (B&I Lions)
- Alexander Obolensky
- Ramiro Pez
- Seru Rabeni
- Steve Redfern
- Dean Richards (B&I Lions)
- Marcus Rose
- Graham Rowntree (B&I Lions)
- Waisale Serevi
- (Ireland) Brian Smith
- Ollie Smith (B&I Lions)
- Winston Stanley
- Tim Stimpson (B&I Lions)
- Joel Stransky
- Ephraim Taukafa
- Frank Tournaire
- Freddie Tuilagi
- Henry Tuilagi
- Anitelia Tuilagi
- Rory Underwood (B&I Lions)
- Tony Underwood (B&I Lions)
- John Welborn
- Dorian West (B&I Lions)
- Peter Wheeler (B&I Lions)
- Clive Woodward (B&I Lions)
- Nick Youngs
International captains
- J.E. Greenwood (England in 1920)
- W.W. Wakefeild (England in 1924)
- F.D. Prentice (Lions 1930)
- B.C. Gadney (England 1934-36)
- D.A. Kendrew (England in 1935)
- Peter Wheeler (England 1983-84)
- Paul Dodge (England in 1985)
- Martin Johnson (England 1999-2003, Lions 1997, 2001)
- Neil Back (England)
- Dorian West (England)
- Martin Corry (England 2005-07, Lions 2005)
Captains
- B .V.D. Zweth
- A. E. Brice
- A.T. Porter
- L. Young
- J.G.S. Coleman
- W.A. Sheffield
- J. Parsons
- R.S. Snowden
- W.R. Porter
- A McKechnie
- W.H. Sturges
- A.E. Cooke
- E. Redman
- A.O. Jones
- W.J Foreman
- J.W. Garner
- S. Matthews
- R.F. Russell
- J.R Watson
- P.W. Lawrie
- W.J. Allen
- W.W. Wakefield
- H.L.V. Day
- F.D. Prentice
- H.D. Greenless
- D.J. Norman
- R.A. Buckingham
- B.C. Gadney
- R.J Barr
- J.T.W. Berry
- H.P. Jerwood
- A.C. Towell
- D. Goves
- W.K.T. Moore
- A.D. Bolesworth
- J.M. Jenkins
- J. Elders
- T. Bleasdale
- J.S. Swan
- C.G. Martin
- M.R. Wade
- M.J. Harrison
- D.J. Matthews
- G.G. Willars
- K.P. Andrews
- John Allen
- R.V. Grove
- Peter Wheeler
- R.S. Money
- Bob Rowell
- B.P. Hall
- Steve Johnson
- Ian 'Dosser' Smith
- Les Cusworth
- Paul Dodge
- John Wells
- Dean Richards
- Martin Johnson
- Neil Back
- Josh Kronfeld
- Martin Corry
- Ben Kay
- Louis Deacon
- Brett Deacon
- Lewis Moody
- Aaron Mauger
- Geordan Murphy (Current Captain)
- Craig Newby
Coaches
- Richard Cockerill, Head Coach
- * Matt O'Connor, Backs coach
- * Paul Burke, Kicking coach
- * Ben Herring, First Team Assistant
Club honours
- English Premierships: 1988, 1995, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2009
- Anglo-Welsh Cups: 1979, 1980, 1981, 1993, 1997, 2007
- Heineken Cup: 2001, 2002
- Middlesex 7s: 1995
References
- Redevelopment presents new opportunity
- Premiership history
- Howard returns home - BBC News, December 28th
- Loffreda named as new Tigers boss - BBC News, 25 April 2007
- Leicester Tigers confirm Richard Cockerill appointment
- Tigers to move to Walkers Stadium?
- Tigers call off ground share plan
- Tigers stadium development
- BBC SPORT | Rugby Union | Gloucester v Leicester - as it happened