London Irish
is an English rugby union club based in Sunbury, Surrey, where the senior squad train, and the youth teams and senior academy play home games, and the club maintain their administrative offices, although the senior squad play home games in Reading. The professional club shares the Sunbury facilities with London Irish Amateur RFC and competes in the top division of English rugby union, the Guinness Premiership. The club also competes in the Anglo-Welsh EDF Energy Cup as well as the European Rugby Cups; the Heineken Cup and European Challenge Cup. The club will play at the Madejski Stadium in Reading, Berkshire, some 40 miles west of central London, until 2026.
London Irish was founded in 1898 for the young Irish people of the city, following the formation of similar clubs in London, including the London Welsh and London Scottish, but it now employs players from a wide range of backgrounds. The team plays in green and white colours, with a reversed away strip. The club's mascot is an Irish Wolfhound called Digger. London Irish won its first major trophy in 2002, claiming the Powergen Cup (now EDF Energy Cup) and in the 2007/08 a resurgent team came close to a place in the Heineken Cup Final losing out to Toulouse in a tight encounter at Twickenham Stadium.
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LONDON IRISH TICKETS
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History
Also known as The Exiles, London Irish RFC was formed in 1898 for the young
Irishmen of
London; it was modelled on the already established
London Welsh and
London Scottish teams. London Irish suffered during
World War I and the
Irish War of Independence. It was not until 1923 when the
Irish Free State was established and peace returned that the club was able to welcome players from across the
Irish Sea on a regular basis.
By the late 1920s the club boasted its first "home grown"
Ireland international in S J 'Cags' Cagney who won 13 caps between 1925 and 1929. The club developed a home of its own in 1931 at The Avenue in
Sunbury, the first game was played on
5 December against London Welsh; the result was an honourable 8-8 draw. Although the club now play their games as tenants of Reading FC at the
Madejski Stadium in Reading, the ground at Sunbury is still its spiritual home.
The 50s was a period of mixed fortunes for London Irish. In 1959-1960 season London Irish only lost 2 games all season, featuring Ireland International players such as
Andy Mulligan & Sean McDermott, Mike (C.M.H.) Gibson (played 1 game in the late 60's), Tony O'Reilly (who played a handful of games in 1970) and Ollie Waldron (who played in the late 60's-early 70's), all graced the Sunbury pitch.
The improving quality of fixtures demanded a change in attitude to training and playing as the sixties became the seventies. Under the leadership of the great hooker Ken Kennedy, with the assistance of exceptional players like Mick Molloy and Barry Bresnihan, London Irish became a force to be reckoned with once more. In 1976-77 the
Rugby Football Union introduced proper club merit tables and in that season London Irish finished first in the London Division with six wins out of seven. The Irish made visits to France and famously to South Africa in 1977 where the club became the first touring side to play so many mixed race teams.
In playing terms the eighties were another period of inconsistency. The first team struggled to find reliable form as work pressures made more demands on players' time making them unavailable for regular training and matches. Happily, at the lower levels and socially London Irish continued to thrive. In 1990-91 London Irish was promoted to the first division with a side containing four new Ireland internationals:
Simon Geoghegan,
Jim Staples,
David Curtis and Rob Saunders, the youngest ever captain of his country at 22 years of age.
The harsh financial realities of playing at the top end of the game in England gradually became clear to all the country's senior clubs including London Irish in the early years of the decade. Operating losses mounted and but for the generosity of key benefactors at the time, the club would have struggled to survive.
The financial struggles were reflected on the pitch where London Irish failed to make any impact in the leagues despite employing the services of a number of high profile coaches. In 1999 London Irish merged with
London Scottish and
Richmond to form a new umbrella company to support the professional team which competes in the
Guinness Premiership in England. An amateur club was also formed at this time, London Irish Amateur RFC, which remains in Sunbury. The club won its first piece of silverware in 2002 by beating
Northampton Saints in the
Powergen Cup final at
Twickenham.
Stadium
London Irish play at the
Madejski Stadium, in
Reading. Madejski is the home of
Reading F.C. and was opened in August 1998. The ground is a 24,161 all-seater capacity.
While Reading F.C. had received local authority approval for a stadium expansion, it now seems unlikely to go ahead following the club's relegation from football's Premier League. All London Irish home matches are played at the Madejski. The largest crowd for a London Irish match was for a game against
London Wasps on 15 March 2008 during the
2007-08 Guinness Premiership. The crowd of 23,790 was also the highest attendance for a regular season Guinness Premiership match
[1] until Harlequins drew 50,000 to Twickenham for a match against Leicester Tigers in December 2008.
Current standing
| 2008-09 Guinness Premiership Table
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| Club
| Played
| Won
| Drawn
| Lost
| Points for
| Points against
| Difference
| Try Bonus Points
| Losing Bonus Points
| Points
|
1
| London Irish
| 8
| 6
| 0
| 2
| 189
| 126
| 63
| 1
| 2
| 27
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2
| Gloucester Rugby
| 8
| 6
| 0
| 2
| 198
| 144
| 54
| 3
| 0
| 27
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3
| Bath Rugby
| 8
| 5
| 1
| 2
| 201
| 169
| 32
| 2
| 2
| 26
|
4
| Sale Sharks
| 8
| 6
| 0
| 2
| 119
| 109
| 10
| 0
| 0
| 24
|
5
| Harlequins
| 8
| 5
| 0
| 3
| 199
| 160
| 39
| 2
| 2
| 24
|
6
| Leicester Tigers
| 8
| 5
| 0
| 3
| 172
| 160
| 12
| 0
| 1
| 21
|
7
| Saracens
| 8
| 4
| 0
| 4
| 187
| 142
| 45
| 1
| 3
| 20
|
8
| Worcester Warriors
| 8
| 3
| 0
| 5
| 132
| 160
| -28
| 0
| 2
| 14
|
9
| London Wasps
| 8
| 2
| 0
| 6
| 140
| 169
| -29
| 0
| 4
| 12
|
10
| Northampton Saints
| 8
| 2
| 1
| 5
| 149
| 195
| -46
| 0
| 1
| 11
|
11
| Newcastle Falcons
| 8
| 2
| 0
| 6
| 131
| 195
| -64
| 0
| 2
| 10
|
12
| Bristol Rugby
| 8
| 1
| 0
| 7
| 95
| 183
| -88
| 0
| 3
| 7
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If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:
# Number of matches won
# Difference between points scored and allowed
# Total number of points scored
# 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.Pink background is the relegation place Reference : Updated 2008-11-30 --- Current English Leagues
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Current squad
[Nat. shown here indicates sporting nationality as defined by the IRB]
Ins and Outs for 2009-2010 season
In
- Chris Malone (Harlequins)
- Ryan Lamb (Gloucester)
- Jamie Lennard (Doncaster Knights)
- Andy Perry (Newcastle Falcons)
- James Tideswell (Plymouth Albion)
- Paulica Ion (Bath)
- George Stowers (Kobe Steel)
Out
- Tomás de Vedia
- James Bailey (Lyon)
- Shane Geraghty (Northampton Saints)
- James Hudson (Newcastle Falcons)
- Dominic Shabbo (London Welsh)
- Richard Skuse (Saracens)
- Eoghan Hickey (London Wasps)
- Tonga Lea'aetoa (Toulon)
- Ben Broster (London Wasps)
- Warren Fury (London Wasps)
Current England Elite Squad
- Delon Armitage
- Steffon Armitage
- Paul Hodgson
Current England Saxons Squad
- Alex Corbisiero
- Nick Kennedy
- Topsy Ojo
- David Paice
Internationally Capped Players
- Delon Armitage
- Steffon Armitage
- Mike Catt
- Nick Kennedy
- Paul Hodgson
- Topsy Ojo
- Bob Casey
- Clarke Dermody
- Paulica Ion
- Seilala Mapusua
- Elvis Seveali'i
- Sailosi Tagicakibau
- Danie Coetzee
- Faan Rautenbach
- Chris Hala'ufia
Notable Former Players
Honours
- European Challenge Cup:
- * Runners-up: 2006
- John Player Cup/Powergen Cup:
- * Champions: 2002
- * Runners-up: 1980
- Middlesex Sevens:
- * Champions: 2009
Trivia
- The Exiles once took part in an episode of Jackass
. They were given the job of teaching Johnny Knoxville and Chris Pontius how to play rugby, no matter how rough it got.
References
- No Luck on Paddy's Day for Irish