The Newcastle Falcons
(formerly Gosforth FC/Newcastle Gosforth until 1996) is a rugby union team currently playing in the Guinness Premiership. The club was established in 1877 and they play at Kingston Park stadium in Kingston Park, Newcastle upon Tyne. The Falcons have been the biggest and most successful club in northern England with 1 Premiership and 4 domestic cups to their name.
|
NEWCASTLE FALCONS TICKETS
|
History
The original
Gosforth Football Club was founded in 1877 by a group of Old Boys of
Durham School, in whose colours of green and white hoops the club played until the mid-1990s. In 1955, the club moved to a new ground at North Road which was to be its home until 1990. During that time and particularly in the late 1970s Gosforth enjoyed tremendous success both on and off the field winning the
John Player Cup in seasons 1975/76 and 76/77.
Gosforth supplied innumerable players to all counties over the years, to the North of England sides and to the full international and British Lions teams. These include
Arthur Smith,
Ray McLoughlin, Malcolm Young,
Roger Uttley,
Peter Dixon, Duncan Madsen, Dave Robinson, Richard Breakey, Jim Pollock and Colin White.
In 1990 the club name was changed to
Newcastle Gosforth and they moved to Kingston Park. Gosforth Rugby Club continued as an amateur side working in partnership with
Northumbria University.
The name Newcastle Falcons and the current black-and-white colours were adopted for the 1996/97 season, after local businessman
Sir John Hall had taken control and attempted to create a sporting club in
Newcastle upon Tyne that would emulate the success of
Barcelona. The four teams that made up the sporting club were the
football team, nicknamed the
Magpies, the
Newcastle Eagles basketball team, the Newcastle Wasps (later Riverkings, Jokers, Vipers etc.) ice hockey team and the Newcastle Falcons rugby union team.
Newcastle was the first fully “professional” club in the world. In 1995, Sir John Hall installed former Wasps’ captain, Rob Andrew, as his salaried Director of Rugby and saw the club earn promotion from the national Second Division to the Premiership. The following season, Newcastle became English champions at their first attempt. The following season Newcastle didnt play in Europe as English teams did not take part but they did go onto the Tetley’s Bitter Cup final against Wasps which they lost.
Hall sold the Falcons for a 'nominal' sum in 1999 to current owner Dave Thompson and since then Newcastle have won two
Powergen Cups in 2001 (against Harlequins) and 2004 (against Sale).
In August 2005 Falcons toured Japan pre-season. They beat
NEC Green Rockets easily but lost to a fired-up
Toyota Verblitz.
In August 2006
Rob Andrew left the Falcons to be in overall charge of the England set-up ahead of the 2007 World Cup in a wide-ranging role that encompasses all aspects of the professional representative game in England. John Fletcher succeeded Rob Andrew as director of rugby at Newcastle Falcons with immediate effect. Fletcher, a former England A centre, had been the club's academy boss and he headed up a team of Peter Walton, Steve Black and Bob Morton, with ex-Falcons prop Ian Peel taking over as acting academy manager.
On 11 March 2008, Fletcher and Walton left the club, officially by mutual consent, following Black who had left a couple of months earlier.
Steve Bates took over as interim Director of Rugby until the summer of 2008 when the post was reviewed. Dave Thompson stated that nine years of underachievement were the reason for the departure of John Fletcher and Peter Walton.
Having said this, Bates guided the Falcons to a record-equalling run of seven consecutive Premiership defeats by April 2008 with home games against Leicester Tigers and London Wasps plus a season-concluding away trip to Worcester Warriors yet to come. Defeat in the ECC semi-final against Worcester Warriors on 25 April 2008 may well have sounded the death knell for Steve Bates' tenure as interim DoR. However, on Tuesday 20 May 2008
Steve Bates was confirmed as Newcastle's Director of Rugby on a full-time basis.
Club information
Stadium
Newcastle Falcons play at Kingston Park which holds 10,200. The recent poor performances by the Falcons has made attendance lower than last season. Traditionally the South Stand is where the loudest fans stand and sing. The stadium has three modern stands (1 open-air standing, 1 enclosed standing and a main stand which is all-seater) but kept the original Gosforth stand with the green and white seating (Gosforth colours). Kingston Park is the second smallest stadium in the
Guinness Premiership and must be extended to accommodate 15,000 by 2010 according to new RFU rules but currently the local council oppose the plan which has lead to speculation about the future of the club in Newcastle.
Kits
The team wears all black for home games and all white for away games. This season the club changed their shirt provider from Nike to the Cotton Traders. During the years known as Gosforth the team played in green and white hoops.
Records
- Record Win: 97 - 0 vs. Cetransa El Salvador (2008)
- Record Loss: 10 - 83 vs Leicester Tigers (2005)
- Best League Position: 1st (1997-1998)
- Worst League Position: 11th (2007-2008)
Historic League Positions
Season
| Final Position
| Points
|
1997-1998 - Allied Dunbar Premiership
| 1st
| 38
|
1998-1999 - Allied Dunbar Premiership
| 8th
| 28
|
1999-2000 - Allied Dunbar Premiership
| 9th
| 20
|
2000-2001 - Zurich Premiership
| 6th
| 57
|
2001-2002 - Zurich Premiership
| 6th
| 56
|
2002-2003 - Zurich Premiership
| 10th
| 40
|
2003-2004 - Zurich Premiership
| 10th
| 40
|
2004-2005 - Zurich Premiership
| 7th
| 47
|
2005-2006 - Guinness Premiership
| 7th
| 47
|
2006-2007 - Guinness Premiership
| 9th
| 44
|
2007-2008 - Guinness Premiership
| 11th
| 37
|
2008-2009 - Guinness Premiership
| 10th
| 44
|
Club honours
- Premiership
(1)
: 1997/98
- Division Two
(1)
: 1992/93
- National Cup
(4)
: 1976
, 1977
, 2001
, 2004
- Middlesex 7s
(1)
: 2007
- Heineken Cup
: Quarter-Final Stage
- European Challenge Cup
: Semi-Final Stage
Current standings
| 2008-09 Guinness Premiership Table
| [ watch] · [ edit] · discuss
|
|
| 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
|
2
| Gloucester Rugby
| 8
| 6
| 0
| 2
| 198
| 144
| 54
| 3
| 0
| 27
|
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
|
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
|
Green background are play off places.Pink background is the relegation place Reference : Updated 2008-11-30 --- Current English Leagues
|
2009–10 European Challenge Cup
Newcastle will play
US Montauban,
Petrarca Padova Rugby and
SC Albi in Pool 5 of the European Challenge Cup.
2009–10 Anglo-Welsh Cup
Newcastle Falcons are in Pool 2 and will play
Harlequins,
London Wasps,
Worcester Warriors and
Cardiff Blues.
Current squad 2009-2010
[Nat. shown here indicates sporting nationality as defined by the IRB]
2009/2010 Transfers
- IN:
- Charlie Amesbury (Harlequins)
- Tom Biggs (Leeds Carnegie)
- James Hudson (London Irish)
- Lawrence Ovens (Bath)
- Uche Odouza (Suntory Sungoliath)
- Rob Vickerman (Leeds Carnegie)
- Alex Walker (Saracens)
- Kieran Brookes (Fylde)
- Jimmy Gopperth (Blues)
- Filipo Levi (Ospreys)
- Grant Shiells (Kelso)
- Michael Tait (Kelso)
- Gcobani Bobo (Stormers)
- Chris Micklewood (Brive)
- Josh Afu (Doncaster)
- OUT:
- Ross Batty (Rotherham)
- Andy Buist
- Rory Clegg (Harlequins)
- Tom Dillon
- Phil Dowson (Northampton Saints)
- Eni Gesinde
- James Grindal (Leicester Tigers)
- Andy Long
- Tom May (Toulon)
- Jamie Noon (Brive)
- Geoff Parling (Leicester Tigers)
- Andy Perry (London Irish)
- Ollie Phillips (Stade Français)
- John Rudd
- Joe Shaw (Hong Kong)
- Sean Tomes (Exeter Chiefs)
- Tim Visser (Edinburgh)
- Jonny Wilkinson (Toulon)
- Johnny Williams
- Dave Wilson (Bath)
- Joe McDonnell (El Salvador)
- Ross Beattie
- Steve Jones (Edinburgh)
- Ross Samson (Edinburgh)
- Russell Winter (Retired
)
- Andrew Fenby (Scarlets)
Current England Saxons Squad
Internationally Capped Players
- Carl Hayman
- Filipo Levi
- Gcobani Bobo
- Josh Afu
Current Coaching Staff
- Director of Rugy:
Steve Bates
- Assistant Coach:
Alan Tait
- Assistant Coach:
Stuart Grimes
- Assistant Coach:
Ian Peel
- Strength & Conditioning Coach:
Mark Wilkinson
- Strength & Conditioning Coach:
Bob Morton
- Junior Academy Manager:
Mark Laycock
Apprenticeship Manager (AASE): Ed Midcalf
Notable former players
- Matthew Burke
- Owen Finegan
- Rob Andrew
- Garath Archer
- John Bentley
- Phil Dowson
- Toby Flood
- Jamie Noon
- Andy Perry
- Dean Ryan
- Michael Stephenson
- Tim Stimpson
- Tony Underwood
- Mathew Tait
|
- Dave Walder
- Colin White
- Jonny Wilkinson
- Mark Wilkinson
- Malcolm Young
- Mike McCarthy
- Ross Nesdale
- Nick Popplewell
- Loki Crichton
- Pat Lam
- Semo Sititi
- Va'aiga Tuigamala
- Gary Armstrong
- Richard Breakey
|
- Steve Brotherstone
- George Graham
- Stuart Grimes
- Craig Hamilton
- John Leslie
- Duncan Madsen
- Jim Pollock
- Arthur Smith
- Alan Tait
- Peter Walton
- Doddie Weir
- Epi Taione
- Colin Charvis
|
|