Camborne RFC

Last updated

Camborne
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Full nameCamborne Rugby Football Club
Union Cornwall RFU
Nickname(s)The Cherry & Whites
Founded1878;146 years ago (1878)
Location Camborne, Cornwall, England
Ground(s)Crane Park, Recreation Ground (Capacity: 7,000 (780 seated))
ChairmanAndy Gill
PresidentBill Hussey
Coach(es)Steve Larkins
League(s) National League 2 West
2023–24 6th
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1st kit
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Official website
www.pitchero.com/clubs/cambornerfc/

Camborne RFC was established in 1878, known locally by fans as 'Town', are one of the most famous rugby union clubs in Cornwall. They are currently champions of Regional 1 South West, a level five league in the English rugby union system and are promoted to National League 2 West.

Contents

When the rugby union leagues were introduced in 1987, Camborne was the highest placed Cornish team and played in Area 4 South. They are also one of the most successful club sides in Cornwall having won the Cornish Cup ten times as of 2016 – level with local rivals Redruth – following a record fourth title in a row in 2016. [1] Camborne enjoys a strong a rivalry with neighbours Redruth, with the two clubs meeting each year, in what is the world's longest enduring rugby fixture. [2]

History

Many original players were involved in the local tin mining industry especially at Camborne's Dolcoath mine which at that time was the deepest mine in Britain, and many were employed at the local machine tool manufacturer at Holman Brothers producing mining equipment. The first Camborne RFC game was played against Penzance in front of some 600 spectators in November 1877. At the start of the 1880–81 season the ground was a field near Camborne Consols (described as an ″old mine″), adjoining Holman Brothers' stone yard. [3]

In 1909–10 Camborne was the top Cornish team and in the following season no Cornish side managed to score a try against "Town" as they were then known. When the tin mining recession hit Cornwall in the late 19th-century many Camborne men and their successors were forced to emigrate to places such as South Africa, Australia and North and South America and along with their mining skills they also helped establish the game of rugby in these areas.

After the First World War in the early 1920s, rugby established a huge following in Camborne. Teams would change at a local hotel and march to the ground behind the Town band. In 1924 a crowd of 19,000 people gathered at Camborne to watch Cornwall, with no less than seven Camborne players, take on the New Zealand All Blacks, and matches against local rivals, Redruth, invariably pulled in crowds of around 6,000. Captain Crawshays Welsh Touring XV started to include Camborne on their fixture list in 1923. Crawshays teams were chosen from the leading clubs in Wales, and consisted of seasoned internationals and up and coming players who would usually go on to be internationals. In 1926–27, Camborne, also known as the Cherry and Whites were the top club in Cornwall and had their first win over a Crawshay side.

With the end of the Second World War the club was back in business and John Collins made his debut for the reserves team in 1946–47 and was selected to play at full back for England in 1952. The 1950s and 60's saw many more successful teams, and Camborne became the first Cornish side in 1968 to beat Ebbw Vale in eighteen Cornish tours.

The team became the most consistent and successful side in Cornwall in the 1970s, winning the Cornish league and cup in 1977–78, the league for the next four years running until 1982, again league champions 84–85 and 85–86, were the highest placed Cornish national league club 87–88 and 88–89, and achieved further Cornwall Cup wins in 1985, 1987, 1990 and 1992. Giant lock Andy Reed joined the Cherry and Whites in 1987, who was later to play for the all-conquering Bath Rugby team of the nineties and represent Scotland and the British and Irish Lions. In 1989 Cornwall reached the final of the County Championship at Twickenham against Durham and were represented by nine Camborne players out of the twenty-one man squad.

More recently youth development products Josh Matavesi and younger brother Sam have gone on to represent Fiji at International level. They are the sons of Camborne and Cornwall legend Serelli Matavesi.

Crane Park (Recreation Ground)

View of the grandstand at the Recreation Ground, home of Camborne RFC Recreation Ground Camborne RFC.jpg
View of the grandstand at the Recreation Ground, home of Camborne RFC

Camborne is one of the grounds used by the Cornish rugby team and has hosted many notable international sides including the New Zealand All Blacks in 1905, 1924 and 1953, Australia in 1908, 1947 and 1967, South Africa 1960, United States 1977 and numerous other touring sides such as the South African Barbarians and Canterbury (NZ).

In 2006 it was agreed to ground share the Recreation Ground with RFU Championship team the Cornish Pirates and the ground underwent a major refurbishment including a new stand for the 2007–08 season. [4] This arrangement has now ceased and the Pirates returned to play at the Mennaye, Penzance in 2010. The first stand was built in 1901 with a £400 loan from the local order of Oddfellows. [5]

The capacity of the Recreation Ground has varied over the decades. Up until the 1980s it was one of the largest rugby grounds in England with an official capacity of 18,582. [6] The current capacity (2018) is much reduced on this due to much tighter safety measures, being approximately 7,000, which includes 780 seated in the grandstand. [7] The Cornish Pirates came close to achieving a capacity crowd at the ground with a club-record attendance of 6,487 watching the Pirates play Northampton Saints on 9 September 2007. [8]

Current standings

2024–25 National League 2 West table
PosTeamPldWDLPFPAPDTBLBPtsQualification
1 Lougborough Students 22008324+592010Promotion place
2 Camborne 22009560+352010
3 Luctonians 22004230+12008
4 Exeter University 21107434+40107
5 Clifton 21105143+8107
6 Bournville 21016853+15217
7 Old Redcliffians 210166671206
8 Redruth 210164706206
9 Macclesfield 2101568024206
10 Taunton Titans 2101375215105
11 Cinderford 200244539123
12 Hornets 2002466317011
13 Devonport Services 2002419958101Relegation place
14 Hinckley 2002387739000
First match(es) will be played: September 2024. Source: [ citation needed ]
Rules for classification: If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:
  1. Number of matches won
  2. Difference between points for and against
  3. Total number of points for
  4. Aggregate number of points scored in matches between tied teams
  5. Number of matches won excluding the first match, then the second and so on until the tie is settled

Honours

[10]

Notable former players

[11]

Notes

  1. Note that the Rodda's Cup fixture between Camborne and Redruth is contested twice a season on a home and away basis, once on Boxing Day and then again in either March or April. Also note that the cup was first competed for on the Boxing Day of 2010. [9]

See also

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. "Camborne overpower Penryn to make history with fourth Tribute Cornwall Cup win in a row". Western Morning News. 2 May 2016.[ permanent dead link ]
  2. "Three generations of Rodda family on hand to see Camborne claim Rodda's Milk Cup". Falmouth Packet. 6 January 2014.
  3. "Camborne Football Club". The Cornishman. No. 119. 21 October 1880. p. 7.
  4. Pirates to groundshare at Camborne RFC [ permanent dead link ]
  5. "The Recreation-Ground Grand-Stand". The Cornishman. No. 1176. 17 January 1901. p. 6.
  6. "JOT - Hillsborough Independent Panel" (PDF). Hillsborough Independent Panel. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 May 2018. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  7. "Facilities". Camborne RFC (Pitchero). Retrieved 5 May 2018.
  8. "Cornish Pirates 26 Northampton Saints 35". Cornish Pirates. 9 September 2007. Archived from the original on 24 May 2018. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  9. "Club Honours". Redruth Rugby Football Club (Pitchero). Retrieved 21 October 2018.
  10. "Camborne RFC: Honours 1". Pitchero. 22 March 2015.
  11. Salmon, Tom (1983). The First Hundred Years. Illogan: Cornwall RFU. pp. 126–8. ISBN   0946664-01-3.