Walsall RFC explained

Teamname:Walsall
Union:Staffordshire RU
Fullname:Walsall Rugby Football Club Ltd
Location:Walsall, West Midlands, England
Ground:Broadway Ground
Capacity:1,150 (150 stand)[1]
Chairman:Timothy Smith
President:Timothy Smith
Url:http://walsallrfcltd_new.rfu.club/
Season:2022–23
Position:2nd
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Walsall Rugby Football Club is an English rugby union club based in Walsall in the West Midlands, playing home games at the Broadway Ground, Delves Road. The club operates four senior men's teams, a colts side as well as a full range of junior teams (ages 6–17). The men's 1st XV currently plays in Regional 2 West Midlands (Level 6).

History

Walsall RFC was formed in 1922.[2] Historically part of Staffordshire they were first members of the North Midlands Rugby Football Union before joining the Staffordshire Rugby Union as it became established in the 1960s.[3] [4] In the 1970s and early 1980s Walsall would become one of the most successful clubs in Staffordshire rugby, winning the inaugural Staffordshire Senior Cup during the 1976–77 season and would go on to win the cup 5 times in the first 10 years of the competition.[5]

The advent of league rugby in 1987–88 saw Walsall placed in Courage Midlands 1, which was the top division of the region, ranked at tier 5 of the English rugby union system. The club did not stay in this division for long and in 1988–89 they finished as champions and gained promotion to the national leagues, to what was then known as Area League North (now National League 2 North). The 1990s were a chaotic time in the English league system due to RFU restructuring and this was both to Walsall's benefit and detriment as they yo-yoed between the divisions, dropping to division 5 in 1993–94, all the way up to division 3 (the highest level in the club's history) by 1996–97, before settling back into division 4 by the turn of the century. They would also re-establish themselves back at the top of the local game with another 3 victories in the Staffordshire Senior Cup during this period.

Having spent the greater part of the past decade in the national leagues, the 2000–01 season would be a difficult one for the club. Walsall struggled through the campaign finishing 11th out of the 14 teams in National Division 3 North. Usually, this would have been enough to have kept them safe but an outbreak of foot and mouth caused havoc in the far north of the country, affecting the most northerly sides, Aspatria and Tynedale, who finished in the bottom two positions, with both sides only playing 18 games apiece, six short of the Midlands side. This led to the RFU re-thinking relegation with this in mind, and after taking early season form into account, they decided that Walsall would go down along with Aspatria.[6]

Although Walsall started the 21st century well, winning three Staffordshire Senior Cup titles in a row between 2000 and 2003 (11 wins overall), they were unable to make a return to the national leagues, with the 2001–02 season being the closet when they made the promotion playoffs but were ultimately well beaten by northern side Hull Ionians.[7] In more recent times the club has struggled with two relegations in 2006–07 and 2015–16 seeing them falling to their lowest ever league position playing in tier 7 (Midlands 2 West (North)).[8] [9]

Honours

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Club's stand ruined by arsonists. Express & Star. 21 March 2008 .
  2. News: History of Walsall RFC. Walsall RFC. 8 May 2017 .
  3. Web site: History. North Midlands RFU. 13 September 2017 .
  4. Web site: STAFFORDSHIRE RUGBY HISTORY. Staffordshire RU. 13 September 2017 .
  5. News: Previous Winners. Staffordshire RU. 13 September 2017 .
  6. Web site: Rugby clubs face relegation over foot and mouth . The Daily Telegraph . 19 June 2001 .
  7. Web site: Rugby Union: Errors end Walsall's hopes of rapid return; Hull Ionians 35 Walsall 22.. The Birmingham Post. 13 May 2002 .
  8. Web site: Midlands 1 2006–07. England Rugby . 24 April 2007 .
  9. Web site: Midlands 1 West 2015–16. England Rugby . 30 April 2016 .