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Sheffield Tigers RUFC

Sheffield Tigers
Sheffield tigers logo.png
Full nameSheffield Tigers Rugby Union Football Club
UnionYorkshire RFU
Founded1932
LocationDore, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Ground(s)Dore Moor
ChairmanPaul Walker
PresidentIan Wragg
Coach(es)Jamie Broadley
Captain(s)Ed Simmonds
League(s)National League 2 North
2019–2010th
Team kit
Official website
www.sheffieldtigers.co.uk

Sheffield Tigers Rugby Football Club is a rugby union team based in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England. They currently play in the fourth tier of the English rugby union league system, National League 2 North, and are based at Dore Moor, Hathersage Road, Sheffield. The club run three senior teams and a veterans side, the junior section starts at under-7's up to a colts XV.[1]

History

Formed in 1932 they celebrate their 75th season of rugby in 2007. Since league rugby began they were long standing members of Yorkshire 2, managing to avoid either promotion or relegation for the first dozen or so years of the leagues.

The arrival of former England and Halifax RLFC scrum half David Holmes spearheaded a new era and the club reached the final of the Tetley Bitter Vase at Twickenham in 2000, securing a 20–11 win over favourites Bank of England RUFC. Despite finishing second, a restructure of the leagues meant that they remained in Yorkshire 2; as all ten clubs below them were relegated! Promotion the following year was accompanied by the club's first Yorkshire Shield win over Scarborough and the 'Tigers' stayed in Yorkshire 1 for two seasons before a disastrous campaign in 2002–03 saw them relegated back to Yorkshire 2.

The arrival of Coach Richard Selkirk and a host of new players saw Tigers promoted at the second time of asking in 2004–05 a year that also saw a second Vase win at Twickenham, this time over Solihull after a tumultuous semi-final win at Sidmouth.

Further success followed in 2005–06 with the Yorkshire 1 title captured, and at their first attempt Tigers made it three promotions in a row in 2006–07 with a play-off win over North 2 West rivals Lymm to book their place in North 1 for 2007–08. Three seasons later the club gained promotion from this league, now known as National 3 North, via a play-off victory over Chester.[2]

Honours

  • Tetley/Powergen Junior Vase winners (2): 1999–00, 2004–05
  • Yorkshire Shield winners: 2000–01
  • South Yorkshire Trophy winners (3): 2003–04, 2004–05, 2005–06
  • Yorkshire League 2 champions: 2004–05
  • Yorkshire League 1 champions: 2005–06
  • North 2 (east v west) promotion playoff winners: 2006–07
  • National League 3 (north v midlands) promotion play-off winner: 2010–11
  • National League 3 North champions: 2015–16

[3]

Current standings

2019–20 National League 2 North Table
Played Won Drawn Lost Points for Points against Points diff Try bonus Losing bonus Points
1 Caldy (C) 25 25 0 0 1002 279 723 19 0 119
2 Fylde 25 17 1 7 790 447 343 16 4 90
3 Hinckley 25 17 0 8 634 461 173 12 5 85
4 Sedgley Park 25 17 0 8 627 549 78 11 4 83
5 Loughborough Students 25 14 0 11 749 605 144 13 5 74
6 Chester 25 13 1 11 690 618 72 12 4 70
7 Stourbridge 25 11 1 13 679 616 63 13 9 68
8 Hull 25 12 2 11 479 472 7 5 6 63
9 Wharfedale 25 11 2 12 528 539 -11 5 6 59
10 Huddersfield 25 9 4 12 528 592 -64 9 4 57
11 Tynedale 24 9 2 13 583 592 -9 10 7 57
12 Sheffield Tigers 24 12 0 12 516 570 -54 5 3 56
13 Luctonians 25 9 1 15 496 609 -113 8 8 54
14 Otley (R) 25 9 3 13 508 628 -120 5 5 52
15 Preston Grasshoppers (R) 25 4 3 18 385 656 -271 3 4 29
16 Scunthorpe (R) 25 0 0 25 341 1302 -961 4 2 6
  • 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
Green background is the promotion place. Pink background are relegation places.
Updated: 14 March 2020
Source: "National League 2 North". NCA Rugby.
Notes


References

  1. ^ Club website Archived 8 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Club website history page Archived 10 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 May 2014. Retrieved 19 May 2014.

External links

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