Cornish Pirates

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Cornish Pirates
Cornish Pirates logo.svg
Full namePenzance and Newlyn Rugby Football Club
UnionCornwall RFU
Founded1945; 74 years ago (1945)
Location
Penzance, Cornwall, England
Ground(s)
Mennaye Field (Capacity: 4,000 (2,200 seated))
ChairmanPaul Durkin

Directors : Dicky Evans, Martin Hudson, Colin Groves (NZ), Graham Stone, Martin Haag, Martin Tucker


Life President : Dicky Evans
Captain(s)Chris Morgan
League(s)RFU Championship
2017–184th














Team kit


Official website
www.cornish-pirates.com

The Cornish Pirates (Cornish: An Vorladron Gernewek) are a professional rugby union team who play in the Championship, the second level of the English rugby union pyramid, and are the premier Cornish rugby club. Formerly known as Penzance & Newlyn RFU, the Cornish Pirates play and train at their home ground, the Mennaye Field in Penzance.




Contents





  • 1 History


  • 2 Stadium For Cornwall


  • 3 Supporters


  • 4 Season summary


  • 5 Club honours


  • 6 Club records


  • 7 Current standings


  • 8 Current squad


  • 9 Notable former players


  • 10 Notes


  • 11 See also


  • 12 References


  • 13 External links




History


At the end of the 2004–05 season the Pirates finished in 4th position in National Division 1 which at the time was their highest league position since owner Dicky Evans became President and just three places below Premiership rugby status.


In 2005 the Pirates moved away from their home at The Mennaye in Penzance, first to Kenwyn Rugby Ground, near Truro, and then to Camborne Recreation Ground. In examining the options it had been viewed as imperative to increase the support base which led to a difficult decision for Dicky Evans and the supporters of the Pirates, as to whether the team should relocate to another site to play their home matches or not. The questions, concerns and sentiments arising from the proposals were thoroughly debated in the clubhouse and elsewhere. However, on 27 May 2005 at an emergency meeting held in a packed St Johns Hall the innovative plans were passed. They included:


  • Relocating to a new temporary site at Kenwyn, Truro for the 2005–06 season.

  • Re-branding including changing the club's name to the Cornish Pirates.

  • Upgrading all the facilities at the Mennaye Field which will continue to act as the permanent training base for the Cornish Pirates.

  • The Mennaye to continue to act as the playing home for the Pirates mini and junior sections and Mounts Bay RFC.

Following the vote, Dicky Evans told members: "ten years ago I asked you to support me in taking this club into the professional era. At that time there were those were totally against this move, there are people that are against this latest move. However, it is my belief that we must try this venture". He expressed his personal happiness at the support expressed for the move and regarded it as a step towards a Premiership rugby club in Cornwall.




Penzance & Newlyn RFC club badge.




Joe Beardshaw wins line-out ball for the Pirates against Plymouth Albion


Following a highly successful 2005–06 season, (when crowds were increased and the Pirates finished 3rd in Division 1), it was decided to relocate again and over the next two seasons the Cornish Pirates played their home rugby matches at Camborne RFC's recreation ground. Camborne's ground is seen as many to be the best rugby ground in Cornwall boasting a superb grandstand. On 15 April 2007, the Cornish Pirates won the EDF Energy National Trophy at Twickenham for the first time in the club's history, against Exeter Chiefs. The score was 19–16.


The Pirates returned to The Mennaye for the 2010–11 season and remain there to date.


After the success of the 2006–07 cup win, the hope was that the club’s ambition could finally be realised. This hope was hampered by the loss of Viliami Ma'asi and Alberto Di Bernardo (to Leeds), these losses were offset in some degree by the signing of Canadian international scrum half Ed Fairhurst, former England U21 centre Simon Whatling from Worcester and seasoned professional Rob Elloway from Gloucester. At first the results were not good but after the World Cup the team began to pick up and were joined by one of the stars of the tournament Tongan full back; Vunga Lilo. Unfortunately the side couldn’t live with the newly relegated Northampton Saints and were unlucky to draw them in the 1st round of the cup, going down 15–3 at home.


In 2009-10 the Pirates won the inaugural British and Irish Cup, beating Munster A 23-14 in the final at the Recreation Ground, Camborne.


Pirates remain a solid RFU Championship side, their lowest finish since being 9th in 2015-16, with highs of 3rd in 2010-11 and 2011-12. These 3rd place finishes resulted in Pirates qualifying for the promotion play-offs. In 2010-11 Pirates beat London Welsh in the semi-final 18-10 at the Mennaye Field before succumbing to Worcester Warriors in the final over two legs, 12-21 at home and 25-20 away, 46-32 on aggregate, resulting in Worcester's promotion back to the Aviva Premiership. The following season the Pirates again won their semi-final, beating Bristol over two legs, 45-24 at home and losing 29-18 away, resulting in a 63-53 win on aggregate. Pirates again however lost in the final, this time to London Welsh, losing 21-37 at the Mennaye and 29-20 away from home, 66-41 on aggregate.


Following these highs, Pirates did not finish in the play-off places again, finishing between 6th and 9th in the subsequent seasons. They returned to the top four in the 2017-18 season, finishing 4th, however a restructure to the league for that season had seen the play-offs abolished, with 1st place being promoted to the Premiership automatically.



Stadium For Cornwall


To be promoted to the Premiership a team must meet certain stadium requirements, and the capacity of the Mennaye Field is too small to meet these. Because of this, there have been many plans over the years for the Pirates to move into a new, larger stadium which meets these requirements to allow the Pirates to achieve their goal of promotion to the Premiership. The most concrete of these plans is the proposed Stadium for Cornwall, which would be home for both the Pirates and Truro City Football Club.[1] The Stadium For Cornwall has received funding from Cornwall Council, and is now only awaiting £3m of funding from the UK government before construction can begin, which is expected to be provided in Spring 2019.[2] The first stage is planned to have a capacity of 6,000, which can be expanded to 10,000 in phase two in the event of the Pirates being promoted.



Supporters


A number of promotions at the beginning of the 21st century saw the Pirates rise from south-west regional rugby all of the way up to the second division. The re-brand from Penzance & Newlyn to the Cornish Pirates for the 2005-06 season, along with relocating from Penzance to Truro, meant that the club was not only the highest ranked in the county but also the best supported, having doubled its supporter base in just over 5 seasons. A further move to Camborne the next season saw attendances continued to flourish, rising to a peak of 3,011 per game during the 2009-10 season.


A move back to Penzance during the 2010-11 season heralded a steady decline in attendances, although as the counties only professional team the club still was easily the best supported. Despite their higher status, the Pirates continued to enjoy good relations with neighbouring clubs such as Redruth and Camborne, often playing home matches on Sunday so that supporters of those clubs can also attend games at the Mennaye Field. It is hoped that the proposed move back to Truro to the proposed Stadium for Cornwall will see an upturn in the clubs fortunes and bring the supporters back.


















































































Season
Total
Average
Highest

2000–01[a 1]
11,400
1,140
2,000

2001–02[a 2]
12,400
1,127
3,000

2002–03[a 3]
11,300
1,614
2,200

2003–04[a 4]
19,810
2,201
5,100

2004–05[a 5]
24,018
2,002
5,000

2005–06
36,194
2,784
5,879

2006–07
38,892
2,593
5,365

2007–08
52,294
3,486
6,487

2008–09
44,739
2,983
4,913

2009–10
42,157
3,011
5,654

2010–11
39,195
2,450
3,500

2011–12
36,932
2,308
3,214

2012–13
20,480
1,862
2,954

2013–14
21,558
1,797
3,752

2014–15
16,270
1,479
2,390

2015–16
15,705
1,428
2,340

2016–17
16,132
1,467
2,043

2017–18
16,715
1,520
2,236

2018–19




Season summary






































































































































































































Season
League
National Cup(s)
Other Cup(s)
Competition/Level
Position
Points
Play Offs
Competition
Performance
Competition
Performance
1987–88
Cornwall/Devon (8)
4th13
1988–89
Cornwall/Devon (8)
7th10
1989–90
Cornwall/Devon (8)
1st (promoted)
1990–91
Western Counties (7)

1991–92
Western Counties (7)

1992–93
Western Counties (7)

1993–94
South West 2 West (7)[a 6]

1994–95
South West 2 West (7)

1995–96
South West 2 West (7)

1996–97
South West 2 West (6)[a 7]

1997–98
South West 2 West (6)
1st (promoted)[3]36
1998–99
South West 1 (5)
4th[4]29Tetley's Bitter Cup2nd RoundCornwall CupWinners
1999–00
South West 1 (5)
1st (promoted)[5]40Tetley's Bitter Cup3rd RoundCornwall CupWinners
2000–01
National 3 South (4)
3rd38Tetley's Bitter Cup3rd RoundCornwall CupSemi-finals[6]
2001–02
National 3 South (4)
1st (promoted)49Powergen Cup2nd Round
2002–03
National 2 (3)
1st (promoted)45Powergen Cup3rd Round
2003–04
National 1 (2)
10th43[a 8]Powergen Cup6th Round
2004–05
National 1 (2)
4th85Powergen Cup3rd Round
2005–06[a 9]
National 1 (2)
3rd90Powergen Trophy6th Round[7]
2006–07
National 1 (2)
5th101EDF Energy CupWinners[8]
2007–08
National 1 (2)
5th91EDF Energy Trophy4th Round[9]
2008–09
National 1 (2)
7th82EDF Energy Trophy5th Round[10]
2009–10
RFU Championship (2)[a 10]
6th[a 11]58[a 12]British & Irish CupWinners
2010–11
RFU Championship (2)
3rd[a 13]76[a 14]Runners upBritish & Irish CupPool Stage
2011–12
RFU Championship (2)
3rd[a 15]74[a 16]Runners upBritish & Irish CupSemi-finals
2012–13
RFU Championship (2)
6th[a 17]52British & Irish CupQuarter-finals
2013–14
RFU Championship (2)
6th51British & Irish CupQuarter-finals
2014–15
RFU Championship (2)
8th45British & Irish CupPool Stage
2015–16
RFU Championship (2)
9th49British & Irish CupSemi-finals
2016–17
RFU Championship (2)
6th55British & Irish CupQuarter-finals
2017–18
RFU Championship (2)
4th[a 18]67British & Irish CupQuarter-finals
2018–19
RFU Championship (2)
RFU Championship CupSemi-finals
Green background stands for either league champions (with promotion) or cup winners. Blue background stands for promotion without winning league or losing cup finalists. Pink background stands for relegation.


Club honours



  • Cornwall Cup winners (3): 1975–76, 1998–99, 1999–00[a 19]


  • Cornwall & Devon champions: 1989–90


  • South West Division 2 champions: 1996–97[11]


  • South West Division 1 champions: 1998–99[12]


  • National League 3 South champions: 2001–02


  • National League 2 champions: 2002–03


  • EDF Energy National Trophy winners: 2006–07


  • British and Irish Cup winners: 2009–10[13]


  • RFU Championship runners up: 2010–11, 2011–12

[14]



Club records


Highest attendance — 6,487

At home to Northampton Saints on 9 September 2007 (Recreation Ground, Camborne).[15]


Highest average attendance (league) — 3,486

Achieved during the 2007–08 season



Current standings




































































































































































2018–19 RFU Championship Table

watch · edit · discuss

Club
Played
Won
Drawn
Lost
Points for
Points against
Points diff
Try bonus
Loss bonus
Points
1London Irish171502615290325131
74
2Ealing Trailfinders171304526396130122
66
3Jersey Reds17110645231014284
56
4Bedford Blues1710074744591575
52
5Cornish Pirates1780943436668116
49
6Nottingham17818407438-3163
43
7Coventry17719359453-9445
39
8Doncaster Knights177010442439344
36
9London Scottish177010362454-9253
36
10Yorkshire Carnegie177010326453-12752
35
11Richmond174013309449-14024
22
12Hartpury College174013301500-19923
21

  • 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 is the relegation place.
Updated: 10 March 2019
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Current squad



The Cornish Pirates squad for the 2018–19 season is:[16][a]


Note: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-WR nationality.
















































































Player
Position
Union

Tom Channon

Hooker

England England

Tom Cowan-Dickie

Hooker

England England

Dan Frost

Hooker

England England

Sam Matavesi

Hooker

Fiji Fiji

Jack Andrew

Prop

England England

Tom Concu

Prop

England England

Tyler Gendall

Prop

England England

Christian Judge

Prop

England England

Billy Keast [a]

Prop

England England

Alan Paver

Prop

England England

Marlen Walker

Prop

New Zealand New Zealand

Brett Beukeboom (c)

Lock

Canada Canada

Josh Caulfield [a]

Lock

England England

Jake Clemson [a]

Lock

England England

Danny Cutmore

Lock

England England

Toby Freeman

Lock

England England

Nodar Tcheishvili

Lock

Georgia (country) Georgia

Matt Bolwell

Back row

England England

Tom Duncan

Back row

England England

Dan Lee

Back row

England England

James McRae [a]

Back row

England England

Chris Morgan

Back row

England England

John Stevens

Back row

England England

Zac Xiourouppa

Back row

England England





























































Player
Position
Union

Jake Ashby

Scrum-half

Australia Australia

Gavin Cattle

Scrum-half

England England

Alex Day

Scrum-half

England England

Alex Schwarz

Scrum-half

Wales Wales

Will Cargill

Fly-half

England England

Javier Rojas Alvarez

Fly-half

Argentina Argentina

Harvey Skinner [a]

Fly-half

England England

Luke Flack [a]

Centre

England England

Dan Koster

Centre

New Zealand New Zealand

Rory Parata

Centre

Ireland Ireland

Callum Patterson

Centre

Ireland Ireland

Jordan Payne

Centre

New Zealand New Zealand

Harry Strong [a]

Centre

England England

AJ Cant

Wing

England England

Kyle Moyle

Wing

England England

Alex O'Meara

Wing

England England

Robin Wedlake

Wing

England England

Matt Evans

Fullback

Canada Canada

Maliq Holden

Fullback

England England
  • Notes:


  1. ^ abcdefgh Josh Caulfield, Billy Keast, Harry Strong, Jack Clemson, Luke Flack, James McRae and Harvey Skinner joined Cornish Pirates on a dual-registration basis with Exeter Chiefs.[17]




Notable former players



  • England Joe Bearman


  • England Brian 'Stack' Stevens


  • England Rob Thirlby


  • Wales Will James


  • Scotland Blair Cowan


  • England Dave Ward


  • England Bertie Hopkin


Notes




  1. ^ Note that Pirates are missing 3 home attendances out of 13 due to poor media coverage during the 2000–01 season.


  2. ^ Note that Pirates are missing 1 home attendance out of 13 during the 2001–02 season.


  3. ^ Note that Pirates are missing 6 home attendances out of 13 due to extremely poor media coverage during the 2002–03 season.


  4. ^ Note that Pirates are missing 3 home attendances out of 13 due to poor media coverage during the 2003–04 season.


  5. ^ Note that Pirates are missing 1 home attendance out of 13 during the 2004–05 season.


  6. ^ RFU restructuring due to creating of Courage League Division 5 meant that Western Counties was renamed as South West 2 for the 1993–94 season, and was also reduced to a level 7 league.


  7. ^ RFU restructuring due the cancellation of Courage League Division 5 meant that South West 2 West became a level 6 league instead of level 7.


  8. ^ Bonus points had been used in National 1 since the 2003–04 season but would not be introduced to the lower leagues until much later. As this was the highest level the Pirates had reached, 2003–04 was the first season the club would experience bonus points.


  9. ^ First season that the club would be known as the Cornish Pirates. Prior to this they were Penzance-Newlyn.


  10. ^ As part of the extensive league restructuring by the RFU for the 2009–10 season, National 1 was renamed as the RFU Championship.


  11. ^ League position is taken from 1st stage only. The 2009–10 RFU Championship was divided into three stages; the Pirates finished 6th during the 1st stage (main league), and then 3rd in their promotion group during the second stage, failing to qualify for the playoff semi-finals.


  12. ^ Figure is taken from first stage of the 2009–10 RFU Championship.


  13. ^ As with the previous season, the 2010–11 RFU Championship was divided into three stages. Pirates finished 3rd in the first stage, then 1st in their promotion group (second stage) to qualify for the playoffs.


  14. ^ Figure is taken from first stage of the 2010–11 RFU Championship.


  15. ^ Pirates finished 3rd in the first stage, then 2nd in their promotion group (second stage) to qualify for the playoffs.


  16. ^ Figure is taken from first stage of the 2011–12 RFU Championship.


  17. ^ The competition format for the 2012–13 RFU Championship changed to a main league stage, with the top 4 sides contesting the playoffs.


  18. ^ The competition format for the 2017–18 RFU Championship and onward was changed to a standard league, with the playoffs discontinued.


  19. ^ Note that Penzance (a parent club of the Pirates) won 2 additional Cornish Cups and Newlyn (the second parent club) won the Cornwall Clubs Cup once.




See also



  • 2018–19 RFU Championship

  • 2018–19 RFU Championship Cup

  • Cornwall RFU

  • Newlyn RFC

  • Penzance RFC


References




  1. ^ "Business plan for Cornwall sports stadium approved". BBC News. 16 March 2011. Retrieved 30 April 2011.


  2. ^ "Stadium for Cornwall: Work could begin in spring 2019". Retrieved 12 March 2019.


  3. ^ "Final League Tables 1996–97". Trelawny's Army. Retrieved 26 July 2016.


  4. ^ "Final League Tables, 1997–98". Trelawny's Army. Retrieved 2 May 2016.


  5. ^ "South West 1 1998–1999". England Rugby. RFU. Retrieved 2 May 2016.


  6. ^ "CRFU decide foot and mouth crisis". South West Farmers. 9 March 2001.


  7. ^ "Powergen National Trophy 2005/06". Statbunker. 25 November 2005.


  8. ^ "EDF Energy National Cup 2006/07". Statbunker. 14 April 2007.


  9. ^ "EDF National Trophy 07/08". Statbunker. 11 January 2008.


  10. ^ "EDF National Trophy 07/08". Statbunker. 14 February 2009.


  11. ^ http://www.trelawnys-army.org.uk/ta/tables67.html


  12. ^ http://www.trelawnys-army.org.uk/ta/tables89.html


  13. ^ "Cornish Pirates 23-14 Munster". BBC. Retrieved 3 January 2012.


  14. ^ http://cornish-pirates.com/pzn/honours/league_cup_honours.htm


  15. ^ "Cornish Pirates 26 Northampton Saints 35". Cornish Pirates. 9 September 2007.


  16. ^ "A-Z of Players & Staff at the Cornish Pirates Rugby Team, Cornwall". Cornish Pirates. Retrieved 12 December 2018.


  17. ^ "Pirates Announce Their Dual-Registered Players" (Press release). Cornish Pirates. 11 August 2018. Retrieved 11 August 2018.



External links


  • Official site

  • Unofficial Fans site & Forum

  • Camborne RFC

  • Trelawny's Army

  • London Cornish RFC – for those living in London missing Cornish Rugby!

  • Cornish Pirates on itsrugby.co.uk











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