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Bedford Blues

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English rugby union club, based in Bedford

Rugby team
Bedford Blues
Full nameBedford Blues
UnionEast Midlands RFU
Founded1886; 139 years ago (1886)
LocationBedford,England
GroundGoldington Road (Capacity: 5,000 (1,700 seated))
CoachMike Rayer
CaptainAlex Day
LeagueChamp Rugby
2024–252nd
1stkit
2ndkit
Official website
www.bedfordrugby.co.uk

Bedford Blues are asemi-professionalrugby union club in the town ofBedford, England, currently playing inChamp Rugby at the 2nd tier of theEnglish rugby union system.

History

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This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(June 2020)

Foundation and 19th century

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Bedford RUFC was founded in 1886 after an amalgamation betweenBedford Rovers (1876) andBedford Swifts (1882). Both parent clubs had close connections withBedford School andBedford Modern School, and both had fixtures with the leading teams of the period. The Bedford colours of dark and light blue are believed to be a reflection of the schoolmasters association withOxbridge and the full badge colours are based on the strip of Swifts (black) and Rovers (cerise).

Under the captaincy of Alfred Parrott, aBedford Modern School master, the new club made an auspicious start, losing only once in its first season (toLeicester) and again only once in its second (to a composite London XV). The early successes, however, paled before the achievements of 1893–94, when the club's reputation persuaded opponents of the stature of Stade Francais, fromParis, and the Barbarians to make the journey over. These two distinguished teams suffered the fate of all other visitors to the club's ground in that marvelous season, defeated by scores of 22–0 and 7–3 respectively in front of huge crowds. Indeed, the club would complete its normal programme unbeaten, only to lose when somewhat understrength, in an extra match arranged as an Easter Monday attraction at Coventry (0–12). The season's final record was 29 played, 27 won, one drawn and one lost, with 521 points and only 49 against. Records created that season stood for many years and winger H.M Morris still holds the highest try-scoring tally with 38 scores in a season.

While the success on the playing field had been good there was often a problem of where to play at home. There were two main sites where pitches could be made available. One was known as 'The House of Industry' ground in Goldington Road. This was the field in front of the House of Industry -now known as the North Wing Hospital. This is approximately where Bedford play now. The other site was known as Midland Road Ground, an area near theQueen's Park railway bridge.

The first matches in 1886–87 were in Goldington Road — where the Bedford Swifts had played — but during the next few seasons several pitches near the railway station were used. It was recorded in local papers at the time that at least one game was played in the field where Queens Works now stands. The railway and industry required this land and Bedford Rugby returned to the Goldington Road area before an agreement in 1895 was reached with Bedford Cricket Club who actually held the lease. The pitch was laid out in virtually the same spot as it is now.

Beginning of the century

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The club's record prior to 1905 was good enough to bring theall Blacks to the town for the first time. The match itself was a great attraction with the town's schools and factories closing for the half day to enable people to attend. The result (0–41 toNew Zealand) was similar to the fate that most club sides suffered in their successful tour. OnlyWales beat them.

In the seasons immediately precedingWorld War I the fixture list grew stronger, and the club lost only one game in 1913–14. The facilities had also improved. With a better playing arena, the first stand had been erected in 1905 and in 1910 a new pavilion was built. At that time it was considered one of the best rugby club pavilions in the country. The fact that it is still standing (now known as the 'Scrumhall' bar) is proof of the quality of workmanship and materials.

The First World War threatened the club's existence when the ground was taken over by the Military Authorities for use as an Army Camp. Things did improve very quickly and by the late twenties and early thirties Bedford once again were at the top. Even today some older supporters consider this the club's best ever period - practically every member of the team in 1938–39 was very close to international honours. Further improvements had been made at the ground, the biggest being the stand opened in 1933 which is still in use today.

Post war yo-yo era

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The club recovered again after the Second World War and continued to play all the leading clubs and had a great spell in the mid sixties. There were three Bedford players regularly in the England team withDavid Perry andBudge Rogers captaining their county. In 1969–70 season Bedford won the Sunday Telegraph English-Welsh rugby union table. Probably, the Blues finest hour was in 1975 when Bedford, captained by Budge Rogers beatRosslyn Park in the final of theKnock Out Cup atTwickenham 28–12. There was a gate of nearly 18,000 which at the time was a record attendance.

Unfortunately this achievement did not continue with the club having little success resulting in many players with great potential leaving the club. There were bright moments such asJohn Orwin captaining theEngland touring party toAustralia andFiji in 1988. When the leagues were introduced in 1987-88 Bedford were in Division 2, promoted to Division 1 in 1989 but relegated immediately to finish in Division 3 for a period.

The professional era

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At the start of the 1996–97 season when 'The Blues' were in Division 2 the club turned professional.Frank Warren (the boxing promoter) and Sports Network putting in a big investment to secure quality players, many of whom were internationally famous, while others were young but promising. The best example is probably Scott Murray who until June 2008 was Scotland's most capped international. At the second attempt Bedford easily won the Allied Dunbar Division 2 Championship in 1998 and were promoted to Division 1 and were runners up in the Cheltenham & Gloucester Cup. Financial problems with the club's owners resulted in the club losing many players but there was a nucleus that remained loyal. The Club Coach and Director of Rugby also left.

The decline

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Bedford Blues playing theCornish Pirates in 2008.

In April 1999 Sports Network sold the club to Jefferson Lloyd International but this was a financial disaster resulting in Bedford losing further staff. The club was about to be sold and moved from the town, which would have meant the end of first class rugby in Bedford. Following intervention by the RFU in October 1999 a consortium of Bedford businessmen headed by David Ledsom (SDC), Mike Kavanagh, Geoff Irvine (Irvine-Whitlock), David Gunner and David Rawlinson with assistance from Bedford Borough Council and other professional people, the transfer of the club to Bedford Blues Ltd. was organised. Several thousand supporters and businesses in the town bought shares and the club is now viable. The club is now sponsored by Charles Wells Brewery and many other local companies. Bedford have been playing on virtually the same pitch for over 100 years and 32 players have gained International honours while they were actually playing for the club at the time of being honoured.

Stability

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Mike Rayer, an ex-player of the club andCardiff RFC, has introduced a free-flowing style which saw Bedford rise to 2nd in the league in 2006, only held back by the dominance ofHarlequins, who had been demoted from thePremiership the year before.

The 2006 season had seen the commencement of a relationship withLeicester Tigers, the prominent Premiership side, which allowed some of Leicester's most promising young players to gain experience by playing for Bedford in National Division One. Within the next five years it was hoped that 50% of the club's players would have been brought into the squad through the academy and youth teams.

The 2006–07 Academy Colts became champions of theEnglish Colts Club Knockout Cup after beating Redruth atFranklin's Gardens. 2007–08 season saw the Colts win the cup again. Being the first Colts team to retain the cup.

Bedford Blues Women

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Back in 2017 the Bedford Blues produced a development plan to help further grow female participation in the game of rugby in the town of Bedford and the surrounding area. The plan initially included the development of school aged rugby, providing rugby for girls aged 11 to 17. Over the following three seasons the Bedford Blues successfully set up and run three separate age group teams; U13s, U15s & U18s. With numbers across all three age groups rapidly growing, a realisation that there was no clear pathway for the girls to follow locally in Women's rugby was recognised. The development plan was updated to include the goal of creating a Women's rugby team under the Bedford rugby umbrella.

The idea then became a reality in January 2020 when the first training session was held with 12 players attending on a cold Saturday morning. The team continued to increase its numbers over the preceding year, even during the COVID-19 situation, building up a healthy roster of over 30 players. The following season (2021–22) the Bedford Blues Women became a league team, playing in the NC3 Midlands (Central) League, led by head coach Mark Stapley. The Bedford Blues Women play their home matches at Goldington Rd and at Bedford Athletic RFC ground.

On Sunday 10 October 2021, Emma Graham made history by being the first player to score points for the Bedford Blues Women Rugby Union Team during their first match against Shelford Nomads, played at Goldington Rd (with the Blues Women winning 31–0)

The 2022–23 season saw the Bedford Blues Women competing in NC2 Midlands (Central), coached by Peter Frost and Daryl Veenendaal and captained by Emma Graham, they played 4 games at Goldington Road, and ended their first season in the new league in 4th place.

The 2023–24 season saw the women's side playing all their home matches at Goldington Road, and competing in NC2 Midlands (South). There was also a coaching team change with Mark “Eddie” Rennell, former Bedford Rugby player, taking over from Veenendaal. Lucy Middleton led the team to finish the season with 12 victories making them undefeated during the season and winning promotion to NC1 East.

At the start of the 2024-2025 season, Peter Frost stood down as joint head coach, to leave Rennell in sole charge.

Goldington Road Stadium

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Goldington Road Stadium

Goldington Road is the home ground of the Bedford Blues, with a capacity of 5,000, usually drawing 2000+ people with each home game. Towards the end of the 05–06 season, two new temporary stands were built for the big home tie against Harlequins, at one point these stands were made a long term part of the stadium, along with the grounds public house and original stand. As of the 06–07 season the extra stands have been removed.[1]

Kit

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The club kit was supplied byKooga from at least 2004 up until the 2011–2012 season and then supplied byZoo Sport Ltd before changing back to Gilbert on 1 September 2020. The kit is sponsored by three companies; The front of the team shirt by Blue Chip, the sleeves byWells Bombardier and the back byLifesure insurance.

YearSupplierChestSleevesBack
1996–2000GilbertDexionunknownunknown
2006–2008KoogaAutoglassWells BombardierLifesure
2008–2010Kooga
2010–2011Kooga
2011–2014Zoo Sport Ltd
2015–2020Blue Chip
2020–2021Gilbert[2]
2021–2022Service Express

sdcac plc

Eagle Brewery

dovecote parkcarter sullivantrust insurancestonburySDG

Butterwell

BudgensBerwick Homes

Special events

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Ladies Day

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October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month and to support the charity Breast Cancer Care the Blues hold a yearly 'Ladies Day' home match at Goldington Road. The team wear a unique Kooga pink strip for the game with the playing shirts auctioned giving proceeds to Breast Cancer Care.https://web.archive.org/web/20111003121344/https://www.medocmall.co.uk/images/theclubshop_bedford_tickets/products/large/KSSHIRT.gif

The Mobbs Memorial Match

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The Mobbs Memorial Match is held annually in memory ofEdgar Mobbs, an England international who was killed in theFirst World War. Mobbs played forNorthampton and was educated atBedford Modern School.[3] Between 2008 and 2011 the match was played at Goldington Road between Bedford Blues and theBarbarians. From 2012 to April 2023 it was played alternately at Goldington Road and the Northampton Saints ground atFranklin's Gardens, with the host club facing theBritish Army team.[4] From 2024 the match will be played as a preseason game between Bedford and Northampton.[5]

YearHomeScoreAway
2008Bedford19–34Barbarians
2009Bedford45–76Barbarians
2010Bedford50–14Barbarians
2011Bedford35–43Barbarians
2013[6]Bedford43–29Army
2015[7]Bedford47–24Army
2023Beford38–10Army

League history

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BEDFORD RUGBY CLUB LEAGUE HISTORY
YearLeagueLevelPositionOther
1987–88Courage League Division Two25th-
1988–89Courage League Division Two22nd (P)Promoted to Division One
1989–90Courage League Division One112thRelegated to Division Two
1990–91Courage League Division Two28th-
1991–92Courage League Division Two210th-
1992–93Courage League Division Two27thRelegated to Division Three
1993–94Courage League Division Three33rd-
1994–95Courage League Division Three31stPromoted to Division Two
1995–96Courage League Division Two29th-
1996–97Courage League Division Two24th-
1997–98Allied Dunbar Premiership Division Two21stPromoted toAllied Dunbar Premiership
1998–99Allied Dunbar Premiership113th-
1999–00Allied Dunbar Premiership112thRelegated to National Division One
2000–01National Division One211th-
2001–02National Division One26th-
2002–03National Division One27th-
2003–04National Division One27th-
2004–05National Division One27thPowergen Shield Winners
2005–06National Division One22ndPowergen National Trophy runner-up
2006–07National Division One27th-
2007–08National Division One26th-
2008–09National Division One23rd-
2009–10RFU Championship24thRFU Championship play-off semi-finalists
2010–11RFU Championship22ndRFU Championship play-off semi-finalists,British and Irish Cup runner-up
2011–12RFU Championship22ndRFU Championship play-off semi-finalists
2012–13RFU Championship23rdRFU Championship Finalists,British and Irish Cup semi-finalists
2013–14RFU Championship29th-
2014–15RFU Championship210th-
2015–16RFU Championship24thRFU Championship play-off semi-finalists
2016–17RFU Championship28th
2017–18RFU Championship23rd(play-offs for promotion were abolished and replaced by the first ranked team being promoted)
2018–19RFU Championship23rd
2019–20RFU Championship28th
2020–21RFU Championship28th
2021–22RFU Championship25th
2022–23RFU Championship24th
2023–24RFU Championship24th
2024–25RFU Championship22nd
2025–26Champ Rugby2

Honours

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Men's honours

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Women's honours

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Current standings

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2025–26 Champ Rugby table
PosTeamPldWDLPFPAPDTBLBPtsQualification
1Ealing Trailfinders7700344117+2277035Play-off
semi-finals
2Worcester Warriors7502234165+696228
3Bedford Blues7502238174+646127Play-off
quarter-finals
4Cornish Pirates7412217128+894224
5Nottingham7403191165+266224
6Caldy7403175150+255223
7Hartpury7403172178−62119
8Chinnor7403148175−271219
9Coventry7304267248+196119
10Richmond7304166181−151215
11Doncaster Knights7214173181−82214
12Ampthill7205147323−1763112Relegation play-off
13London Scottish7106111205−94116
14Cambridge7007115308−193314Relegated
Updated to match(es) played on 16 November 2025. Source:England Rugby
Rules for classification: If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:
  1. Number of matches won
  2. Number of matches drawn
  3. Difference between points for and against
  4. Total number of points for
  5. Aggregate number of points scored in matches between tied teams
  6. Number of matches won excluding the first match, then the second and so on until the tie is settled

Current squad

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The Bedford Blues squad for the2024–25 season.[8]

Note: Flags indicate national union underWorld Rugby eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-World Rugby nationality.

PlayerPositionUnion
James FishHookerEnglandEngland
Tommy HermanHookerEnglandEngland
Joey ConwayPropIrelandIreland
Oisin HeffernanPropIrelandIreland
Jamie JackPropEnglandEngland
Luke FrostLockEnglandEngland
Shay KerryLockEnglandEngland
Rory WardLockEnglandEngland
Alex WoolfordLockEnglandEngland
Jac ArthurBack rowWalesWales
Joe HowardBack rowEnglandEngland
Cameron KingBack rowEnglandEngland
Fred TuilagiBack rowSamoaSamoa
PlayerPositionUnion
Alex DayScrum-halfEnglandEngland
James LennonScrum-halfEnglandEngland
Will MaiseyFly-halfEnglandEngland
Jamie ElliottCentreEnglandEngland
Alfie GarsideCentreEnglandEngland
Michael Le BourgeoisCentreEnglandEngland
Joel MatavesiCentreEnglandEngland
Lucas TitheringtonCentreEnglandEngland
Dean AdamsonWingEnglandEngland
Pat TapleyWingEnglandEngland
Matt WorleyWingHong KongHong Kong
Louis JamesFullbackEnglandEngland

International players

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References

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  1. ^"Goldington Road". Napit.co.uk. Retrieved25 March 2009.
  2. ^"Gilbert to become official kit partner". bedfordrugby.co.uk. Retrieved17 June 2020.
  3. ^"Edgar Mobbs".espn.co.uk. Retrieved6 December 2014.
  4. ^"Mobbs Memorial Match promises to be poignant occasion".rfu.com. Archived fromthe original on 14 December 2014. Retrieved6 December 2014.
  5. ^"New format agreed for Mobbs Memorial Match". Bedford Rugby. 21 February 2023. Retrieved14 July 2023.
  6. ^"MOBBS would have been proud".armyrugbyunion.co.uk. Retrieved7 December 2014.
  7. ^"Match Report v British Army".Bedford Blues. Retrieved23 April 2015.
  8. ^"Player Profiles". Bedford Rugby. 31 January 2025. Retrieved31 January 2025.

External links

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