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Fylde RFC

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English rugby union club
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Rugby team
Fylde Rugby Club
Full nameFylde Rugby Football Club
UnionLancashire RFU
NicknameFylde / #runitfylde
Founded1919; 106 years ago (1919)[1]
LocationLytham St. Annes,Lancashire,England
GroundWoodlands Memorial Ground (Capacity: 9,000[2])
ChairmanNew Zealand Matt Filipo
PresidentEngland Anthony Hoskisson
CaptainEngland Toby Harrison
LeagueNational League 2 North
2024–254th
Teamkit
Official website
www.fylderugby.co.uk

Fylde Rugby Union Club/ˈfld/ is arugby union club based inLytham St Annes, on theFylde coast inLancashire,England. The home venue is theWoodlands Memorial Ground on Blackpool Road inAnsdell and the first team play in English rugby'sNational League 2 North, the fourth tier of theEnglish rugby union system, following their relegation fromNational League 1 at the end of the 2017–18 season. There are another two senior teams, the Hawks and the Vandals who play in the English North West Leagues; respectively in the NW Premiership and NW3 North. There is also a Colts team. In previous seasons the Colts have played in the Lancashire & Cheshire regional leagues.

In the past, Woodlands Memorial Ground was shared byBlackpool Rugby League Club and Fleetwood Town FC (training).

History

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Overview

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Fylde Rugby Club was founded on 25 July 1919, literally on the toss of a coin when a group ofHuddersfield businessmen met at Ansdell Institute to discuss the formation of either a rugby union or afootball club. A coin was tossed and it fell in favour of rugby union. Hence the similarity in kit between clubs. The club grew steadily and achieved a strong fixture list by the 1960s and has been in theNational Leagues since the league's inception in 1987.

It takes its name fromThe Fylde, a roughly 13-mile (20-kilometre)square-shapedpeninsula, bounded byMorecambe Bay to the north, theRibble estuary to the south, theIrish Sea to the west, and theBowland hills to the east, withBlackpool to the north andPreston to the east.

Formative years

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In May, 1920 the present Woodlands site was first used for rugby. The admission was 5d and the first yearly gate receipts amounted to just over £57. In 1922, Harold Brooks was elected President and through his efforts Fylde progressed. He also provided the present stand. In 1924 the club was represented in theLancashire team by players such as "Ham" Neville, who was capped 33 times, and "Pop" Ogden. The club was strengthened by the merger withBlackpool Old Boys in the 1934–35 season.

During theWorld War II, Fylde, along with many other clubs, had to close as theArmy took over the ground. In 1946 the President, G.W. Parkes, welcomed back members from the war and by this time the ground had been purchased and named the Woodlands Memorial Ground in recognition of those members who gave their lives during the war.

Post-war years

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In the 1950s, the dressing rooms were built and Pop Ogden was elected President of Lancashire. Arthur Bell and Rothwell Bamber were given life memberships for their work with the club. Bell served for 34 years as the Honorary Secretary.

In 1964 the secondEngland trial was held at Fylde and Sir Laurie Edwards opened the new pavilion extension and presented the club with a rugby union shield which is still on the clubhouse wall.

1969 was Fylde'sjubilee year, when they were fielding six or seven teams every Saturday. The club's two most famous players were home grown, Malcolm Phillips andBill Beaumont. Phillips, who attendedArnold School inBlackpool, won 25 England caps at centre between 1958 and 1964. He was President of theRugby Football Union (RFU) from 2004 to 2005 and has served on theInternational Rugby Board (IRB) for a number of years. Beaumont was also a one club man having joined Fylde as a 17-year-old in 1969 and stayed with the club until injury forced him to retire in 1982. His father had also played for Fylde and he wrote suggesting that his son be given a trial. His first game was in the sixth team as fullback. With his size and his 6'3" height, he was very quickly made into a forward to play for the first team. He earned 34 England caps between 1975 and 1982, 21 of them as captain. This included leading the side to theGrand Slam in 1980, as well as skippering the1980 British Lions tour to South Africa. In retirement he has remained in the public eye as a broadcaster and columnist. He is still a regular face at Fylde. He has also made major contribution to rugby administration in theUnited Kingdom and internationally as an IRB Member, with the RFU and he was manager of the2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand.

In the same era, a youngRoger Uttley, subsequently to skipper and then manage England, andBrian Ashton, England'sHead Coach, also played for Fylde. Other more recent internationals associated with Fylde include England wingers Tony Swift and Simon Smith, who were capped in the 1980s after leaving the club and locksSteve Bainbridge andWade Dooley, established internationals who won further caps whilst with Fylde.

England 'A' winger Mark Preston had a record of scoring 98 tries in 131 appearances. He subsequently made a similar impact in rugby league withWigan andHalifax.

Present day

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As with many former top-flight clubs outside theGuinness Premiership, attendances at home matches have fallen in recent years. In the early 1990s, 2,000 spectators would watch local derbies withPreston Grasshoppers and as many as 5,000 attended in 1982 to see Bill Beaumont's XV play Lancashire, staged when he retired through injury. But the club still stages representative games such as the England vScotland Under 19 international in January 2004 which attracted 2,500 spectators. There were 1,500 people at the Fylde v Preston Grasshoppers league match in December 2006.

Today, the teams still go onto the field wearing the colours of claret, gold and white, which were originally the colours of the Huddersfield Old Boys following the origins of Fylde’s formation by Huddersfield businessmen. The colours have not changed, although the design is now modernised.

Recent seasons have seen Fylde move betweenNational Division One,National Division Two and more recentlyNational Division Three North (from which the club gained promotion during the 2010–11 season). The club ran up significant debts in trying to compete in National One from 1997 to 1999 and had to sell a small portion of the Woodlands' grounds in order to re-establish financial health. With the receipts of the sale, a period of redevelopment of various facilities at Woodlands began in January 2005. The new clubhouse opened in October 2005 and can house more than 600 people.

The club finished in sixth place in National Division Three North in the 2003–04 season, fourth in 2004–05 and seventh in 2005–06. The club's then rugby management, including coaches Stuart Connell, who used to play for Fylde and Cumbria, Martin Scott, who played forOrrell, Fylde and Scotland, as well as Alistair Atkinson who played for Orrell andSedgley Park. They planned a promotion bid back to National Division Two. Leading scorers in the 2005–06 season included skipper andfly-half Mike Scott with 300 points, and one of the top goal kickers in national rugby, winger Nick Royle with 16 tries and flanker Andy Atkinson with 11 tries. The Players' Player of the Season was Paul Newton who was appointed skipper for the 2006–07 season.

Like so many clubs, Fylde has struggled in the professional era to maintain a balance between a members' club, based on traditional local community values and structures, and a professional outfit able to compete for players, regionally and nationally. The club, following this era, reasserted itself as a community-oriented members' club, basically amateur, bringing together experienced players in the area, together with nurturing considerable local talent and a sprinkling of overseas players. Since this period of reorganisation the club has promoted and excelled promoting young local and regional players, along with the promotion of former mini junior players to drive the club forward providing an exciting attacking form of rugby and hence the more recent moniker of #runitfylde.

The club fields eleven mini/junior sides, a Junior Colts squad and three other senior teams, the Hawks, the Saracens and the Vandals. In more recent seasons the club has also promoted more community rugby teams to promote rugby across all ages and abilities such as walking rugby. It further has a flourishing community rugby set up to promote, encourage and develop rugby in the surrounding community especially in the more disadvantaged areas at both junior and senior level.

Apart from a new clubhouse completed in September 2005, the club has developed an all weather pitch, upgraded facilities and non-rugby items and activities forming a core to the local and regional community.

Midway through the 2007–08 season the coaches Stuart Connell and Martin Scott were replaced with Mark Nelson the Lancashire coach who has previous experience of coaching at the club along with a successful spell as backs coach atSale. Nelson recruited a number of high calibre players including England Counties' Steve Nutt, Craig Aikman and David Wilks. He has also rekindled the club's relationship withSale which has allowed him to call on some of the Premiership club's young players whilst Sale have also given game time to Fylde'sNick Royle.

In June 2010, it was announced that formerEngland managerBrian Ashton would be a coaching consultant for his former club.[3] On the 26 July 2010, it was announced that formerEngland internationalJason Robinson would be making his comeback at the club.[4]

In June 2012, Sam Beaumont stepped down from his role as the skipper of Fylde.[5]

Current standings

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2025–26 National League 2 North table
PosTeamPldWDLPFPAPDTBLBPtsQualification
1Sheffield101000418161+2579049Promotion place
2Darlington Mowden Park11911418302+1169047
3Macclesfield11902471296+1758145
4Tynedale11803389253+1368242
5Fylde11722310268+424137
6Hull Ionians11614341256+858236
7Billingham11506272386−1147027
8Otley11407338353−157427
9Wharfedale11407315330−156527
10Sheffield Tigers11407270310−406325
11Preston Grasshoppers11407322333−116123
12Rossendale11209257434−1776115
13Hull111010251432−1814412Relegation place
14Scunthorpe10109196454−258329
Updated to match(es) played on 22 November 2025. Source: National League Rugby[6]
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

Honours

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1st team:

Fylde Saracens (2nd tam):

Fylde Vandals (4th team):

  • NOWIRUL Plate winners 2017

Current squad

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2016–17Note: Flags indicate national union underWorld Rugby eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-World Rugby nationality.

PlayerPositionUnion
Tom BurtonwoodHookerEnglandEngland
Ben GregoryHookerEnglandEngland
Alex LoneyHookerEnglandEngland
Danny MaherHookerEnglandEngland
Simon GriffithsPropEnglandEngland
Adam LewisPropEnglandEngland
Jake Pope(D/R)PropEnglandEngland
Sam SimpsonPropEnglandEngland
Oli TrippierPropEnglandEngland
Jonny WildPropEnglandEngland
Paul ArnoldLockEnglandEngland
Matt GarrodLockEnglandEngland
Nick GrayLockEnglandEngland
George Nott(D/R)LockEnglandEngland
Jack TurleyLockNew ZealandNew Zealand
George BlackwellFlankerEnglandEngland
Jamie BrookesFlankerEnglandEngland
David FairbrotherFlankerEnglandEngland
Matt LampreyFlankerEnglandEngland
Evan StewartFlankerEnglandEngland
Ben VernonFlankerEnglandEngland
Mark GoodmanNumber 8EnglandEngland
Andy HughesNumber 8EnglandEngland
Matt Rogerson(D/R)Number 8EnglandEngland
PlayerPositionUnion
Connor DeverScrum-halfEnglandEngland
Greg NichollsScrum-halfEnglandEngland
Jack HarrisonFly-halfEnglandEngland
Greg SmithFly-halfEnglandEngland
Scott ArmstrongCentreEnglandEngland
Sam Bedlow(D/R)CentreEnglandEngland
Chris BriersCentreEnglandEngland
Ralph DowdsCentreEnglandEngland
Scott RawlingsCentreEnglandEngland
Connor WilkinsonCentreEnglandEngland
James BaileyWingEnglandEngland
Anthony BinghamWingEnglandEngland
Oli BrennandWingEnglandEngland
Jordan DorringtonWingEnglandEngland
Warren SpraggFullbackItalyItaly

Notable former players

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Lions Tourists

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The following Fylde players have been selected for theLions tours while at the club:

Bill Beaumont (1977 &1980), tour captain in 1980

Rugby World Cup

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The following are players which have represented their countries at theRugby World Cup whilst playing for Fylde:

TournamentPlayers selectedEngland playersOther national team players
19872Steve Bainbridge,Wade Dooley

Other notable former players

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Notes

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References

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  1. ^"History 1919-present Fylde Rugby". fylderugby.co.uk. Archived fromthe original on 26 March 2010. Retrieved2010-04-07.
  2. ^"Details for Woodlands Memorial Ground, Lytham St Annes". worldstadia.com. Retrieved7 April 2010.
  3. ^Mairs, Gavin (29 June 2010)."Brian Ashton to help coach Fylde". London: The Telegraph. Retrieved4 July 2010.
  4. ^"Jason Robinson to make comeback for Fylde". BBC Sport. 26 July 2010. Retrieved27 July 2010.
  5. ^"Sam Beaumont".BBC Sport. Retrieved26 June 2012.
  6. ^"National League 2 North".NCA Rugby.
  7. ^"International debut for deaf rugby player".Craven Herald. 18 February 2010.

External links

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2025–26 teams
Former clubs
Seasons
Area League North
National 4 North
National Division 4
National Division 4 North
National Division 2 North
National Division 3 North
National League 2 North
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