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London Irish

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromLondon Irish RFC)
Professional English rugby union club
For other uses, seeLondon Irish (disambiguation).

Rugby team
London Irish
Full nameLondon Irish Rugby Football Club
UnionMiddlesex RFU,Surrey RFU,Irish RFU
Nickname(s)The Exiles, The Drummers
Founded1898; 127 years ago (1898)
Most appearancesTopsy Ojo (301)
Top scorerBarry Everitt (1,234)
Most triesTopsy Ojo (46)
2022–23Premiership, 5th
Official website
www.london-irish.com

London Irish RFC is a professionalrugby union club that most recently competed in thePremiership, the top division of rugby union in England. The club also participated in theEuropean Champions Cup, and theEuropean Challenge Cup. While competing in theRFU Championship, the second tier of English rugby, during the 2016–17 and 2018–19 seasons, London Irish also took part in theBritish and Irish Cup and theRFU Championship Cup. For twenty years, the club played its home games at theMadejski Stadium inReading, Berkshire, before relocating to theBrentford Community Stadium inBrentford, West London, for the 2020–21 season.

The club was founded in 1898 following the creation ofLondon Scottish,London Cornish andLondon Welsh for the same reason, allowing Irishmen the chance to play rugby with fellow countrymen in the English capital. They won their only major trophy, thePowergen Cup, in2002 and reached the2009 Premiership final, losing 10–9 toLeicester Tigers.[1] In the 2007–08 season, the team came close to a place in theHeineken Cup Final, losing out toStade Toulousain 15–21 in the semi-final.[2]

London Irish faced financial difficulties during the 2022–23 season and was issued a winding-up order byHMRC over an unpaid tax demand. To avoid suspension from the Premiership, the RFU set a deadline for the club to provide financial assurances confirming its ability to continue paying players and staff. The club failed to meet this deadline and was subsequently excluded from competing in the 2023–24 season—not only in the Premiership but across all professional tiers of rugby union in England.[3] After a number of moribund years, the club exited administration on 12 February 2025 when it was purchased by a consortium led by Irish formerFormula One owner,Eddie Jordan.[4]

History

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Formation and early years

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The squad that playedRacing Club de France atParc des Princes in 1899

London Irish was the third club to be formed in England by working and student exiles from thehome countries, followingLondon Scottish in 1878,London Welsh in 1885; followed byLondon Cornishin 1962. The first game took place on 1 October 1898 against the former Hammersmith club atHerne Hill Athletic Ground, with London Irish winning 8–3. The team that season benefited from the early recruitment ofvet andIrish internationalLouis Magee.[5] He became essential in the early years of the club along with club captain R.S Dyas in putting the team on the map and having regular fixtures between other London-based teams.

War and conflict

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The turn of the new century was a great time for London Irish with the club firmly solidified in the London club roster but these would be some of the last years of normality for the team. With the commencement ofWorld War I, many of the players enlisted with Irish Battalions in their homeland for deployment in mainland Europe. In 1916, following theEaster Rising, a number of remaining players and members returned toIreland to fight in the independence struggle; many did not return. It is unknown exactly how many with a connection to the club were lost. Following the formation of theIrish Free State in 1923, some of those who fought in Europe and/or Ireland returned to the club, which saw an overhaul of the organisation over the remainder of the decade, reviving the team and its influence for a new beginning.

In the years that followed, Irish made strides in playing competition outside of Greater London with matches against teams such asLeicester andCardiff. This, however, was short-lived with the commencement ofWorld War II and players and members again being dispersed across the continent, many of whom elected not to return following the end of the war. Nine of the players who participated in the 1938–39 season died in the conflict. The club's then playing ground located inSunbury-on-Thames was acquired byMinistry for Agriculture to be used as a site to grow food for the war-torn capital. Because of the state of the playing field after the war, games were temporarily held atRectory Field inBlackheath.

Post-war years

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The post-war era got off to a rocky beginning. Player numbers weren't what they used to be as former members elected not to move back to London and this made it difficult to front a starting XV. The year that followed saw theWinter of 1946, one of the coldest winters on record in the United Kingdom. Rectory Field was frozen for most of the winter meaning Irish missed matches in the season. Things picked up with the arrival of a new captain,Des O'Brien, and a number of other key players and in 1948 London Irish celebrated their 50th anniversary with the most successful season yet for the club.

In the 1950s the club thrived, fielding teams most weeks, and in 1951 they became the first club to host touring Italian teamRoma. On 9 September 1959, Irish returned to Sunbury and had a place to call home, which was dubbedThe Avenue. They achieved a record-breaking season, remaining unbeaten.

Results in the 1960s were mixed, with many good wins but also a number of defeats. Fixtures improved and the club played against many famous teams, which changed the attitude of the training and playing and, in the 70s, London Irish became a force to be reckoned with, finishing first in the London Division of the Rugby Football Union in the 1976–77 season. Pre-season tours became popular and in 1977, the London Irish made history in South Africa when they became the first touring side to play a host of mixed-race teams.

Professional era

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London Irish vsToulon in 2010

Since the professional era began in August 1995, London Irish has only lifted one piece of major silverware, winning thePowergen Cup in 2002 in a match againstNorthampton at Twickenham that saw the club win 38–7. Some 75,000 people attended the match, seeing the Exiles win in what is regarded as one of the most successful days in the club's history. London Irish enjoyed success in Europe in 2005–06 when they reached the final of the Challenge Cup, only to be defeated by Gloucester 36–34 at Twickenham.

In 2013, Irish were taken over by a consortium led by Mick Crossan, executive chairman ofPowerday, a London-based recycling and waste management firm. Powerday would go on to be one of the club's main sponsors.

In early May 2023, theRFU sought clarification from London Irish about why the club's players and staff had not yet been paid for April 2023.[6] On 15 May the RFU gave the club a 30 May deadline to sell the club to new owners, and indicated the club would be suspended from the Premiership if they were not satisfied the club had sufficient funding.[7] Two weeks later, the RFU extended the deadline until 6 June.[8]

On 2 June 2023, London Irish received winding up petitions from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) over an unpaid tax bill believed to be up to £1 million, which saw them forced out of business.[9][10]

Post administration era (2024–present)

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In October 2024, it was reported that Irish businessman and TV personalityEddie Jordan alongside former New Zealand and South Africa internationalsAndrew Mehrtens andBobby Skinstad respectively, were forming a consortium to buy London Irish as part of a wider project to emulate the success of theCity Football Group.[11][12]

In February 2025, Strangford Ellis Ltd, led by Jordan, completed the takeover of London Irish, defeating German businessman Daniel Loitz in the bid. The consortium outlined plans to have the club playing rugby again by 2026, while remaining open to both a return to the Premiership and the possibility of joining theUnited Rugby Championship.[13] In March 2025, the Jordan group announced further plans to establish a home ground in west London as well as a women's team and an academy setup before handing the club over to fan ownership.[14]

The following week, Jordan died peacefully in his home after being diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer the previous year. His son, Kyle Jordan, assumed the role of interim chief executive of the club and reaffirmed plans for a return to competitive rugby in 2026.[15]

Academy

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London Irish managed their own academy, with players such asTom Homer,Nick Kennedy,Topsy Ojo,Anthony Watson, brothersDelon andGuy Armitage,Alex Corbisiero andJonathan Joseph having gone on to play for the senior side and be internationally capped. Ojo retired at the end of the 2018–19 season having made 301 appearances for the club.

Stadium

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Main article:Brentford Community Stadium
Gtech Community Stadium Under Construction.

From the2020–21 season, London Irish played at theGtech Community Stadium, inBrentford,Greater London. The stadium is owned byBrentford F.C. who also play their home games there. The ground is a 17,250-capacity all-seater stadium that opened in 2020.

Prior to 2020, London Irish played at theMadejski Stadium inReading, Berkshire for twenty seasons between2000 andMarch 2020 when the2019–20 season was suspended due to theCOVID-19 pandemic. Due to delays owing to the pandemic, Brentford Stadium was running behind its scheduled opening date. Irish made the decision to play their remaining games when possible atHarlequin'sTwickenham Stoop as they could not return to Reading. The Exiles had previously played at The Stoop in the1999–2000 season before moving to the Madejski Stadium.

London Irish drummers and fans at theMadejski Stadium.

The largest crowd for a London Irish match was for a game againstLondon Wasps on 15 March 2008 during the2007–08 season. The crowd of 23,790 was also the highest attendance for a regular season Premiership Rugby match until December 2008.[16]

On12 March 2016, London Irish played their first home Premiership match abroad, and also the first-ever Premiership match outside England, when they travelled to theUnited States to faceSaracens at theNew York Red Bulls'Red Bull Arena in theNew York metropolitan area.[17]

On 15 August 2016, the club announced its intention to return to London and that it was in formal discussions withHounslow London Borough Council to play at Brentford's new stadium.[18] On 10 February 2017, the club confirmed that the council had approved its application to use the stadium for rugby, effectively allowing it to move into the new stadium from its opening season.[19] This was later confirmed.[20]

The club's training ground and offices were located at theHazelwood Centre, which is located in the west of the city inSunbury-on-Thames. The facility was opened in 2014 following the closure ofThe Avenue and is also used byNFL teams during theNFL International Series as a training facility.

London Irish Amateur Rugby Football Club

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Further information:London Irish Amateur

The club also hostsLondon Irish Amateur RFC (a separate legal entity) for non-professionals to allow them to improve in rugby. The team plays at the location of London Irish's training ground and offices,Hazelwood in Sunbury. Some players such asJustin Bishop andKieran Campbell have gone through the ranks to play for the London Irish professional team.[21]

Mascot

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Digger

Digger

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Digger is an Irish wolfhound and the officialmascot of London Irish.

In 2003, Digger won the "Best Mascot" award inPremiership Rugby at the Premier Rugby Marketing Awards.[22]

On 23 April 2006, Digger ran theLondon Marathon raising money for spinal research. He finished themarathon in a time of 6 hours 39 minutes 31 seconds.[23]

Others

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Mr Doyle

Digger was joined by his cousin, Duggie, from the 2006–07 season. Much taller and much slower, Duggie has proved popular with younger children attending matchdays. As well as the mascot characters, there is also a realIrish wolfhound, Mr Doyle, who also attends the home games. Prior to Mr Doyle, his great uncle, Jumbo, attended home games before his retirement.

Rivalries

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London Irish have rivalries in the Greater London area, mainly withHarlequins andSaracens, with whom they are now, thanks to Irish moving back to West London, able to have local derbies.Gtech Community Stadium's location makes it less than two miles to theTwickenham Stoop. They also maintain a friendly rivalry with fellow exilesLondon Scottish.

Season summaries

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LeagueDomestic CupEuropean Cup
SeasonCompetitionFinal PositionPointsPlay-OffsCompetitionPerformanceCompetitionPerformance
1987–88Courage League Division 28th24N/AJohn Player Cup3rd roundNo competitionN/A
1988–89Courage League Division 26th12N/APilkington Cup4th round
1989–90Courage League Division 25th12N/APilkington Cup2nd round
1990–91Courage League Division 22nd (P)19N/APilkington CupQuarter-final
1991–92Courage League Division 19th9N/APilkington Cup3rd round
1992–93Courage League Division 17th12N/APilkington Cup3rd round
1993–94Courage League Division 19th(R)8N/APilkington Cup5th round
1994–95Courage League Division 25th18N/APilkington Cup5th round
1995–96Courage League Division 22nd (P)30N/APilkington CupSemi-finalNo English teamsN/A
1996–97Courage League Division 110th12N/APilkington Cup4th roundChallenge Cup6th in pool
1997–98Allied Dunbar Premiership11th12N/ATetley's Bitter CupQuarter-finalChallenge Cup2nd in pool
1998–99Allied Dunbar Premiership7th30N/ATetley's Bitter CupQuarter-finalNo English teamsN/A
1999–00Allied Dunbar Premiership8th25N/ATetley's Bitter CupSemi-finalChallenge CupSemi-final
2000–01Zurich Premiership8th45N/ATetley's Bitter CupQuarter-finalChallenge Cup1st in pool*
2001–02Zurich Premiership4th57N/APowergen CupChampionsChallenge CupSemi-final
2002–03Zurich Premiership9th40Powergen CupSemi-finalHeineken Cup2nd in pool
2003–04Zurich Premiership8th49Powergen CupQuarter-finalChallenge Cup2nd round
2004–05Zurich Premiership10th40Powergen CupSemi-finalChallenge Cup2nd round
2005–06Guinness Premiership3rd66Semi-finalPowergen Cup3rd in poolChallenge CupRunners-up
2006–07Guinness Premiership6th53EDF Energy Cup2nd in poolHeineken Cup4th in pool
2007–08Guinness Premiership7th59EDF Energy Cup3rd in poolHeineken CupSemi-final
2008–09Guinness Premiership3rd66Runners-upEDF Energy Cup2nd in poolChallenge CupQuarter-final
2009–10Guinness Premiership6th52LV= Cup3rd in poolHeineken Cup3rd in pool
2010–11Aviva Premiership6th54LV= Cup3rd in poolHeineken Cup4th in pool
2011–12Aviva Premiership7th46LV= Cup2nd in poolHeineken Cup4th in pool
2012–13Aviva Premiership9th35LV= Cup2nd in poolChallenge Cup2nd in pool
2013–14Aviva Premiership10th36LV= Cup3rd in poolChallenge Cup2nd in pool
2014–15Aviva Premiership10th40LV= Cup4th in poolChallenge CupQuarter-final
2015–16Aviva Premiership12th(R)20No competitionN/AChallenge CupQuarter-final
2016–17Greene King IPA Championship1st (P)91ChampionsBritish and Irish CupSemi-finalNot qualifiedN/A
2017–18Aviva Premiership12th(R)22Anglo-Welsh Cup2nd in poolChallenge Cup3rd in pool
2018–19Greene King IPA Championship1st (P)99ChampionsChampionship CupRunners-upNot qualifiedN/A
2019–20Gallagher Premiership10th34Premiership Cup3rd in poolChallenge Cup4th in pool
2020–21Gallagher Premiership9th48No competitionN/AChallenge CupQuarter-final
2021–22Gallagher Premiership8th63Premiership CupRunners-upChallenge CupQuarter-final
2022–23Gallagher Premiership5th55Premiership CupRunners-upHeineken CupRound of 16

Gold background denotes champions
Silver background denotes runners-up
Pink background denotes relegated

* Finished first in pool but did not progress to the quarter-final. Their place was taken by Brive[24][25]

Club honours

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Major honours

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Friendly

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Notable former players

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See also:Category:London Irish players

Rugby World Cup

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The following are players who have represented their countries at theRugby World Cup whilst being registered with London Irish:

TournamentPlayers selectedEngland playersOther national team players
19997Malcolm O'KellyIreland,Kieron DawsonIreland,Justin BishopIreland,Conor O'SheaIreland,Julian LovedayCanada,Isaac Fe'aunatiSamoa,Stephen BachopSamoa
20030
20077Peter Richards,Mike CattOlivier MagneFrance,Juan Manuel LeguizamónArgentina,Gonzalo TiesiArgentina,Seilala MapusuaSamoa,Sailosi TagicakibauSamoa
20118Alex Corbisiero,Delon Armitage,Shontayne HapeJoe AnsbroScotland,Jebb SinclairCanada,Paulică IonRomania,Ofisa TreviranusSamoa,Sailosi TagicakibauSamoa
20156Blair CowanScotland,Sean MaitlandScotland,Asaeli TikoirotumaFiji,Ofisa TreviranusSamoa,Halani AulikaTonga,Jebb SinclairCanada
20196Allan DellScotland,Motu Matu'uSamoa,TJ IoaneSamoa,Steve MafiTonga,Bryce CampbellUnited StatesAlivereti VeitokaniFiji

See also

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References

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  1. ^Palmer, Bryn (16 May 2009)."Leicester 10–9 London Irish".BBC News.
  2. ^"London Irish 15–21 Toulouse".BBC News. 26 April 2008.
  3. ^"London Irish suspended from Gallagher Premiership and all leagues by RFU due to financial issues".Sky Sports. Retrieved6 June 2023.
  4. ^"F1 legend Eddie Jordan's consortium launches revival of London Irish".The Guardian. 12 February 2025. Retrieved12 February 2025.
  5. ^Club history –beginnings london-irish.com Retrieved 20 September 2015
  6. ^Morgan, Charlie (2 May 2023)."RFU in contact with London Irish over failure to pay April wages". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved3 May 2023.
  7. ^Mairs, Gavin (15 May 2023)."Revealed: Head of consortium bidding to take over London Irish is California lawyer Chip Sloan". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved16 May 2023.
  8. ^Sara Orchard (31 May 2023)."London Irish granted further extension until 6 June to complete takeover".BBC Sport.
  9. ^"London Irish crisis deepens after winding-up petition issued against club".The Irish Times.
  10. ^"London Irish served winding-up petition over unpaid tax bill". 26 June 2023.
  11. ^Parker-Turner, Charlie (19 October 2024)."F1 icon Eddie Jordan planning to buy new team and make them 'Man City of their sport'". Retrieved19 October 2024.
  12. ^Lowe, Alex (18 October 2024)."Eddie Jordan wants to buy London Irish – and make them Man City of rugby".The Times. Retrieved19 October 2024.
  13. ^Latham-Coyle, Harry."Consortium led by F1 legend Eddie Jordan buys London Irish out of administration". The Independent. Retrieved12 February 2025.
  14. ^"'A rebirth': London Irish target 2026 return". BBC Sport. Retrieved28 March 2025.
  15. ^"London Irish return on course despite death of Jordan". BBC Sport. Retrieved28 March 2025.
  16. ^"No Luck on Paddy's Day for Irish". Guinness Premiership.com. Retrieved16 March 2008.[permanent dead link]
  17. ^"London Irish Aviva Premiership Rugby match in USA".London Irish. 27 October 2015. Retrieved27 October 2015.
  18. ^Hyde, Nathan."London Irish could soon leave Madejski Stadium".Get Reading. Trinity Mirror Southern. Retrieved15 August 2016.
  19. ^"Approval for rugby".Brentford Community Stadium. Retrieved10 February 2017.
  20. ^"Back in Town — The Irish are Returning to London!".London Irish. 18 December 2018. Retrieved18 December 2018.
  21. ^[1]Archived 15 April 2010 at theWayback Machine
  22. ^"Digger Wins 'Best Mascot' Award". London Irish. Archived fromthe original on 14 June 2011. Retrieved26 February 2010.
  23. ^"Steven Orton is fundraising for Spinal Research – JustGiving".JustGiving. Retrieved26 February 2010.
  24. ^"Challenge Cup | Pool Tables".
  25. ^"Challenge Cup | Fixtures & Results".

Notes

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External links

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