Doncaster Knights

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Doncaster Rugby Football Club are a professional rugby union club representing the city of Doncaster, England. The first XV are known as the "Doncaster Knights", and play in the RFU Championship. Being the most promoted side in English history has led to huge changes at the Castle Park ground and within the team structure.

Doncaster Knights
Full nameDoncaster Rugby Football Club
UnionYorkshire RFU
Nickname(s)Knights
Founded1875; 149 years ago (1875)
LocationDoncaster, South Yorkshire, England
Ground(s)Castle Park (Capacity: 5,000 (1,650 seated)
Coach(es)Steve Boden
Captain(s)Sam Graham
League(s)RFU Championship
2022–236th
Team kit
Official website
www.drfc.co.uk

Castle Park Conference and Function centre is a multimillion-pound development and is among the top conference venues in Doncaster, while remaining a supportive place for amateur rugby union in the city. The club motto "rugby for all" sees amateur side Doncaster Phoenix compete at the same ground, as well as the ladies side Doncaster Demons and every age group from under-7 to under-17s.

History

The rise to National League One, from amateur status led to the rebranding of Doncaster RFC to Doncaster Knights for the 2006–07 season, and that season saw their highest placed finish to date under Clive Griffiths as Director of Rugby. Doncaster also won the Yorkshire Cup.

After the departure of Griffiths to Worcester, the current DOR Lynn Howells joined the club on the eve of the 2007–08 season. Justin Bishop, signed from London Irish, had acted as DOR during the pre-season.

Howells inspired the Knights to almost repeat the 3rd-place finish in his first season in charge, and has moulded the squad in his own image for the 2008–09 season. 9 January saw the opening of the new De Mulder-Lloyd Stand at Castle park, a £3 million state of the art 1650 seater stand. Driven by CEO James Criddle and funded by Tony De Mulder and Steve Lloyd this has seen Castle Park develop into undoubtedly the best rugby facility in South Yorkshire.

The home of the Knights, Castle Park, featured in and won "4 Weddings" and also hosted the Northern BBC TV news coverage for Remembrance Day during 2009 showing how for the operational side of the club has come supporting the on the pitch success.

The 2009–10 season saw the squad decimated by injuries, with no fewer than 15 unavailable players at one stage from a squad of 32. Despite this, and playing nine games in 27 days (of which they won eight) the Knights managed the semi-final of the British and Irish Cup and a promotion play-off finish. The result of the season being the defeat of Bristol at Castle Park, who like Leeds Carnegie before them underestimated the Knights as home.

The 2010–11 and 2011–12 seasons were very average seasons with the Knights managing mid table status and avoiding the relegation playoffs with a reduction in playing budget meaning a shuffling of the pack which saw several long serving players move on to other clubs. The captures of the likes of Tristan Roberts and Paul Devlin hinted at a more creative side than the powerhouse forward game Doncaster are known for traditionally.

The 2012–13 season saw the Knights have a disappointing season with only three wins and a draw out of twenty two league matches and two wins from six in the British and Irish Cup competition which resulted in relegation (for the first time in Doncaster history) back to National League 1. One of the few highlights being a win over local rivals Leeds Carnegie 23–17 in February 2013.

For the 2013–14 season DOR Clive Griffiths signed a variety of new and returning players including Mat Clark, Paul Jarvis, Bevon Armitage, Roberto Santamaria and Bruno Bravo who would all feature as regulars in the coming season. The season looked to begin badly for the Knights as they were once again plagued by injuries particularly in the forwards but still with an intention to be the first team to secure promotion back to the Championship at the first time of asking. The Knights started strongly recording seven straight wins before losing away to Henley Hawks 11–10 [1] in a close fought game. The Knights campaign continued strongly at home although with away losses to Blaydon and Wharfedale they could not fully pull away from the following pack. With further signings during the year, such as former British Lion Darren Morris,[2] London Irish back row Danny Kenny,[3] Argentinian-Italian prop Santiago Sodini[4] and the return of former Knight Richard List from RC Narbonne[5] to bolster the injury prone team, the Knights continued to be the team to beat having been top of the table for the majority of the season.

In late March 2014 with only four games left to play of the season there were only two teams (Rosslyn Park & the Knights) left with the potential to win the league and with them due to meet on 29 March many believed that this could be the most important match of the season. The game resulted in a win for Rosslyn Park[6] and meant the Knights would need to win all three of their remaining matches to guarantee promotion. With a win over Wharfedale (57–17) at home to secure a 100% home win record for the season followed by away wins against Coventry (17–18) & Blackheath (20–38) the Knights secured promotion back to the Championship despite having lost one more game than Rosslyn Park (having achieved more bonus points to be three points clear).

During the 2013–14 season Tyson Lewis was the top try scorer for National League 1 with 22 tries and his teammate Mat Clark was equal second on 20 tries. Tyson also achieved Guinness World Record fame for "The fastest time to score a try in a rugby union match".[7] The try was scored direct from the opening kick off in 7.24 seconds (Doncaster Knights vs Old Albanians at Wollam Playing Fields, St Albans, UK, on 23 November 2013).

Honours

Doncaster Knights

[8]

Doncaster Phoenix (amateur side)

Current standings

2023–24 RFU Championship table
PosTeamPldWDLPFPAPDTBLBPts
1Ealing Trailfinders (C)201604823417+40616282
2Cornish Pirates201514589408+18112175
3Coventry201406698428+27015273
4Bedford Blues201208590563+2713465
5Hartpury University201109627551+7611459
6Doncaster Knights201118509529−209257
7Ampthill2010010573607−3414256
8Nottingham208012487615−12813247
9London Scottish204115510614−10410735
10Caldy205114415675−2608131
11Cambridge202018382796−4147520
Updated to match(es) played on 25 May 2024. Source: "The Championship". 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. 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
There is no relegation this season
(C) Champions (ineligible for Promotion play-off)

Current squad

The Doncaster Knights squad for the 2023–24 season.[9][a][b][c]

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

PlayerPositionUnion
Tom DoughtyHooker England
Harri Morris [a]Hooker Scotland
George RobertsHooker Wales
Corrie BarrettProp England
Harrison CourtneyProp New Zealand
Conor DavidsonProp Australia
Andrew FosterProp England
Lewis ThiedeProp England
Charlie BeckettLock England
Ehize EhizodeLock England
Evan MinternLock Ireland
Ben MurphyLock Wales
Fyn BrownBack row England
Jack DigbyBack row Australia
Adam HopkinsonBack row England
Seb Nagle-TaylorBack row England
Archie SmeatonBack row Scotland
Rhys TaitBack row Scotland
Harry WilsonBack row England
PlayerPositionUnion
Alex DollyScrum-half Australia
Ollie FoxScrum-half England
Will MetcalfeScrum-half England
Russell BennettFly-half England
Sam OlverFly-half England
Tom ParkinFly-half England
Joe Bedlow [b]Centre England
Connor EdwardsCentre Wales
Joe MargettsCentre England
Harry DaveyWing England
Maliq HoldenWing England
Jack MetcalfWing England
Vereimi Qorowale [c]Wing Fiji
AJ CantFullback England
Billy McBrydeFullback Wales
George SimpsonFullback England

Past performance

YearTierDivisionPWDLPFPAPDTBLBPtsNotes
2022-232English Championship2210012565583-189352Finished 6th
2021-222English Championship20*17035243222029077Finished 2nd
2020-212English Championship10*802236225114036Finished 3rd
2019-202English Championship15*609268351-833128Finished 10th on 36.84pts*
2018-192English Championship228014546617-716442Finished 10th
2017-182English Championship229112582615-3313657Finished 7th
2016–172English Championship20*1208514424909158Finished 4th
2015–162English Championship22152558847011810579Finished 2nd
2014–152English Championship228113429481−523643Finished 9th
2013–143National League 1302505943487456184122Promoted to Championship as champions
2012–132English Championship223118364592−2282723Relegated to National League 1
2011–122English Championship229211467524−577350
2010–112English Championship229013572576−47851
2009–102English Championship221001239438682648
2008–092National 1302127895571324143105
2007-082National 130210979655124512298
2006-072National 13022178554743811641101st Season as Doncaster Knights
2005-062National 12610115555699−1445552
2004-053National 2262312818379439111106Promoted to National 1 as champions
2003–043National 226170969248720534
2002–033National 226140126305517928
2001–024National 3 North262501107435771750Promoted to National 2 as champions
2000–014National 3 North23161658436422033
1999–20004National 2 North261221265653911726
1998–995North 122181355021433637Promoted to National 2 North as champions
1997–985North 122172348928520436
1996–976North 222220069025943144Promoted to North 1 as champions
1995–966North 2124261831681510
1994–956North 212705136155−1914
1993–947North East 11211012327016222Promoted to North 2
1992–938North East 21211012943925522Promoted to North East 1
1991–92
1990–91
1989–90
1988–89
1987–8810Yorkshire 2
  • 2016-17 - Season shortened to 20 games due to London Welsh going into liquidation and being removed from the league by the RFU.
  • 2019-20 - Season cut short due to Covid pandemic and final positions were determined by a best playing record formulae. Doncaster were 9th on 28pts when season was suspended but finished 10th on 36.84pts after formula was applied and a 5pt deduction imposed for use of an unregistered agent.
  • 2020-21 - Season was truncated due to ongoing pandemic and teams only played each other once either home or away. London Scottish declined to participate due to pandemic costs so only 11 teams took part.
  • 2021-22 - Due to Saracens being promoted but no team being relegated from the Premiership the league consisted of 11 teams.

References

External links

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