Aberdare RFC
Full name | Aberdare Rugby Football Club | |
---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | The Snakes | |
Founded | 1890 | |
Location | Aberdare, Wales | |
Ground(s) | Ynys Stadium (Capacity: 500) | |
President | P.M. Walters | |
Coach(es) | Luke Thomas & Jamie Yates | |
Captain(s) | Daniel William Lewis | |
League(s) | WRU Division Three East Central A (League Champions) | |
2015/16 | 1st[1] | |
| ||
Official website | ||
aberdarerfc |
Aberdare Rugby Football Club are a Welsh rugby union club based in the town Aberdare in South Wales. Aberdare RFC plays in the Welsh Rugby Union Division Three South East league and is a feeder club for the Cardiff Blues.[2]
Club history
Aberdare RFC began as Aberaman Rugby Football Club, a team formed in 1890, though the earliest written conformation of their existence is from a match in 1895 against a team from Ferndale. In the early 1900s the team joined the Glamorgan league, playing other coal mining towns such as Maesteg, Treorchy and Treherbert.
In 1907 Aberdare were involved in an early rugby scandal linked to professionalism. Local collier Dai 'Tarw' Jones was one of Aberdare's star players and captained the club from 1905 to 1907. For his services to the club he was paid 10 shillings a week along with meal costs and train fares. When the club cut the wage to 5 shillings, Jones switched allegiance to Treherbert, commuting from his home town of Aberdare on match days. Aberdare's ex-secretary E. Rees in 1907 made several allegations in the press that broke multiple union rules. Not only did he mention the wages but also stated that leading teams had been paid to visit the town and stated Aberdare was involved in match fixing. During the 1904/05 season, Aberdare won the Glamorgan League by beating Treorchy in the last match. Rees claimed that Treorchy had agreed to lose the game for £15.[3]
The resulting investigation from the WRU, at the time still called the Welsh Football Union, spread far further than the two clubs mentioned by Rees. The union saw 6 players temporarily suspended, including Welsh international Fred Scrine, Merthyr escaped with a warning but Treorchy and Aberdare saw the permanent suspension of their entire committees. The union also permanently suspended eight players, including Jones who switched to rugby league.[3] The events of the investigation led to bad feeling in the rugby community of Aberdare, and was a major factor in Aberdare founding Aberdare RLFC, one of the first professional rugby league clubs and member of the Welsh League.[4]
During the 2015/2016 season Aberdare RFC were crowned champions of Welsh Rugby Union's Division 3 East Central A. Aberdare RFC were confirmed champions on the 27th April 2016 with a 47-30 victory over Cardiff based side Fairwater RFC with two games to spare. This was notably Aberdare's most successful season since the clubs formation in 1890, being the only side in the 125-year history to be crowned champions of their respective league. Fittingly Aberdare RFC celebrate becoming league champions on their 125th Anniversary year. This side, that was led by Captain Daniel William Lewis was well known for the exciting brand of running rugby they brought to the table scoring over 100 tries during the season and notching up over 700 points in the "for" column, 200 points more than their closest competitors. There was only one recorded loss in the league during the campaign and this reflected in the teams excellent defensive display which holds an impressive record of being undefeated at the Ynys Stadium since the 21st of February 2015.
Notable former players
- Will Hopkins (1 cap)
- Dai 'Tarw' Jones (13 caps)
- Keith Rowlands (5 caps)
- Rhys Shellard
- Owen Williams (4 caps)
- Dai Young (51 caps)
References
- ↑ WRU official site
- ↑ BBC News (2004-07-08). "Wales' regional rugby map". BBC. Retrieved 2008-05-22.
- 1 2 Fields of Praise, The Official History of the Welsh Rugby Union 1881-1981, David Smith, Gareth Williams (1980) pg 180 ISBN 0-7083-0766-3
- ↑ Lush, Peter; Farrar, Dave (1998). Tries in the Valley: A History of Rugby League in Wales. London: London League Publications. p. 9. ISBN 0-9526064-3-7.