Mindray Defibrillator

CLUB HITS DEFIBRILLATOR TARGET

A £30,000 fund raising initiative by the club will see all its teams and age groups provided with life saving defibrillator equipment. The fund raising target was passed in May and will pay for 24 defibrillators from London Hearts, the UK’s leading defibrillator charity. After hearing about a tragedy in the local community the club set about raising money including the auction of 15 Canterbury Bears dressed in club shirts. The defibrillators are a vital part of treatment of people suffering cardiac arrest. With the effective and speedy delivery of treatment the chances of survival can be raised to 70%, but this requires CPR and the use of a defibrillator. Survival chances decrease 10% every minute after a cardiac arrest, so the faster help can be given the better the outcome, meaning that having over 20 defibrillators at the club could make a real impact on people’s lives in the wider community. The successful fundraising also secured the money for enough batteries and extras to completely replenish their defibrillators in three years time.

In addition, and thanks to a generous donation from Dave Thompson, Managing Director of principal sponsor Marine Travel, 260 club members in the vulnerable category (aged 14-35) will be offered a free heart scan in November this year. The scan usually costs the individual £50 and is key to spotting the signs of heart disease.

Chairman Giles Hilton said: “I am proud of the efforts of our club in raising this incredible amount of money. Having this many defibrillators at the club and therefore in the community could make all the difference to someone, and that makes it all worth it.”

The club is no stranger to raising money, having contributed over £100,000 to good causes, from the Ukrainian appeal to Cancer Research, in the last year alone.

NEW LEAGUE STRUCTURES ANNOUNCED

The new league structure for National 2 clubs in the 2022/23 season has been released with Canterbury placed in the 14-team National 2 East. Newcomers to this level will be Dorking, North Walsham and Sevenoaks. Kent clubs Blackheath and Tonbridge Juddians, both relegated from Division One last season, are also in the mix. The full list of clubs is Barnes, Blackheath, Bury St Edmunds, Canterbury, Dorking, Guernsey Raiders, Henley, North Walsham, Old Albanian, Rochford Hundred, Sevenoaks, Tonbridge Juddians, Westcliff, Worthing Raiders.

Canterbury Pilgrims will compete in a new Counties 2 Kent competition made up of nine first teams together with the Pilgrims, Westcombe Park 2nd and Sevenoaks 2nd
Counties 2 Kent: Canterbury Pilgrims, Dover, Gillingham Anchorians, Hastings & Bexhill, Maidstone, Old Dunstonians, Old Williamsonians, Park House, Sevenoaks 2, Southwark Lancers, Vigo, Westcombe Park 2.

Welcoming the new structures Head Coach Matt Corker said: “I am excited by the new leagues that our 1st XV and Pilgrims will be entering and feel that it is an extremely positive move for our players. The Pilgrims entry into Counties 2 Kent is a big step forward in our ability as a club to help our players develop and prepare them for national league rugby. The new National 2 East is full of great teams and offers us reduced travel times and more rest weekends which is a great help to players rugby and life balance. It will add a real excitement to pre-season, and I can’t wait for the first game.

European Touch Championships 2022

Canterbury players receive England call up for the European Touch Championships 2022

10 England teams have been named for this Summer’s European Touch Championships in Nottingham. England has entered a team into every category in a bid to retain the Overall, Opens and Seniors crown won in 2o18, the last time the European Championships were staged.

37 clubs from as far as Exeter, Wigan, and North Tyneside had players selected, and we are proud that some of our current players and alumni have been called up to represent England. Congratulations to them all and we wish them the best of luck in the competition that taps off on August 1st this year.

England Juniors U18 Girls

  • Iris Nasir
  • Abigail Pritchard
  • Alice Summers

England Womens Open Team

  • Danni Gregory
  • Lydia Ticehurst
  • Erin Payten (Non-traveling reserve)

England Mens Open Team final training squad

  • Vaughan Meredith
  • Max Howard – Canterbury Touch Alumni

England Mixed Open Team

  • Daniel Mayall –  Canterbury Touch Alumni
  • Eliot Nye (Non-traveling reserve)
  • Alice Summers (Non-traveling reserve)

England Mens 50’s Team

  • Spencer Nys
  • Adrian Riggs

“This has been a lengthy but rewarding process,” commented High-Performance Director, Ben Powell, “and by the time we arrive at tap off for ETC22 on August 1st, it will have been over 1,400 days since the last European Championships.

“We have assembled excellent squads through a process that may be the most competitive to date for England Touch. We are really looking forward to the opportunity to compete at ETC22 and feel all of our squads have a great chance to challenge for top honours.

“I would like to thank everyone who has helped us get to this point – the High-Performance Panel, our excellent coaching team, our medical team, strength, and conditioning, and most importantly our dedicated and talented athletes.”

We congratulate them all and will cheer them on through the competition!

To find out more and follow the competition, go to the European Federation of Touch website – http://www.toucheurope.org/etc/

FRANK BOOTS KENT TO VICTORY

Canterbury fly half Frank Reynolds contributed nineteen points to Kent’s 44-43 win over Hampshire in the first round of the County Championship.

He was one of five of the club’s players to appear in the Division One game at Havant with debutants Max Halliday, Tom Williams and Will McColl joining Royce Cadman in the Kent squad.

Frank’s points all came from the boot with five conversions and three penalty goals, the last of which sealed victory three minutes from the end.

Kent were scheduled to meet Surrey in their second game on May 21st only to learn that Surrey have withdrawn from the competition. Depending on other results the county side could still appear in the Twickenham final on June 4th.

Tom Williams

Match report – End of Season Spectacular, Canterbury Mens 1st XV v Bury St Edmunds

END OF SEASON SPECTACULAR

CANTERBURY 31 BURY ST EDMUNDS 34

by David Haigh

Canterbury’s season may have ended as it began with a narrow loss to Bury, this time to Charlie Reed’s last minute penalty goal, but this was still a game to savour. The biggest crowd of the season were treated to a feast of ten tries, some of them spectacular, in a cracking contest that had none of that end of term feel about it. Victory was important for Bury as it gave them a top six finish in National 2 South and after building a fourteen point lead in the second half their job seemed almost done. But Canterbury, who had lost their earlier intensity, rediscovered it to dominate the final fifteen minutes and draw level with two exhilarating tries. To then concede that late penalty was a frustrating own goal leaving them with two league points instead of three from the draw their efforts probably deserved. The game was alive from the off with Canterbury taking an early lead through a catch and drive try from Billy Young and Bury hitting back quickly when Ruraidh Williams’ break made a try for Matt Bursey. From then on it was nip and tuck until half time. Lovely foot work from Reed set up the first of Bury wing Ross Taylor’s three touchdowns, Alex Evans rewarded more close range work by the city pack and hooker Fin McCartney claimed Bury’s third try to edge his side ahead again. Canterbury clawed it back in the closing minute of the half, Young again finishing an organised driving maul. Reed’s two conversions against one by Will Hilton saw Bury two points in front at the break and everything nicely poised. However, one of Canterbury’s regular failings has been a drop in concentration in the third quarter and here it surfaced again. Bury’s fast moving wide game exposed them and Taylor completed his hat trick in the space three minutes, the first following a fine break by scrum half Chris Bolton and then capitalising on work by fellow wing Ciarian Leeson. Reed converted both tries and Canterbury had all the work to do. Inspiration for the fight back came from replacement scrum half Tom Williams who spotted space on the blind side and outpaced the Bury defence in a searing 70 metre run. Hilton converted and was left a much easier kick when clever footwork by fly half Frank Reynolds took him over between the posts to bring everything level and ten minutes remaining on the clock. Canterbury seemed to have the momentum but paid the penalty for hanging on to the ball at a ruck and Reed cooly slotted the winner with the last kick of a brilliant match.

Canterbury: W.Hilton, G.Hilton, F.Morgan (repl D.Heads), T. F.Reynolds, B.Cooper (repl T.Williams), A.Cooper, B.Young, E.Lusher (repl D.Herriott), J.De Vries (repl R.Cadman), J.Stephens, A.Evans (repl S.Churchyard), T.King, T.Oliver

View match photos

v Bury St Edmunds - 30 April 2022

Images may be subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton