Seven Points Sparkling Wine

Score Seven Points for Canterbury

Seven Points Sparkling WineProduced just a drop kick away from the Marine Travel Ground, using the finest Kent-grown grapes, ‘Seven Points’ has been created to be our club’s official sparkling wine. A match-winning example of a quality Kentish sparkling wine to celebrate big moments on and off the field.

Seven Points was lovingly made by Defined Wine, near Bridge, using Chardonnay grapes from Plumford Farm near Faversham. Made using the same high-quality technique as used in Champagne (where Nick Lane, their Head Winemaker when not watching his son play at Canterbury Rugby Club, previously worked for Dom Perignon), the grapes were hand-picked in October 2021 and then pressed gently in whole bunches, to slowly release their juice. Following fermentation and filtration, the wine was bottled in January 2022. A yeast culture was prepared prior to bottling and then mixed into the wine, so that a secondary fermentation happened in bottle, giving the wine its sparkle. Once this was complete, the yeast cells would have broken down to gently release greater flavour to the wine, which was then riddled and ‘disgorged’ to eject the yeast, and a cork and wire cage inserted.

The result is a delicious wine that exhibits fresh citrus, green apple, and a hint of crusty French bread. This is a true reflection of the local quality of the chalk – lying under the pitches that rugby club members are more used to seeing.

Available for purchase and collection from Canterbury Rugby Club.

£30 per bottle – Buy 6 get one free
£50 per Magnum

Each bottle is individually hand-numbered. Order yours now from  –

kirsty@cantrugby.co.uk

Saracens WR5 London development Tournament

As rugby people the names of Saracens and Harlequins are well known. To watch the rugby union teams play is normally full on, fast, furious and inspiring. Now imagine taking the same team names by a small, relatively new wheelchair team – that was Hellfire’s task on Saturday 25th November 2023, a date that will be ingrained into their memory for a very long time.

On a cold wintry feeling morning the Hellfire squad gathered at Saracan’s high school to compete against Brighton Buccaneers, Crawley Jet’s, Harlequins Jesters and our hosts. Just seven Hellfire players, a few parents and carers and me as Hellfire Chairman, sat in our designated changing room sharing a mixture of excitement and a small amount of fear.  But, head coach, Steve Brown, fired everyone up, got the team prepared and ready to show what we can do. 

The first of four games was against our old rivals Brighton Buccaneers. Their coach Omar Foster wished us luck and a nervous team got the day started. Yes, there were a few errors but we kept up with the fast pace that Brighton always brings but we couldn’t secure the win and the final score was Brighton 19 – Canterbury 13.

Back in the changing room and every bit of fear was gone. It was a highly charged, if slightly tired, Hellfire squad. Next game Harlequin Jesters!

Harlequins had a large squad, 11 in total, most of whom had been playing for a while in other teams. They are a new team but they have attracted experienced players and have a good coaching team. Their pace, skill and teamwork was well practiced and they certainly had a few moves that we will be rehearsing in the near future. 

As many Hellfire followers will know our squad is relatively green, but we have our own, not so secret weapon in the form of former Team GB captain Steve Brown. Steve tried every trick in the book, and many that have never been in any play book, which in turn earned him a few trips to the sin bin for his creativity. 

One positive that deserves a mention is that picker Louisa Nerssessian, another of our relatively new players, had, what was described as an Eureka moment, when things learnt during training and doing repetitive drills suddenly clicked, leading to her first ever try in Wheelchair Rugby. Both Steve Brown and I had a proud coaches feeling that makes all the hours put in worthwhile and we got to play against a true household name!

We kept it close in the first half but a combination of fatigue and lack of playing experience lead to a final score of Harlequins 24 – Canterbury 12 but a few new moves we added to our skill set and we were certainly much more of a team at the end of the game than at the beginning. 

During the lunch break our changing room was a buzz of “did you see me do this” and “I think I can do that” as well as quite a few good humour digs at our Head Coach for spending so much time in the sin bin. All things that just about every rugby team who have ever existed do when they are a bonded close team. A few bumps and bruises were showed off with pride and the eagerness to get more was brilliant to witness. 

The toughest game was number three against a well drilled, undefeated and highly experienced Crawley Jet’s. Trevor Garson’s team knew what they were doing, had key players in the right place at the right time, each and every time and raced away to a 21-6 win. It may have been the third loss of the day for Hellfire but every single player saw moves that inspired, learned new ways of looking at how to play and saw our head coach return to the sin bin. 

The fourth and final game of the day was entered into with the same positive excitement as the first was. 

Canterbury playing Saracens, I will let those words hang in the air for a moment. 

I am betting every adult player in Canterbury would dream of wearing a Canterbury shirt and play against Saracen’s. As an able bodied person even I wished I had a qualified disability to take part in what we believe is the first time any Canterbury adult side has taken on the great name of Saracen’s. OK, OK, I admit I am a Saracen’s fan. I was way more nervous than any Hellfire player showed. Smiles and a let’s do this attitude on every face. 

Just six Canterbury players took on a fourteen strong Saracen’s squad. Again, we almost had them in the first half. Nothing negative could be said about any single Hellfire player, they truly gave it everything they had. They worked as a team. They pushed as hard as I have ever seen them push. They past the ball with the best precision they have all day. They marked their opponents just like they were asked. They just couldn’t get that elusive win and the final score Canterbury 12 – Saracens 17. The game felt so much closer than the final score would lead you to believe. 

We were the underdogs. We were the smallest team. BUT, everyone commented on how we got on with the job, how much our team are coming on, how quick Bethany Ferne is and how much time our head coach spent in the sin bin. We will continue to grow and the more games we have where we are pushed the better we will become. 

Canterbury Hellfire Team Sheet

v Old Albanians

Victory The Hard Way

CANTERBURY 32 OLD ALBANIAN 27

by David Haigh

It has been some time since Canterbury enjoyed the luxury of a four match winning run but this latest success was not achieved without serious alarms. When Frank Morgan’s try three minutes into the second half opened up a nineteen point lead they appeared to be cruising at a safe height. By the final whistle, however, the city side were clinging on to their seat belts after a revived Albanians sent them into a nosedive. They survived, despite two yellow cards and a heavy penalty count, to take a full five points and stay sixth in the National 2 East table. The visitors were first on the scoreboard as wing Hugo Watson nipped through a large hole for a try converted by Sam Jones. When Canterbury got themselves together they levelled matters with Number Eight Tyler Oliver’s burst off the back of a scrum setting up a try for Eoin O’Donoghue and converted by Frank Reynolds as he compensated for an earlier penalty miss which hit a post. They fell behind again to a Jones penalty goal but that was the last time Albanians held the lead as Canterbury took command of the first half and exploited a yellow card for Albanian lock Ashley Illston with two converted tries. An athletic run from Jesse De Vries won vital territory before flanker Cam Murray burrowed over and as the city side continued to apply pressure Tom Best stepped neatly through for the third try. At 24-10 most sides would have been happy and even more delighted to get the bonus point touchdown so soon after the break. It was a good score, too, from Morgan as he powered down the left flank and although Reynolds was off target the chill November wind was blowing Canterbury’s way. Albanians, however, refused to be left out in the cold. As the city side frequently incurred the referees displeasure and surrendered territory the visitors found fresh energy and resolve and scored two tries in the space of six minutes through forwards Kemp Price and Ben Alexander, both topped up by Jones. With O’Donoghue and Oliver both serving time in the sin bin Canterbury had to find ways to hold on. A welcome Reynolds penalty goal edged them eight points ahead but when Jones replied late on and Albanians surged forward in a final assault there was tension all over the pitch. A rare penalty award to Canterbury in the last seconds finally brought them huge relief.

Canterbury: W.Waddngton, A.Moss (repl G.Jones), F.Morgan, T.Best, A.Orris, F.Reynolds, T.Williams(repl B.Cooper), C.Macmillan (rep E.Lusher), N.Morris, W.McColl (repl D.Herriott), J.Stephens, J.De Vries, C.Murray, E.O’Donoghue (repl S.Rogers), T.Oliver

View match photos

v Old Albanian - 25 Nov 2023

Images may be subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton
V Old Albanian

Feeling The Energy

CANTERBURY V OLD ALBANIAN

Our focus all last week was to make sure that we prepared ourselves mentally to travel to Guernsey to perform at our best. We have been continually growing our understanding of what our best performances are built on, and the way we played last Saturday showed how far we have come. It starts with our physicality in the first two minutes, from all 15 players, and from that foundation we can build the rest of our game. Frank Reynolds deserves a mention for a 24 point haul which has put him as the highest points scorer in the league. This is a fitting reward for his contribution over the first ten games.

We are not the finished article but the increased energy the players have brought over the last three weeks has shown what this group is capable of. There are no weak teams in this league and if we step off the gas we are going to be disappointed, and that is not something we want to go back to. As we return home to the Marine Travel Ground after two long trips on the road, we are looking forward to showing our amazing supporters how much it means for us to be back.

The unstoppable Pilgrims did the business again beating second place Crowborough by a 30 point margin opening a nine point gap over second place Dartfordians. The team has a well earned break this weekend before they launch into the final three games before Christmas as they look to continue their perfect start to the season.

Matt Corker, Head Coach

Frank R v Guernsey

Frank Pulls The Strings

GUERNSEY 10 CANTERBURY 34

by Andy Rogers

It’s often said there is no such thing as a free lunch and so it turned out on this trip to Guernsey which is always a massive challenge, made harder still by the wind and rain battering the island on Saturday. Facing the worst of the conditions in the first period Canterbury played controlled rugby against bullish opposition with the back row and influential No 8 Tyler Oliver always in the thick of things. So it was against the run of play when after 20 minutes Canterbury were penalised for offside at the breakdown and from the resulting line out Guernsey second row Lewis Hillier was driven over.
That early momentum seemed to be drifting away further when Cameron Murray was singled out for ten minutes in the sin bin after some mild argy bargy with the Guernsey forwards. However, these setbacks appeared to galvanize a Canterbury side who continued to play the conditions with control, astute kicking and no little skill.
On thirty minutes and down to 14 players they drew level. It was the unlikely figure of fly half Frank Reynolds who emerged from the bottom of a driving maul to claim the touch down. When he converted his own score it was the start of a virtuoso performance from the Number Ten who went on to net two tries, two penalties and four conversions for a personal haul of 24 points. Reynolds then added a penalty goal before half time leaving Canterbury with a slender five point lead but still with a serious second half job to do.
With Reynolds pulling the strings it turned out to be a lead they would not surrender, but any suggestion that this was a one man performance would be way off the mark.
With fifteen second half minutes played prop Cam Macmillan drove over for the side’s second try and five minutes later lock Dave Irvine was rewarded for an afternoons hard graft by adding another to take the score to 27-5
Guernsey were not finished though. Spurred on by a noisy crowd they continued to take the game to the visitors and with 10 minutes remaining their tricky fly half Owen Thomas broke the cover to put centre Ciaran McGann over for a try which went unconverted.
It proved to be much too little too late for the home side leaving the final word to man of the match Reynolds. Playing with confidence, Canterbury went looking for a bonus point try. Wingers Alfie Orris and Garry Jones both went close after some lovely interplay with Will Waddington before forward pressure saw replacement scrum half Ben Cooper gather a loose ball to set up Reynolds who dummied and outpaced the cover to race under the posts.
A fitting end to a fine individual performance but, more importantly, an impressive display from a Canterbury squad who played the difficult conditions with a level of skill and control which augurs well for the testing run of league games to come.

Canterbury: W.Waddington, G.Jones, F.Morgan, T.Best, A.Orris, F.Reynolds, T.Williams, C.Macmillan, N.Morris, W.McColl, D.Irvine, S.Kerry, J.Stephens, C.Murray, T.Oliver. Replacements: E.O.Donoghue, E,Lusher, B.Cooper, A.Moss, S.Rogers

View match photos

v Guernsey - 18 Nov 2023

Images may be subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton
MATCH-REPORT-v-CROWBOROUGH

Pilgrims Purple Patch

CANTERBURY PILGRIMS 43 CROWBOROUGH 10

by David Haigh

Billed as the Match of the Day between the only two unbeaten sides in Counties 1 Kent it ended in a decisive victory for league leaders Pilgrims. A Crowborough side which arrived at Merton Lane with an impressive winning run of 20 games, stretching back to last season, dominated the first quarter but then had no answer to Canterbury’s pace and their power in the loose. In a purple patch, fifteen minutes either side of half time, they scored four tries and seldom gave the visitors another look-in. It had been a test of Pilgrims defence until the 27th minute when they finally got their hands on the ball from a clearance kick. Wing Sonny Trew-Neville made an elusive run, full back Gus Lister finished off with the try and Tom McMann converted from wide out. That wiped out the seven points Crowborough had in the bank, from a fine individual try and conversion by their fly half, and before half time Pilgrims had scored two more. The backs produced the break and accurate handling for Jack Weaver to touch down and when the visitors collapsed a maul the penalty cost them a lineout and a pick and go try for Adrian Geddes. McMann converted both to open a fourteen point gap and two minutes after the break Pilgrims stamped their authority on the game even further. Another penalty led to a close range try from skipper Alex Evans and Crowborough were stranded. The one area they came to control was the set scrums but a tolerant referee did not punish Pilgrims heavily and it only cost them a penalty goal. In the final quarter it was all Canterbury with tries from prop Freddy Holland-Oliver, converted by McMann, great creative work by the backs for Weaver’s second and, in the closing minute, a joyful finish from lock Jesse De Vies rewarded his all round effort. .

Pilgrims: G.Lister, J.Weaver, T.Halliday, B.Law, S.Trew-Neville. T.McMann, P.Farrance. A.Malik, B.Dunkerley, F.Holland-Oliver, L.Webber, J.De Vries, J.Dengate, T.Mackenzie, A.Evans. Replacements: A.Gedddes, D.Gill, H.Valldares

MATCH-REPORT-ZINGARI-V-LEIGH

A game of endurance then dominance

Canterbury 21 – 5 Leigh

The zingari had to endure the hardest opening half of the season so far. Leigh came at them from the start setting up camp just outside the Zingari twenty-two with a move from the training pitch, and quick ball from a scrum created the overlap on the blind side to go over in the corner. With the opening score under their belt leigh’s forwards pressed hard dominating at the set piece, and quite a lot of possession in the loose. However, as the half-progressed the Zingari’s resistance developed, and by halftime they had taken the early sting out of Leigh’s attack. The second half saw a complete change from the start, with the city sides forwards driving deep into Leigh’s territory for Jack Waite to finish off with a try converted by Finn McCabe. Leigh’s forwards rallied but as the half progressed and with some aggressive tackling Leigh found themselves confined more into their half of the pitch. As the game entered the last quarter the city side’s forwards started to gain quality possession feeding their backs who started to make inroads, first to profit was Richard Collins breaking through to touch down out wide, converted by Simon Crossley. This seemed to inspire the backs who repeatedly breeched the gain line keeping Leigh on the back foot. The game got a little fractious at this point but the Zingari forwards stuck to their task again releasing their backs, this time it was Geoge Thomas with a tackle breaking run who sliced through to touch down out wide, leaving Simon Crossley with the difficult conversion hitting the crossbar on the way over to close out the match.

Tries
George Thomas 1
Richard Collins 1
Jack Waite 1

Conversions
Simon Crossley 2
Fin Mc Cabe 1

V Crowborough

TOP TABLE CLASH

PILGRIMS v CROWBOROUGH
The clash of the only two unbeaten sides in Counties 1 Kent make Saturday a special day at the Marine Travel Ground. Pilgrims with eight wins from eight, take on second placed Crowborough with a 2.30pm kick-off. Like the first team, the Pilgrims scored fifty points on the road last week but this game will present a completely different challenge. With Elliot Lusher called up for the Guernsey trip, there is a change in the front row but skipper Alex Evans still has the core of the squad that performed so well at Charlton Park..We are going for our third week of double wins as a squad and we know that both our teams will need to be at their best on all fronts.

Matt Corker, Head Coach

Vs Guernsey

CHANNEL ISLAND CHALLENGE

GUERNSEY V CANTERBURY

Fifty points on the road, and five added to our league tally is exactly what we wanted from last Saturday. Long journeys and performing at your best is a mental challenge that we are beginning to get to grips with. This will be tested again on Saturday as we get on a plane to play Guernsey. There are still things we are working hard to improve, as there always will be, but I can really see growth in our understanding of what are the foundations of our best performance. The old cliché of the top two inches wins you games rings true for us at this point in our journey, and the players know the importance of mental preparation leading up to kick off. And can the Pilgrims keep up their fine unbeaten record in their home game with Crowborough? We are going for our third week of double wins as a squad and we know that we are going to have to be at our best on all fronts to keep on a roll.

Matt Corker, Head Coach