Clifton RFC vs CRFC

Match report – Clifton RFC vs Canterbury 1st XV

CLIFTON 22pts  CANTERBURY 19pts

Canterbury might well have fancied their chances of pulling off a surprise victory on a ground where they have seldom tasted success after trailing by only seven points at the interval. That didn’t look likely in the early stages when, after only three minutes, Clifton’s influential Number Eight, Brad Talbot, drove over from close range and a Luke Cozens conversion gave then the ideal start. But Canterbury quickly regathered themselves, built phases, and responded with a smartly taken try from Frank Reynolds after good work from half back partner Ben Cooper. At this stage, it was Clifton who were clearly happier to play the wide channels despite the biting northerly wind, and with fly half Cozens expertly pulling the strings they always looked dangerous. They struck again after a promising run from Canterbury centre Frank Morgan and the ball was stolen. Full back Alex Forrester gathered to run from deep in his own half and put winger Finlay Sharp over. Worse was to follow as Canterbury threatened again.  Another good line break from Morgan looked to have created a try scoring opportunity but when the move broke down it was Forrester who again broke upfield. After some excellent interplay winger Bentley Halpin crossed and Cozens converted. With Clifton still playing the conditions better it was to Canterbury’s credit that they stuck to their task. With half time fast approaching they got their reward. A textbook line out catch and drive saw winger Dwayne Corcoran run a lovely line and Kyan Braithwaite added the extras. Despite the best efforts of both sides the second period was to become a catalogue of missed chances and handling errors, not aided by the deteriorating conditions. The city side were forced to defend for long periods as Clifton’s forward pressure grew but all they conceded was a penalty goal which left them ten points behind. With only ten minutes to go, they were still to have their moments – a powerful break from skipper Jamie Stephens put flanker Alex Evans into space but the overlap was missed and the opportunity lost. Evans was to make amends two minutes later when driving over to score from close range. Braithwaite again converted and Canterbury went in search of the score they needed.  It proved to be one task too many.

Canterbury: A.Moss, G.Hilton, F.Morgan, K.Braithwaite, D.Corcoran, F.Reynolds, B.Cooper, B.Young, T.King, D.Herriott, S.Churchyard, J.Stephens, A.Evans, S.Rogers, T.Oliver.
Replacements: A.Coope, R.Cadman, T.Best, T.Williams, W.McColl,

by Andy Rogers

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v Clifton - 27 Nov 2021

Images may be subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton
CRFC vs Redruth

Match Report – Canterbury 1st XV vs Redruth RFC

CANTERBURY 22pts REDRUTH 26pts

League leaders Redruth kept up their winning ways but not before they had been pushed all the way by a Canterbury side who earned a deserved bonus point with the last play of a rousing game.  The obstacles the city had to overcome before the match would have daunted most sides, but they threw themselves into the battle with spirit and enterprise.  Covid and injury troubles, with two of the squad failing fitness tests in the warm up, could have derailed them. Instead, an all-action contest might have gone either way until the Redruth pack found a measure of control in the final quarter.   Canterbury made the early running, attacking the wide channels, looking for the telling offload, and keeping Redruth’s defence busy.  They were unlucky to come away with only a ninth-minute try from Frank Morgan after prop Billy Young made a decisive line break.  An unkind bounce and a last-minute interception frustrated them and the visiting forwards sent out a warning as hooker Richard Brown was driven over for a try converted by Fraser Honey.  There was more trouble as the city side failed to claim the restart and Redruth used possession smartly to set up a second score. Conor Gilbert made the touchdowh and Honey converted.  Canterbury, however, refused to lie down, trusted in their attacking strategy and hit back when Aiden Moss twisted away from the defenders. The try was converted by Kyan Braithwaite but still left his side two points adrift at halftime.  It was his penalty goal that pushed Canterbury back in front eight minutes into the second half and the action, not all of it tidy, never slackened.  The telling scores came as the Redruth scrummagers forced penalties, found field position and showed why they have become difficult to beat.  Tries from scrum half Jack Oulton and replacement forward Richard Kevern, plus Honey’s conversion, gave them breathing space and they resisted a late Canterbury surge until the final minute.  The city side, for whom Braithwaite and wing Dwanye Corcoran were outstanding, hammered away at the line, Honey was shown a yellow card and
Braithwaite found a gap for the try and conversion that won the bonus point.

Canterbury: A.Moss, G.Hilton, F.Morgan, K.Braithwaite, F.Reynolds, B.Cooper (repl T.Williams), B.Young (repl A.Wake-Smith), T.King, A.Cooper, S.Churchyard (repl J.De Vries), J.Stephens, A.Evans, S.Rogers, T.Oliver

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v Redruth
Images subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton
Hinkley vs CRFC

Hinkley game postponed

The first team’s National 2 South fixture against Hinckley has been postponed after a playing member of the Canterbury squad tested positive for Covid 19.   The player received the result of the PCR test shortly before the team was due to leave for Hinckley. Medical advice from the National Club’s Association triggered the postponement as the player had been in contact with other members of the squad at Thursday night’s training session. The game will now be rescheduled for the next available reserve week in February.

Canterbury 1st XV vs Henley Hawks

Match Report – Hawks Make It Blank Day

CANTERBURY 10pts HENLEY HAWKS 19pts

A pointless day for Canterbury after Hawks ran in a late try to seal victory in a game which often failed to rise above the ordinary. Henley deserved their success and might have won more convincingly had they taken all their opportunities but slack work at crucial moments and an obdurate defence denied them. Despite spending the first 20 minutes pinned on the back foot Canterbury eventually found a way out and went ahead through the only try of the first half. Hawks spilled the ball, giving Kyan Braithwaite and Tom Best the chance to combine and send Guy Hilton over. It left Frank Reynolds with a difficult conversion and he shanked his kick badly. It was a score that lifted the city side’s mood but a poor second half saw it wasted as life was made too easy for the visitors. Two minutes after the restart they fell behind as Braithwaite was caught in possession, Henley forced the penalty and Sam Lunnon was driven over from the lineout. Cail Coookland converted and was on target again when the visitors were gifted another bonus. A yellow card for Danny Herriott left the home side a man short and that handicap lead to points. Hawks went for the wide channels, Canterbury ran out of defenders and centre Will Panday strolled over. The score came in the 66th minute but memories of a late revival in Canterbury’s last home game quickly surfaced as they claimed a second try. An attacking lineout went wrong but Henley tapped the ball over their own line and Tyler Oliver swooped to touchdown. Reynolds’ kick went astray but there were to be no second miracles. Another Canterbury error, this time losing the ball in contact, was all Hawks needed and three minutes from the end Panday’s second try denied them the consolation of a losing bonus point.

Canterbury: K. Braithwaite, G.Hilton (repl J.Weaver), F.Morgan, T.Best, T.Williams (repl M.Halliday), F.Reynolds, B.Cooper, A.Cooper (repl W.McColl), T.King, D.Herriott (repl E.Lusher), R.Cadman, J.De Vries (repl A.Evans), J.Stephens, S.Rogers, T.Oliver

David Haigh

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v Henley Hawks

Images subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton
Barnes vs CRFC 1st XV

Match Report – All Square at Barnes

BARNES 20pts CANTERBURY 20pts

It may have ended all square but Canterbury had to find a shovel and dig themselves out of a hole before they claimed two mildly disappointing National 2 South league points. Trailing by eleven after a flat first half, to which Barnes brought energy and pace, they gradually felt their way back into the contest. The pack did the work with two close range scores which took them into a narrow lead and a glimpse of victory. A Barnes penalty goal ten minutes from the end of an error strewn affair made sure that did not happen. The city side had the opportunity to make their mark early in the game but were forced to settle for a couple of Frank Reynolds penalty goals. Josh Hammett kicked one for Barnes and after those early wobbles they took control. With scrum half Josh Davies calling the shots their enterprise and pace on to the ball was rewarded with tries from flanker Alex Farquhar and wing Frank Nickson, both converted by Hammett, and it left the city side with a salvage job on their hands. The transformation after the break was not spectacular but there was a fresh determination and more possession which shaped Canterbury’s game. The pressure built on Barnes and a driving maul, finished off by hooker Tristan King, broke their resistance. Reynolds converted and as the strain once again told on the home defence they collected a yellow card and conceded a second try. Jamie Stephens drove over, Reynolds was on target and the lead was three points. The final stages, like much of the match, were messy with yellow cards on both sides, Canterbury failing to punish Barnes errors and giving away a penalty for obstruction which allowed Hammett to level the scores. To a neutral spectator that might have seemed about right.

Canterbury: K.Braithwaite, G.Hiton (repl D.Heads), F.Morgan, T.Best, T.Williams (repl M .Halliday), F.Reynolds, B.Cooper, , W.McColl (repl A.Cooper), T.King, D.Herriott (repl E.Lusher) J.De Vries (repl R.Cadman), J.Stephens, W.Hunt (repl J.De Vries), S.Rogers, T.Oliver

David Haigh

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v Barnes - 23 Oct 2021

Images subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton
CRFC 1st XV vs Leicester Lions

Match Report – Canterbury 1st XV vs Leicester Lions

CANTERBURY 30pts LEICSTER LIONS 27pts

To say Canterbury left things late would be an understatement as they snatched this victory deep in stoppage time with their fifth try of the afternoon.  A patient build up and outstanding ball retention were rewarded when Frank Reynolds scored under a pile of Lions defenders to give his side a maximum five league points.  It seemed they had missed their chance when, three minutes earlier, Reynolds failed to convert Aiden Moss’s second try which would have earned his side a draw.  But all was forgiven when the fly half put the finishing touches to the last play of the game.  That late surge stunned a Leicester team who were sitting on a seven point lead and looking warm favourites in the closing stages.

After trailing at the break they scored three tries in a see-saw second half and must have thought they had done just enough to earn the win.  That they failed was no criticism because Canterbury found a rhythm and determination that would have tested any side.  The quality of that spell was in stark contrast to a poor first half when both sides were guilty of basic errors. Lions took an early lead through a Ben Young dropped goal, but surrendered it to close range tries from front-row men Will McColl and Tristan King, with Reynolds adding a conversion. A  great chip and chase by Lions full back Alex Wilcockson and Young’s conversion narrowed the gap to two points by half time but the visitors upped their game after the break.  Hooker Ollie Taylor’s converted try took them back into the lead before a yellow card for Young gave the city side an opportunity. Reynolds kicked a penalty goal and Moss cruised through acres of space to make a touchdown.  Lions came back strongly as Taylor, their top try scorer this season, grabbed a second and when wing Jake Sterland latched on to Young’s shrewd cross kick with seven minutes remaining Canterbury were left chasing the game.   They chased in such a positive fashion that they will travel to Barnes next Saturday confident in their own abilities.

Canterbury: K.Braithwaite, F.Morgan, W.Waddington (repl A.Moss), T.Best,T.Williams (repl G.Hilton), F.Reynolds, B.Cooper, W.McColl (repl A.Cooper), T. King, D.Herriott, S.Churchyard (repl J. De Vries), J.Stephens (repl S.Churchyard), W.Hunt (repl E.Lusher), S.Rogers, T.Oliver.

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v Leicester Lions

Images subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton
Barnstaple vs Canterbury 1st XV

Match Report – Barnstaple RFC vs Canterbury 1st XV

BARNSTAPLE 10pts  CANTERBURY 22pts

A sharper and more focused Canterbury made the most of the Devon sunshine and a firm surface to end a run of two defeats and claim their second National 2 South league win of the season.   In a game that was always tight on the scoreboard a try from the last play of the afternoon, scored by replacement wing Dave Heads, ensured the most deserving side took the points. The gap might have been greater had Canterbury made the most of a high tempo first quarter which kept Barnstaple fully occupied but somehow the finishing touches were missing.  All looked good when a catch and drive then slick work by the backs saw Kyan Braithwaite score the first of his two tries and Frank Reynolds converted. That was after fifteen minutes, and the city side continued to pose a real threat with ball in hand. They went close but frustratingly that was all. When Barntstaple finally broke free they levelled matters with a driving maul try for hooker Nat Bayet and a Jake Murphy conversion.  By half time it was still stalemate after Reynolds and Murphy exchanged penalty goals but a yellow card for Barnstaple centre Johnny Carter, for a deliberate knock on, gave Canterbury an advantage they did not waste.  Four minutes after the break Reynolds carved an opening and Braithwaite was on his inside shoulder to take the scoring pass.   That five point lead began to look fragile as Canterbury then delivered their least impressive period and began to look unsure of themselves. Basic errors, dithering and unwanted penalties handed momentum to the home side.  it was left to some outstanding defensive work, with special mention for back row trio Sam Rogers, Will Hunt and Tyler Oliver, to hold them off. Scarcely a tackle was missed but, having survived,  the city men regained control in the late stages. They might have settled for running down the clock but with the seconds ticking away a charge by young prop Will McColl set up a promising position.  It was exploited to the full as Heads was given a clear run to the posts and Reynolds’ kick capped a much better day at the office.

Canterbury: K.Braithwaite, F.Morgan (repl G.Hilton), W.Waddington, T.Best, T.Williams (repl D.Heads), F.Reynolds, B.Cooper, W.McColl,  (repl A.Cooper),
T .King, D.Herriot, (repl E.Lusher) R.Cadman, J.Stephens (repl S.Churchyard) W.Hunt, S.Rogers, T.Oliver

CRFC vs Dings Crusaders

Match Report – Canterbury 1st XV vs Dings Crusaders

CANTERBURY 0pts  DINGS CRUSADERS 17pts

On a day of extremes, Canterbury looked ill equipped to deal with the gales and rain that swept across the Marine Travel Ground. Conditions were made for hard-nosed West country packs and Crusaders did not disappoint.  Their forwards bossed this game and made sure that when it came their turn to face the elements a twelve point lead was more than enough.  The city side might have hoped that restricting the visitors to two first half tries would give them a decent chance of victory, but they were contained so efficiently that any optimism vanished long before the end. As the Crusaders defence stifled them Canterbury’s frustrations were reflected by a slew of technical penalty offences and scrambled decision making.   In the early minutes of the match there was a glimpse of what might have been under different conditions. The city backs ran from deep to create a great chance that was lost when the final pass missed the support runner.  It was the first and last glimpse of daylight as Crusaders exploited the wind to establish territory and took the lead with a driving maul try from flanker Tom Anderson.   Canterbury did well to resist the pressure they were under but conceded a second try to centre Tom Price from a charged down clearance kick. Ben Bolster added the conversion but at the break the city side could look back on a strong defensive effort. Turning that that to their advantage, however, proved too much.  Driving mauls and wet wet weather are natural bedfellows and Dings used them effectively before Josh Lloyd added a third score to strengthen their grip.  Streetwise and committed to holding on to possession they lured Canterbury into so many errors and misjudgements they cruised home in some comfort.  With a long winter ahead there may be more cloud burst days like this and on this showing the city club, who have now lost four of their five games, will not be looking forward to them.

Canterbury: W.Waddington, K.Braithwaite, A.Moss, T.Best, F.Morgan, F.Reynolds, T .Williams, A.Cooper, T.King, D.Herriott, R.Cadman, J De Vries, J.Stephens, S,Rogers, T.Oliver.  Replacements: W.McColl, E.Lusher, W.Hunt, B,Cooper, J.Weaver

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v Dings Crusaders

Images subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton

 

Rochford 100 vs CRFC 1st XV

Match Report – Rochford Hundred vs Canterbury 1st XV

ROCHFORD HUNDRED 20pts – CANTERBURY 1st XV 19pts

A late try could not save Canterbury from their third defeat in four games after a disappointing second half performance.  In a match fragmented by frequent injury stoppages they were subdued and lacking cohesion as they failed to build on their half time lead.   After an ominously slow start which saw league newcomers Rochford take the lead with a try and conversion by fly half Sam Cappaert the city side forced their way back  into the game.  The second quarter brought them two tries and by the interval they were looking slight favourites.  The first resulted from intense forward pressure and when Rochford stopped a driving maul illegally it cost them a penalty try.   Their next seven points owed everything to pace and vision as Aiden  Moss found a gap and Tom Best sent scrum half Tom Williams racing to the posts for Frank Reynolds to convert.    A third try beckoned when Moss opened up Rochford’s mean defence with a chip and chase but a cruel bounce denied him what seemed a nailed on score.  At that point Canterbury were confident and looking in control.

Why they could not carry that momentum into the last forty minutes only they will know.  Rochford looked the hungrier outfit, dominated territory for long periods but at least Canterbury showed plenty of defensive grit. It was a surprise when the home side cracked them from a first phase move which ended in an unvconverted try for Jordan Spivey.   An uninspiring and error prone Canterbury then surrendered the lead to a Cappaert penalty goal  and Rochford extended it to six points with an opportunist try from George Griffiths. There seemed little danger when Mark Billings kick reached half way but the ball broke for the home side and the wingman found himself with a clear run to the corner. When Canterbury did find a couple of attacking positions they were lost through lineout wobbles but they roused themselves in a desperate late surge.  A driving maul try from Tyler Oliver left Reynolds with a hugely difficult kick to win the match. It missed by a whisker but Canterbury will know it was their own shortcoming which really hurt their chances.

CRFC vs Worthing

Match Report – Canterbury 1st XV vs Worthing Raiders

CANTERBURY 29pts  WORTHING 24pts

Canterbury have lift off.  This bonus point victory over a previously unbeaten Worthing could not have been better timed as rugby returned to the Marine travel Ground for the first time in eighteen months.

To register their first league points of the season the city club had to hold their nerve as Raiders dominated second-half territory and mounted a ferocious late assault. But outstanding defence kept them at bay and that as much as their four tries earned Canterbury this success. Having established a nine-point lead by half time they then had to overcome a mental barrier. In their two previous defeats they have thrown a similar advantage away. This time they cut out the errors and produced a score at a critical time.

The catalyst for that first-half lead was wing Sam Sterling who scored two of Canterbury’s three tries and had a substantial role in the other.   His first came after heavy forward pressure opened the way to an overlap, converted from wide out by Frank Reynolds who put behind him two earlier penalty misses.  That was after fifteen minutes but Raiders soon cut the deficit when the impressive Nathan Jibulu, a Harlequins Academy player, finished powerfully. Although he was wearing a wingman’s shirt, however, Sterling roamed everywhere and it was his break that paved the way for flanker Alex Evans to touch down.

Once again the score was pegged back as Raiders made space for a Jerome Rudder try but in the final minute of the half Sterling struck again.  Charging down a kick, he scooped up the ball and outran the chasers to leave Reynolds an easy conversion.  That 19-10 lead looked pretty fragile as Raiders mounted a second-half offensive but finding a way through was another matter.  Canterbury resisted countless line out drives, stifled the Raiders backs but eventually succumbed to Henry Birch’s try which Matt McLean converted.

The city side gathered themselves and broke out to produce a critical score. Fly half Reynolds threaded a kick behind the raiders defence and Tom Best was first to the ball as it bounced under the posts.  Reynolds topped up the try and went on to add a late penalty goal.  Worthing were always in this match and they set nerves jangling in the last five minutes with Cam Dobinson’s converted try.  It was not quite enough thanks to Canterbury’s marvellous defenders.

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v Worthing

Images subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton