Thanet vs Zingari

Match report – Thanet 3rds vs Canterbury 5ths

THANET 3rds 22pts vs CANTERBURY 5ths 32pts

Canterbury took on league leaders Thanet Wanderers in miserable conditions at Callis court. The city side struck first blood with an opening try after Gareth Thomas broke through in the centre to touch down and give Kevin Stevens the simple conversion. Thanet’s response was swift taking a quick tap penalty caught the city’s defence off guard to claim a try wide out. Thanet then turned the screw keeping the city side on the defence only relived by Stevens slotting a penalty, but Thanet’s efforts were rewarded with a converted try just before halftime to give them a slender two-point lead.

The second half didn’t start well for Canterbury conceding an early penalty before the city started to take control twenty minutes into the half with Kevin Stevens picking up from a maul, selling the dummy to go under the posts giving himself the simple conversion. This opened a purple patch for the city, with Patrick Collins slicing through the defence to touch down followed by Richard Collins chasing a kick through a flat defence to gather under the posts for the simple conversion by Stevens. With fifteen minutes to go Thanet stepped up a gear and it was now Canterbury defence that was tested they held out before conceding a converted try at the end of normal time, however deep into injury time, Canterbury were awarded a long-distance penalty that Stevens slotted to put the game out of sight.

Sam Stirling vs Leicester Lions

Leicester Lions vs Canterbury 1st XV

LEICESTER LIONS 35 CANTERBURY 0

by David Haigh

This was the third time this season that Canterbury have been whitewashed and it left Head Coach Matt Corker frustrated at his side’s failure to score. After conceding three tries in the first sixteen minutes they mounted enough pressure to put themselves back in the game but could not translate it into badly needed points. In a crucial ten minutes at the end of the first half the inability to pierce a quick and organised Lions defence was pivotal to their chances but they made nothing of it. Canterbury had plenty of lost ground to make up in the Leicester mud as the Lions shot into that early lead. Fly Half Ben Young’s shrewd kicking led to early tries for wing Devon Constant and full back Alex Wilcoxon. Number Eight Ed Sumpter claimed the third from a driving maul, all converted by Young. When the city side got their hands on the ball they were poor at keeping it and the home side thrived. To their credit Canterbury improved as the half wore on but that blank scoreline was to follow them into the last 40 minutes. They had an equal share of territory after the interval and thought a surging maul had earned a try only for it to be ruled in touch. They could make nothing, either, of a flurry of yellow cards for the home side but by that time the ever dangerous Constant had made an interception and sprinted 80 yards for his second try. Canterbury’s troubles were compounded by injuries to Jamie Stephens, Tristan King, and Jessie De Vries and when back rower Simon Johnson grabbed Lions fith try, and Joe Brock added his second conversion, it gave Matt Corker many questions to ask of his squad before next week’s encounter with Barnes..

Canterbury: D. Corcoran, S.Sterling, W.Waddington, K.Braithwaite (repl F.Morgan), M.Halliday, R.Best, B.Cooper, B.Young, T.King (repl A.Coopr), D.Herriott (repl W.McColl), R.Cadman, S. Churchyard (rel D.Irvine), J.De Vries (repl G Hilton), J.Stephens, T.Oliver

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v Leicester Lions - 19 Feb 2022
Photos may be subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton
Colts group photo

Colts international calls and other player successes

The success story of our unbeaten Colts teams this season has been crowned by international call-ups for two players, Harry Legg and Harrison MacKinnon. Harry is joining the England Under 18 Training camp while Harrison goes north of the border to be included in the Scotland group ahead of the Under18s Five Nations Competition in France this Spring.

Harry Legg - England U18 Camp
Harry Legg

Harrison MacKinnon - Scotland U18
Harrison MacKinnon

They are not the only young players making an impression as numerous members of the Canterbury squad have won representative honours this month. The latest are Will Calder and Gabriel Hayden who have been selected for the London and South East side for the forthcoming regional Championship. Will and Gabriel are also playing for Kent in the national counties championship together with Ben Ashdown, Tom Fright and Adrian Paul Geddes. The good news does not stop there as Kennedy Sylvester and Harry Legg are both currently playing for Saracens in the U18s Premiership league. The boys are a credit to the club and to the coaches and managers, led by Miles MacKinnon, who put in so much time overseeing their development.

Will Calder
Will Calder

Gabriel Hayden
Gabriel Hayden

Tom Fright
Tom Fright

Adrian Paul Geddes
Adrian Paul Geddes

Kennedy Sylvester
Kennedy Sylvester

Sidcup vs Pilgrims

Match report – Sidcup 2nd vs Canterbury Pilgrims

SIDCUP 2ND 12pts  CANTERBURY PILGRIMS 17pts

The Pilgrims travelled to Sidcup for their Invicta A league game with a much-changed side, yet again!. With four players not available after Thursday’s training, a few rabbits had to be pulled out of the hat! (obviously, they did not play). The game started well for the visitors; Tom Halliday made ground, got the ball to Nathan Annakie, who put Tristan Van  Dyk away, and he found Nathan in support to score the opening try.

Pilgrims continued to dominate without adding to that first try until another great run by Annekie set up position, the forwards produced good ball and Harvey Furneaux touched down. Tom Halliday converted. After the break, they went further ahead and Van Dyk’s try seemed to have taken them into the comfort zone.  But that was premature as Sidcup surged back in the last quarter and two tries and a conversion left the result on a knife’s edge.

Fine defence and the occasional slice of luck, however,  saw Pilgrims home and marked a fitting last appearance for captain Toby Rayleigh-Strutt who is going to ‘strutt’ his stuff in Sydney, Australia.

 

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Photographs may be subject to copyright: Christine van-Dyk
CRFC 1st XV vs Barnstaple RFC

Match report – Canterbury 1st XV vs Barnstaple RFC

CANTERBURY 52pts  BARNSTAPLE 22ptsby David HaighAn eight-try blast from Canterbury put the warmth back into a chilly February day as they cruised to a comfortable victory. After edging into a nine point lead by half time they raised the temperature in the second half to dismantle an injury ravaged Barnstaple side that has struggled to make an impression all season.   The visitors were solid in defence in the early stages but after falling behind to an Aaron Cooper try from a driving maul they briefly took the lead through Jake Murphy’s penalty goal and a smartly worked touch down from Johnny Carter, to which Murphy added the goal points.  Canterbury’s ambition to keep the ball alive was freqently stalled by a lack of control but they were building pressure and on the half hour Danny Herriott sent fellow front-rower Billy Young in under the posts. Kyan Braithwaite landed his second conversion into the wind and late in the half added a try as the city side exploited space on the right.  The breeze may have eased after the break but Canterbury still had it in their sails and two tries in the space of four minutes took them into clear water. Frankie Morgan hit fly half Tom Best’s flat pass at pace to stroll over for the bonus point score before Best produced an individual piece of magic to register his side’s fifth try.  Barnstaple, however, were never short of spirit and when a good spell of pressure earned a yellow card for Aaron Cooper they took advantage with a try for hooker Gav Mitchell, converted by Murphy.   It was the last quarter of the game that fully exposed their frailties as a confident city side hit them with three more tries. Jesse De Vries, his first for the club; Tristan King from quick thinking at the front of a lineout and Will McColl’s bulldozing effort finished them off. Four more Braithwaite conversions took the scoreboard past the fifty mark while Barnstaple were left with only Carter’s last-minute try as consolation.Canterbury: D.Corcoran, S.Sterling, F.Morgan, K.Braithwaite, M.Halliday (repl G.Hilton), T.Best, T.Williams (repl B.Cooper), A.Cooper  (repl W.McColl), B.Young (repl W.Waddington) D.Herriott, R.Cadman , S.Churchyard (rep J.De Vries), J.Stephens, T.King, T.Oliver

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v Barnstaple - 12 Feb 2022

Photographs may be subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton
Dings vs CRFC

Match Report – Dings Crusaders vs Canterbury 1st XV

DINGS CRUSADERS 32 CANTERBURY 10

by David Haigh

Canterbury’s inconsistent season goes on as they shipped six tries and in the end, were well beaten. The good things about this performance were almost entirely limited to their work in defence but a high tackle count took its toll as they ran out of steam in the second half. In the face of a swirling wind they did a decent holding job before the interval and were a touch unlucky to be ten points adrift at half time. Dings had to work hard before taking a 22nd minute lead with a try from wing Tom Hargen but Canterbury hit back swiftly as Danny Herriott completed a driving maul. The city side continued to resist until a rare missed tackle set up Hugo Harbinson for Dings second try and in the final play of the half they got a third. There was more than a suspicion of a forward pass before wing Tommy Foot slipped through the defence but on the surface Canterbury had plenty of reasons to be pleased with the memory of the previous week’s second half exploits fresh in everyone’s thoughts. It was Dings, however, who produced the best rugby in their determination to end a five match losing streak. They were aggressive and incisive and scrum half Tom Knight underlined their threat with a try from a quick tap penalty converted by Rob Kirby. Canterbury did make some headway midway through the half and after Crusaders Number Eight Jake Holcombe was yellow-carded another driving maul ended in a Tristan King try. But the wind dropped, so did the city side’s energy and Dings made the final quarter their own. With the city scrum under pressure, they put themselves out of sight with an excellent try from centre Matt Smith and, in the last act of the match the sixth was scored by prop Ashley Challenger. Canterbury’s challenge will be to quickly rediscover its confidence.

Canterbury: D.Corcoran, S.Sterling, F.Morgan, K.Braithwaite, G.Hilton, T.Best, T.Williams, B.Young, T. King, D.Herriott, R.Cadman, J.Stephens, W.Waddington, A.Evans, T.Oliver.

Replacements W.McColl, S.Churchyard, T.Rayleigh-Strutt, B.Cooper, F.Reynolds.

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v Dings Crusaders - 29 Jan 2022

Images may be subject to copyright – Phillipa Hilton
Zingari vs UKC 2nds

Canterbury 5th v UKC 2nds

CANTERBURY 51pts UKC 2nds 12pts

This was the game that experience triumphed over a young athletic side, while the university had the speed the city had the technique to suppress the fiery student pack. First, it was Canterbury scrum near the university line that gave Julian Hunt the chance to break through for the opening try, followed a few minutes later by a quickly taken penalty setting up a maul for Phil Cottrell to power his way over. Not everything was going Canterbury’s way a missed tackle let the university slide through the defense to go under the post for a converted try, the reply was fairly swift with Will Rayner stretching his legs touching down in the corner, followed by Jerome Weigh powering over from short range giving Kevin Stevens the easy conversion. With halftime approaching the university had the last word with quickly taken penalty scoring out wide to reduce the city’s halftime lead to just ten points.

The second half asked the question could the Zingari keep up this furious pace, but with a Clive Johnson try followed by Pat Collins breaking through for a converted try, and Jerome Weigh claiming his second the city side looked almost out of sight. However, there was a lot of fight left in this University side, it was only Canterbury’s tackling, and ability to win the ball at the critical moments kept their line safe for the next twenty minutes. This famine was only broken by a terrible defensive mix-up on the university’s line giving a sharp Rob Paul the chance to snatch the touch down, and Stevens to add the extra points. Canterbury had a final flourish with Finn Roland finishing off a move out wide for the last play of the match and despite the overwhelming score line one of their most competitive matches of the season.

UKC vs Pilgrims

UKC vs Canterbury Pilgrims

UKC 19pts CANTERBURY PILGRIMS 24pts

A new look Pilgrims survived a second-half fightback by the students and clung on to claim a tense victory. The home side started well and Canterbury saw little of the ball until debutant Tristan Van-Dyk set off from his own half and chased down a kick ahead for a great individual try. Player/coach Will Hilton converted.

It was not long before the home side built-up pressure to score under the post, to make it 7-7. It was end-to-end stuff before the Pilgrim’s backs opened up a gap for Max Halliday to score out wide. When Halliday stormed through for his second try and Hilton converted things were looking good for Pilgrims but the second half was a different story. Both sides made halftime substitutions but Pilgrims never got going. UK C chipped away at the lead and eventually leveled matters through two tries and a conversion. A yellow card for the student gave the city side their chance and Van Dyk forced his way over in the corner to open up a narrow advantage which they battled to keep. A well-deserved win from a scratch side, but anyone could have won this game. Good entertainment for the crowd. Outstanding performances from Van-Dyk and Dunkerley.

Team

1. Dan Whittaker ,2. Joe Harvey, 21. Dan Gill, 4. Rob Knott, 5. Joe Craig, 6. Harvey Furneaux, 7. Brandon Dunkerley, 8. Haydn Annakie, 9. Dan Eaglestone, 10. Will Hilton, 11. Max Halliday, 12. Tom Halliday, 13. Nathan Annakie, 14. Tristan Van-Dyk, 15. Barney Howard, 16. Joe Rumsey, 18. James Hunt, 19. Nico Englebrecht, 20.Jake Forest

Zingari vs Maidstone Vets

Canterbury 5th v Maidstone Vets

CANTERBURY 5th 31pts MAIDSTONE VETS 15pts

It was Canterbury who drew first blood in the opening 5 minutes with their wingman Will Rayner side stepping the defence to break free touching down under the posts for the easy conversion. The reply was swift from Maidstone within minutes some powerful running forced their way over for an unconverted try out wide. The Zingari had to fight hard with Maidstone having the best of the territory before Jez Swan forced his way over the line on a rare visit to the Maidstone line for Canterbury’s second converted try. This was compounded just before halftime when Rob Paul picked off a loose midfield pass, and with the interception went under the posts for a converted try giving the city side a comfortable 31- 5 halftime cushion.

The second half saw The Zingari play with more confidence and purpose with Phil Cotteral first on the second half try list followed ten minutes later with Kevin Stevens adding to the total as the game went into the last quarter. At this point Canterbury took their foot off the gas, and paid the price against this experienced Maidstone side intent on breaking down the Canterbury defence soon claimed their reward with an unconverted try. Having lost the initiative, the city defence was tested against the Maidstone onslaught and held out until the final minute when Maidstone claimed their final try, this was not enough to affect the outcome but added a respectable final scoreline that reflected this contest.