Broughton Park RUFC

Broughton Park
Full nameBroughton Park Football Club
UnionLancashire RFU
Founded1882; 142 years ago (1882)[1]
LocationChorlton-cum-Hardy Manchester, England
Ground(s)Hough End
ChairmanJim Rochford
Director of RugbyAlan Marsland
Coach(es)Graham Higginbotham / Mark Poole
Captain(s)Patrick O'Donnell
League(s)North 1 West
2019–2011th
Team kit
Official website
broughtonparkfc.rfu.club

Broughton Park FC, is one of the oldest rugby union clubs in England and was established in 1882, just one year after the Lancashire County Rugby Football Union was founded and eleven years after the formation of the national Rugby Football Union. The first XV played in North 1 West, a sixth level league in the English league system following their promotion as champions of South Lancs/Cheshire 1 at the end of the 2017-18 season.

History

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Broughton Park was established in 1882 and despite this early beginning was the third Broughton based rugby club, after Broughton RUFC (1862) and Broughton Rangers (1877). The club was overshadowed in terms of international representation by its two neighbours for the first decade of its existence. In 1919, just after the First World War, it started to make a mark on the national scene with A M Crook becoming both the Lancashire Union president and also being elected to the presidency of the Rugby Football Union. J E Kidd was elected Lancashire president in 1930 and it was not until the 1960s that Broughton once again came to the fore. The glory days of the club were in the 1960s and 1970s and at one point they fielded four internationals on the pitch.[2] In this period they also had two more Lancashire presidents and in 1981 in John Burgess they had a president of the Rugby Football Union. Broughton Park were never able to recapture the heights of this period, and in the professional era have not managed to reach the top flight.

Club honours

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Ground

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The club has had a number of different grounds in its time, mainly in the Salford/Prestwich areas, but also in the south of Manchester. Since 2004 its present new facility is at Hough End in Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester. Football club Salford City F.C.'s stadium, Moor Lane, was once the club's home ground. It is located in the Kersal Moor area of Salford, close to the boundary with Prestwich.

Representation

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Originally the club had only one senior side, but now fields five senior sides (4 male and 1 female) and supported by one Colts (U19), four youth (U13-U17) and six mini (U6-U12) teams; a total involvement of some 330 players each week. Broughton Park R.F.C. is the City of Manchester's highest placed representative in the Rugby Union Leagues.[3]

Notable players

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International honours

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Other notable former players

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  • Alan Shuker, England Trialist, Barbarians and President of Lancashire RFU.
  • Ron Greenall, Lancashire, Cheshire, North of England and England Trialist and Peter Barratt, England Trialist.
  • John Burgess, England Coach and former President of the Rugby Football Union.
  • Simon Verbickas, North of England U21 and England U21.
  • Andy O'Grady, North of England U21.
  • Jimmy Wilde, England Colts and a Barbarian
  • Jim Sydall, in the North team which beat the All Blacks 20 points to 9 at Otley in November 1979.
  • John Russell, England Colts
  • Andy Taylor, England Colts
  • Gary Jones, England Colts
  • David Tait England Schools U17 International 2003.
  • Jason Duffy England Schools U18 International 2003.
  • Simon McIntyre England U18 International 2009.Sale Sharks 2009-2011 and Wasps 2011-2021.
  • Bill Bevan and Glyn Parry, - co-founders of Manchester Schools Rugby Football Union
  • Jamie Harrison North Of England U20 and England Counties U20 2011
  • Alan Buckley, rugby league centre with Swinton, Lancashire and Great Britain
  • Michael Woodhouse, New Zealand Member of Parliament and Deputy Leader of the House

Presidents of Lancashire RFU

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  • 1919/23 A M Crook
  • 1930/32 J E Kidd
  • 1963/64 V G Funduklian
  • 1970/71 A Shuker
  • 1981/82 J Burgess
  • 1985/86 W G Bevan
  • 1986/87 Dr J E Ryner

Presidents of the Rugby Football Union

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References

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