Romsey Colts win end of season thriller

Romsey’s Colts rugby side came out on top in a thriller at the Winchester RC ground to win the 2026 Hampshire Shield. The festival crowd was royally entertained as Romsey scrum half Sam Hurst burrowed his way over from a goal line ruck to score the decisive fifth try.

The game was played in bright sunshine and on a bone hard pitch, all of which contributed to a fast, free flowing game. Josh Campbell’s determined drive opened the scoring for Romsey, with the reliable boot of Zac Bates establishing an early seven point lead. Romsey’s band of supporters were in for a nail biting seventy minutes, however, as Andover replied with some excellent close driving work themselves to equalise. This set the tone for the rest of the game, with Andover’s strong ball carriers needing to be subdued. Romsey’s misfiring lineout made it difficult for them to establish a stranglehold, but their attacking flair was always likely to provide the key difference between the sides.

Tries by backs Daniel Yorke and Jacob Wolfe were just rewards for Romsey’s attack minded approach and they looked increasingly likely to pull further ahead as they went into half time.

Andover started the second half in a determined fashion and a stretched Romsey defence was unable to prevent the score. Despite trailing for the first time in the match, Romsey stayed true to their philosophy and continued to run the ball. Just short of the hour mark fly half Rowan Sherrington sliced through the Andover midfield to re establish the lead. Another Andover attack resulted in a score that levelled the game at 24 points apiece.

With the dust swirling and the sun getting warmer by the minute, the spectators were gripped by the contest. Romsey played with great maturity in the last quarter and Sam Hurst’s late late try meant that Romsey went home to Ganger Farm with the trophy. Having scored five tries to four, and playing some attractive rugby, they were the deserved winners.
Peter Jones

Romsey 7 Trojans 64

Trojans not in a loving mood on Valentine’s Day

A bumper crowd were present for Romsey home match against local rivals Trojans who currently set the pace in Counties 2 on a day that saw a rare appearance in 2026 of the sun. The visitors put their hosts under pressure from the start but strong tackles from Silas Clark with an E and a deft piece of ball pilfering from Alfie Lawrence allowed the pressure to be relieved. Trojans pinched the lineout and spun the ball wide and opened the scoring. Solid defence by Jay Hodges and Dylan Scott were in vain as the Trojans winger slipped through and slid over to extend the lead. Some slick hands followed from the visitors and within five minutes a third try was added despite the valiant home teams defence and Romsey were staring at a Valentine’s Day massacre. A less than romantic coming together of Oli Coburn and Ian Milanak’s heads resulted in both of them splitting them open and managing to avoid heading out for an overpriced meal, replacing that with a stale sandwich from the local hospital canteen. Oli Soundy found himself under a pile of men, a position he usually likes but this one forced the wind out of him and he needed to be replaced on the wing by the flowing locks of Josh Davies normally a flanker. While Romsey were reshuffling Trojans wrapped up the bonus point before half time and took a 0-24 lead into the break.

A quick start was needed by Romsey to try and get a foothold back in the game but two quick tries from Trojans put the match beyond doubt. Romsey did however continue to fight hard with Sam Page running himself to a standstill and fellow new boy Jack Light carrying hard at every opportunity. From a thunderous carry from Brad Hughes, who had remembered where the rugby club was, supported by Will Murrant, who thought it was a better idea to play for Romsey than go and watch Scotland like his 40-year-old brother Dan, gave Romsey a good attacking platform. Hooker turned centre Ben Hoad then barrelled over his new opponent and this gave Jim Lamont a wide enough gap to waddle through to score adding the conversion himself to peg the score back to 7-36.

This fired the visitors back up and they utilised their useful backline to counter attack from deep and take advantage of the tiring home side to score 2 quick tries. With Elliott Johnson and the pizza inspector Tom Bird more than holding their own in the scrums this allowed Harrison Scott to carry hard and set up another opportunity for the home side, but Will Davies, who’s mind had wandered to the large number of dates he had lined up for the evening, elected to call a “no nine” move despite the ball being next to his feet and the moment was gone (a bit like events that evening according to reports). 2 late tries were added to take the score to 7-64 which doesn’t reflect the hard work and effort shown by the Romsey squad.

Post-match coach Jason Berry reflected “Tough day at the office, the lads battled hard but Trojans are top of the league for a reason and that’s because they take their chances. The score line doesn’t reflex the effort we put in and Trojans definitely would have felt it wasn’t a walk in the park.”

Skipper Harrison Scott echoed those thoughts adding “Thought the effort was good. Big shout to both Sam Page and Jack Light who stuck at the task superbly. It was always going to be a steep challenge after 3 injuries in 30 mins but the efforts stayed high against a classy Trojans team who made every mistake count.”

This week sees a break with the club open for the England v Ireland game from 1330 followed by a trip to US Portsmouth on the 28th.

Romsey RFC BEER FESTIVAL 2026 – VOLUNTEERS NEEDED!

Hi all!

Planning is underway for our *2026 Romsey Rugby Club Beer Festival* on June 12 & 13, one of the biggest and best community events of the year — and we need *YOU* to help make it happen! 🎉

 

This festival isn’t just about great beer… it brings the whole community together, raises vital funds for the club, and helps keep rugby at the heart of Romsey. 💛💙

 

We’ve got *roles to suit every interest and every level of free time* — from a couple of hours on the day to taking on a small project in the run‑up. Whatever you can give makes a massive difference.

 

*⭐️ Our key roles to fill:*

 

* *Overall Event Leader* – the big one! Guide the team, keep things moving, and be the hero behind this brilliant event.

* *Daily Volunteer Coordinators* – one person for each day to organise and support volunteers (nice, social, and absolutely essential!).

 

*🔥 Other open roles include:*

 

* Ticket sales

* Sponsorship (event & barrel)

* Marketing & comms support

* Letter drop helpers

* Brochure design & print support

* Clubhouse setup / breakdown teams

* Volunteer sign-up admin

* Bar staff / token sales / security (on the day) …plus loads more — tell us what you enjoy, and we’ll match you to something!

 

If you’re up for helping, even just a little, message me directly (or chairman@romseyrugby.club).

Let’s make the 2026 Beer Festival the biggest, smoothest, and most fun yet! 🍺🎶🙌

Romsey v Southampton – March 7th – Matchday Lunch hosted by the RFU Injured Players Foundation.

We’re thrilled to invite you to our next Matchday Lunch – a proper celebration of rugby, community, and good food!

🎉 What’s on the menu?

🍽 Two delicious courses + cheese

🎟 Raffle with cracking prizes

🎤 Evan Davies talking about the charity & an interview with the senior team

🍻 Bar open from 12:30 – come early and settle in!

📅 Date & Time:

Sat 7 March – Romsey v Southampton

12:30 – Bar opens

13:00 – lunch served

15:00 – kick-off

Whether you’re a long-time member or new to the club, we’d love to see you there. Bring your mates, bring your appetite, and let’s make it a proper rugby day out 💙💛

🎟 Book your spot here:

Romsey v Southampton – March 7th – Matchday Lunch hosted by the RFU Injured Players Foundation.

We’re thrilled to invite you to our next Matchday Lunch – a proper celebration of rugby, community, and good food!

🎉 What’s on the menu?

🍽 Two delicious courses + cheese

🎟 Raffle with cracking prizes

🎤 Evan Davies talking about the charity & an interview with the senior team

🍻 Bar open from 12:30 – come early and settle in!

📅 Date & Time:

Sat 7 March – Romsey v Southampton

12:30 – Bar opens

13:00 – lunch served

15:00 – kick-off

Whether you’re a long-time member or new to the club, we’d love to see you there. Bring your mates, bring your appetite, and let’s make it a proper rugby day out 💙💛

🎟 Book your spot here:

👉 https://events.romseyrugby.club

Let’s fill the clubhouse and show our guests what Romsey hospitality is all about!

Let’s fill the clubhouse and show our guests what Romsey hospitality is all about!

We look forward to welcoming you.

Book your tickets here

https://ticketpass.org/event/EECEJV/matchday-lunch-romsey-v-southampton

DINNER DANCE 2026 – ANNUAL FUNDRAISER & CELEBRATION

💙💛 All members are invited to come together and celebrate our amazing rugby club and everything achieved during the 2025–2026 season 🏆

Saturday 9th May 2026

Whether you’re a player, coach, supporter, parent, or someone who just pops in for a pint now and then — we’d love to see you at this end-of-season celebration.

Live music & DJ set from:

  • Pianist *Jonathan Fashole-Luke*
  • Ibizia DJ *Ridney*

Secure your tickets here:

👉 https://ticketpass.org/event/EEWMVX/dinner-dance-2026

 

Let’s celebrate in true Romsey Rugby Club style 🥂

Romsey RFC – Club Development Workshop Update

Thank you to everyone who attended last week’s Club Development Workshop with **Alex Roe from the RFU**.
Your input, honesty and passion for Romsey RFC were hugely valued, and we want to make it clear that **everything shared in that room has been listened to and is already shaping our plans.**

This workshop was an important moment for the club. It confirmed what we already know—that Romsey RFC is built on a strong community spirit, brilliant volunteers, and a genuine “club for all” ethos—but also highlighted where we need to improve so we can grow sustainably and keep rugby thriving in Romsey.

✔ What’s Happening Now

The full output from the workshop has already been:

* **Shared with the Executive Committee**, and
* **Initial discussions held at this week’s full committee meeting**, so we can turn your ideas and challenges into clear priorities for the rest of this season and into next.

These insights are now guiding our **club development plan**, helping us focus on: community visibility, player pathways, facilities, volunteer support, and improving internal and external communications.

We will share a more detailed summary and addendum of the workshop notes shortly.

✔ Immediate Actions Already Taken

A number of suggestions raised at the workshop have already been acted on:

### **Improving Communication**

* **Adam (Hon. Secretary)** will now circulate **highlight-only minutes** after each Exec meeting
– top 8–10 decisions, updates and projects.

### **Events & Community**

* **Events Team is now in place** for this season’s Dinner Dance (May 9th).
Tickets are **on sale via Ticketpass**.
* Increased planning for community‑based activities is underway.

### **Facilities & Clubhouse Improvements**

* **New toilet block planning** has moved forward and we’ve ordered technical drawings.
* **Blinds** for the area behind the big screen have been ordered.
* **Club memorabilia** is being measured and prepared for **TVBC‑compliant acrylic frames**, helping turn the clubhouse into a true rugby home. We’ll start with old pictures in the stairwell.
* **Pool table options** and potential clubhouse impact are being reviewed.
* **Gym requirement** has been formally raised with the landlord for discussion.

These are the first steps of many, and we’ll keep everyone updated as work progresses.

## **✔ How We Will Keep Everyone Informed**

A recurring theme from the workshop was communication—making sure updates travel clearly from committee → coaches → players → parents → volunteers.

To improve this, we will be:

* Publishing **regular short updates** on the website and Spond
* Sharing **Exec highlights** after every monthly meeting
* Coordinating cleaner information flow via age‑group managers
* Using Spond/WhatsApp for **quick wins and timely reminders**
* Sharing a **club-wide seasonal plan** once priorities for 2026/27 are confirmed

We want every member, parent, volunteer and player to feel included in what the club is doing and where we’re going.

## **✔ What Happens Next**

We will meet with **Alex Roe from the RFU again on 17th February** to work through next‑step planning, validate our development priorities, and ensure we’re on the best path for sustainable growth.

This is the start of a bigger, more structured development journey for Romsey RFC, and we’re committed to doing it transparently and together.

## **Thank you**

Finally, a huge thank you to everyone who contributed to the workshop.
Your ideas, concerns, and aspirations are shaping the future of our club.
Romsey RFC is special because of its people and community spirit—and together we’re building something stronger.

If you’d like to get involved or support any of the projects mentioned, just speak to a committee member.

T1 Rugby Training at Romsey Rugby Club – 17th February

T1 Rugby Training– 17th February

Romsey Rugby Club is pleased to be hosting a T1 Rugby Training session led by Alex Roe from the RFU on Monday 17th February. This workshop is designed to support coaches, volunteers, and anyone involved in delivering or developing player‑pathway rugby at the club.

📅 Session Schedule

6:30pm – 6:50pm

Indoor presentation in the clubhouse, delivered by Alex Roe (RFU) 6:50pm Move outside / prepare for practical session on the 4G 7:00pm – 8:00pm Practical coaching session on the 4G (half pitch) 8:00pm – 8:30pm Workshop concludes with an indoor Q&A and feedback session supported by RFU staff

Filming Notice The RFU may capture some short video clips during the practical element of the evening to support future national T1 Rugby promotional materials. Anyone who does not wish to be filmed will simply be asked to make this known on arrival, and this will be fully respected.

We look forward to welcoming coaches and volunteers for an engaging and informative evening of rugby development.

 

Need more info? https://help.rfu.com/support/solutions/articles/103000348273/

 

Petersfield 2s 14 Romsey 43

An ugly win of rearranged game in tricky conditions

Romsey travelled to the east of the county to play Petersfield 2s in a game that was rearranged from before Christmas due to poor weather and the heavy rain this year meant that the pitch was rather slippery underfoot. It was due to these conditions that the Romsey players kept sliding offside at the breakdowns and off a couple of tackles which allowed the home team to take an early 7-0 lead. The penalty count kept rising and this lead to Admire Munenga feeling the wrath of the referee and earning a 10-minute break.

This sparked Romsey into life and a break by “Luke Litler” double Will Davies was carried on by Ian Millanak who was held up short of the line; a deft pass to Jay Hodges attracted 2 defenders by he was able to feed the ball back inside to the supporting 30 year old Dan Murrant who raced over from 8mm to score under the posts. The kick off was taken by debutant Sam Page who carried hard up field by the greasy ball was nudged forward. Northampton saints super fan Tom Bird and Elliot Johnson put their opposite numbers under a great deal of pressure at the ensuing scrum, and this led to a hurried clearance that Jack Murrant gathered and set off in search of the precious. He weaved through the defence before a good tackle stopped him, but Alfie Lawrence was on hand to race over to give the visitors the lead. Another turnover at the breakdown from the elegantly coiffured Harrison Scott was shipped to the slightly less coiffured Milanak who used his power to bounce several tacklers off him and he scored wide out, Jim Lamont adding his third conversion with a fine kick from the touchline to make it 7-21 at half time.

Almost from the kick off Romsey added the bonus point try when Ethan Hunt, realized that his little legs and a 75m run to the tryline were a mission impossible, he put the refreshed Munenga in space and his mazy run created a 2 on 1 which he unselfishly passed to Silas Clarke to score his maiden try for the club. The ensuing kick-off was taken by another debutant Jack Light, who secured a tricky bouncing ball, and this allowed a surge from the third (and better) Murrant brother, Will. There had obviously been an argument over the breakfast table as his pass to his brother Jack caused the later to have to stretch awkward and was crunched by a double tackle. Somehow, he managed to offload in contact, and the ball reached the venerable Jim Lamont who just outpaced his 62-year-old opponent to extend the lead to 7-31.

Munenga finally got the try all of his hard work deserved when Oli Soundy, having spent the first half being chatted up by the elderly ladies on the Petersfield sideline and doing much for cross county relationships, decided to chase a speculative kick ahead, blatantly ignored a wide open Dan Murrant, in a possible anti-ginger fit of pique, and passed to Munenga who dived over. The experienced home side started to niggle the Romsey youngsters and took a liking to trying to remove Dylan Argent’s red scrum hat and this provoked the visitors into giving away more penalties in the red zone which allowed them to be awarded a penalty try to make it 14-38.

Romsey had the final say following a deft cross field chip the flaxen locked Clarke was held up on the line, but this allowed a balding Will Davies to trip over the tryline to close out the game 14-43.

Post match live from Franklins Gardens having watched Saints trounce Tigers coach Jason Berry said “We saw debuts for Sam Page and Jack Light. On a heavy, slow pitch that really hampered our style of play, we were forced to dig in and out-wrestle a heavier opposition. Despite the conditions we scored some good tries, it wasn’t a pretty performance, but it was a vital win.”

Captain Scott said “It’s good to finally see the back of this game, a slow start but we showed resilience to overcome some discipline issues and laziness. Shout out to Will Murrant who quietly was my man of the match.”

This week the 6 Nations returns so there is no game, but it is live at the club before we welcome Trojans to Romsey on Valentines Day.

Volunteers Needed – Dinner Dance 2026

Our annual Dinner Dance is one of the absolute cornerstones of the Romsey Rugby calendar. It’s a brilliant evening for 100+ players, parents, partners, coaches, managers and friends to come together and celebrate everything the season has given us – the highs, the hard work, and yes… the occasional low too!

To make it happen, we’re looking to form a volunteer team to help plan and deliver the event. You don’t need previous experience – just a willingness to get involved and help make it a great night for everyone.

 

What roles do we need help with?

There’s something for everyone, and roles can be shared:

– Lead organiser

– Steering group members

– Communications & marketing

– Getting raffle prizes

– Setting up the raffle site

– Selling raffle tickets

– Selling event tickets

– Managing the budget

– Picking and booking entertainment

– Sponsor hunting

– Table planning

– Volunteer coordinator

– Set‑up team

– Break‑down team

– Organising the set‑up & break‑down teams

– …and anything else you feel you could help with

 

Time commitment

– Minimum of one in‑person meeting

– Beyond that, time commitment depends on the role and how much you’re able to contribute

– Many hands make light work — roles can be big or small

 

📅 Event details & tickets:

https://ticketpass.org/event/EEWMVX/dinner-dance-2026

If you’d like to be involved, or just want to find out more, please email:

📧 chairman@romseyrugby.club

(Once a lead organiser is appointed, they’ll take things forward.)

 

This event only happens because people step up — if you’ve ever enjoyed the Dinner Dance, this is a great way to give something back and be part of delivering a fantastic night for the club.

🙌 Thank you in advance!

 

Tickets for the Nations Championship 2026.

Coming this autumn 9 games of rugby at Allianz Twickenham stadium in the Nations Championship 2026.
Here are the fixtures.
• England v Australia – SUNDAY 8 November 2026 – Twickenham Stadium – 15:10
• England v Japan Saturday 15 November 2026 – Twickenham Stadium – 16:40
• England v New Zealand – Saturday 21 November 2026 – Twickenham Stadium – 14:10
• 6th and 3rd place games – FRIDAY 27 November 2026 – Twickenham Stadium – 16:40 & 20:10
• 5th and 2nd place games- Saturday 28 November 2026 – Twickenham Stadium 13:10 & 16:40
• 4th and 1st place games – SUNDAY 29 November 2026 – Twickenham Stadium 13:10 & 16:40
Go to https://nationschampionshiprugby.com/en to register your interest and keep an eye out on the club socials for more information regarding tickets through the club at a slightly lower price than for general sale.

Whole Club Development Workshop hosted by Alex Roe, RFU development officer.

This is your chance to help shape the future of Romsey Rugby Club. We’re building a development plan and long-term strategy to sustain and grow the club over the next 3–5 years. Your ideas and feedback matter—whether you’re a player, parent, coach, volunteer, or supporter.

Date: Wednesday 28th January 2026

🕖 Time: 7:00 PM – 9:00 PM

📍 Location: Romsey Rugby Clubhouse

🍴 Food & Drink Provided

 

Why should you attend?

This is your chance to help shape the future of Romsey Rugby Club. We’re building a development plan and long-term strategy to sustain and grow the club over the next 3–5 years. Your ideas and feedback matter—whether you’re a player, parent, coach, volunteer, or supporter.

What impact can you have?

– Influence the priorities for the club in the short and long term

– Share what matters most to you and your team

– Help create a strategy that keeps rugby at the heart of Romsey and ensures the club thrives for years to come

Who should come?

– Committee members and key role holders

– Age-grade team managers, coaches, and parents

– Senior players, coaches, and managers

– Anyone interested in volunteering or shaping the club’s future

 

This is a whole-club conversation. Your voice counts.

Join us and be part of building a stronger, sustainable Romsey Rugby Club.

✅ RSVP via Spond or message us on WhatsApp

📣 Spread the word—let’s get everyone involved!

 

Club Developer

Alex Roe

My role as RFU Club Developer for Hampshire in the London South East team, is to support rugby clubs to operate sustainably and to be fit for the future. Through the provision of high quality personal, group and virtual support, my role is to facilitate opportunities for clubs to create effective club management structures, diversify and grow revenues, grow and develop the volunteer base and enhance their facilities.

Burns Night Dinner & Ceilidh – Friday 23 January 2026

Romsey Rugby Club is thrilled to announce its annual Burns Night Dinner & Ceilidh, hosted in partnership with Anchor Maintenance and Parker Bullen. This much-loved event brings together the best of Scottish tradition, fine dining, and lively entertainment – all in support of Romsey Rugby Club fundraising.

Event Highlights

  • Bar opens: 18:00 with a welcome drink on arrival
  • Live piper to set the Scottish mood
  • Piping in the Haggis, Chairman’s welcome, and traditional toasts from 19:00
  • Three-course Scottish Feast served from 19:10 (vegetarian and vegan options available)
  • Wine on the table and a wee dram of single malt whisky for poetry recitals
  • Burns poetry readings by guests – volunteers encouraged!
  • Online fundraising raffle drawn at 21:15
  • Live Ceilidh and dance tuition with the Red Robin Band

Dress Code

Dress to impress! Kilts, black tie, dinner suits, evening dresses – and don’t forget your dancing shoes.

Tickets & Booking

🎟️ Book now: https://events.romseyrugby.club

Early booking recommended – this event sells out fast!

Support Your Club

Sponsorship opportunities available – contact us for details

Raffle prize donations warmly welcomed

Attendees are encouraged to bring a bottle of single malt whisky to share with fellow revellers

Join us for an unforgettable evening celebrating Robert Burns with music, poetry, and dancing – right here in Romsey! 

Under 15’s take League Title

Romsey U15s travelled to Overton on Sunday, knowing that a bonus point win would hand them their first League Title; snatching the glory from Ellingham and Ringwood on the final day of the season.

The U15s beat Overton in the cup final last year and it was clear from the start that the home side were still licking their wounds, matching Romsey’s game play and tenacity throughout the first half as the two sides exchanged blows and points with Romsey finishing the first period 17 v 7 to the good.

Half time saw Captain Max Carter, address his team’s first half nerves in his half time talk and the Mighty Romsey U15s took to the field with renewed confidence at the start of the second 30. Thanks to the depth and commitment of the squad, a new second row partnership, two fresh wingers, a centre pairing and a front row bull dog bolstered the team as Romsey began to grind out the tries against a resilient opposition.

An unstoppable rucking game linked seamlessly with fluent back play taking the ball from one side of the pitch to other, continuously probing the stoic defence for weakness. The forwards fought tirelessly against a determined Overton Pack before the opposition reluctantly but inevitably succumbed to the relentless Romsey onslaught and the Home Town Heroes ran out 41 v 17 winners and LEAGUE CHAMPIONS.

Tries were scored by our Flying Fullback Alex Goodey, who scored 5 and Keaton Smith, our Wrecking Ball (and rather bloodied) Number 8, who topped off the forwards efforts with a further 2 tries under the posts. Conversions scored by fly half, Leo Rawlins.

Coach Matt Southey said “I am so extremely proud of the boys and so very grateful to have such a supportive group of parents. From the Coaches, Medics and Management Team, I say a massive well done to our lads, rest easy over Christmas and come back ready for an equally exciting Cup Run in the New Year”.

 

 

100 Club Winners

We are thrilled to announce our December results

Guy Foan – 1st (£72.50)

Nick Edwards – 2nd (£43.50)

Nick Smith – 3rd (£29.00)

Due to increased membership the Fist Prize is now over £50!

Join Club 100 and Support Romsey Rugby Club – Join here.

The more members the higher the prizes!

50% of 100 Club payments help towards club running costs.

 

Matchday Lunch & Free Christmas Party – Romsey v Fordingbridge (KO 2pm, Saturday 13th December)

 Our last lunch before Christmas 🎄 — great rugby, a three‑course meal, and a free festive party with Michelmersh Silver Band.

Join us at Ganger Farm for a festive matchday to remember!

We welcome Fordingbridge to Romsey for a 2:00pm kick‑off as the 1st XV look to keep our good form rolling. Make a day of it with our popular three‑course Matchday Lunch and stay on for a FREE Christmas Party soundtracked by the brilliant Michelmersh Silver Band belting out sing‑along classics.

What’s on

Bar opens: 12:00 (midday)

Lunch served: 12:30 (three courses — with the cheese course after the match)

Kick‑off: 2:00pm — Romsey vs Fordingbridge Raffle & real ale throughout the afternoon Christmas Party: from 4:30pm with Michelmersh Silver Band 🎺🎶

 

Tickets

Secure your seat for lunch now: https://events.romseyrugby.club/ The party after the game is free — everyone welcome, so bring your best singing voice!

Families welcome. Please book early to help our catering team plan numbers.

 

 

Rampant Romsey almost hit Chichester for a century

Hard work on the training ground pays off as first team run in 16 tries

Romsey entertained Chichester 2s on Saturday in the first meeting between the sides since Covid and it all clicked into place in a performance that previous games showed glimpses of being in the team’s repertoire.

Ryan Daly set the tone from the opening kick-off with a 50-metre break to leave Romsey on the front foot and after a few phases the balding Will Davies sniped over to open the scoring 5-0. Following a penalty cleared to touch the pack produced a dominant maul driving the visitors back 25 metres until it was illegally stopped. With a free play the ball was popped to Oli Soundy who barrelled over to make it 10-0.

Rich Sumner caught the ensuing kick-off and weaved over from 70m score under the posts to extend the lead to 17-0.

Chichester then had their best period of the game and were playing some enterprising rugby but the ginger assassin Dan Murrant kept chopping them down in midfield so the resorted to an aerial attack but Jay Hodges defused the pressure with two well gathered high balls and this allowed Romsey to swarm up field and back onto the Chichester line but conceded a penalty. Touch was missed and Sam Adams given the ball with time and space and he outpaced the defence to score the bonus point try at 22-0.

A lineout on Romsey’s 22 was won at the front, spun to Sumner who sliced through the defence for a try that Aiden Cleland converted now that the ball was at the correct pressure for a score of 29-0.

A Sam Adams try was chalked off after Soundy had wiggled his hips too much and this adjusted his line which the referee deemed obstruction but Adams wasn’t to be denied when another poor clearance ended up in his hands and he weaved through to extend the score to 34-0.

A lineout move straight from training resulted in a quick maul off a pen allowed Ben Hoad to plunge over for a try Aiden Cleland adding the extras 41-0.

With Romsey now rampant he returning Ian Milanak bounced through in the style of Franco Harris or possibly Jerome Bettis but seemed to forget momentarily to put the ball down but did so just in time for another 7-point score and when a thrust by the WWE star Alfie “the undertaker” Lawrence prompted two phases of slick hands allowing Jay Hodges to walk in untouched for a half time lead of 53-0.

Ryan Daly set the tone again as a turnover was fed to Oli Pike carried the ball hard into the visitor’s half, the next phased was repulsed but the home side retained possession and when shire resident Ethan Hunt spotted a ring in the in goal area sliced through to claim a precious try with Jim Lamont converting this one to take it to 60-0.

Another try went begging after a clever link play as the pass went over middle earth native Hunts head.

The game got fractious as Rich Sumner was yellow carded for a dangerous clear out before Ian Milanak saw red for a high tackle.

A thundering break from captain Harrison Scott drew 3 defenders to him and his pass permitted Hunt to waddle over for his second try with Lamont, bursting his shirt with his dad bod, converting for 67-0.

The game then was becalmed as the cards took effect and Romsey had to reshuffle with the svelte Elliott Johnson returning from a sore toe, and the flaxen haired Silas Clarke moving onto wing where his deft pass released the flying Adams who shimmied through and offloaded. The pass wasn’t the greatest but Daly picked it off his toes to link with Sumner for his hattrick. Lamont, now playing at number 8, converted to make it 74-0.

Aiden Cleland caught the beleaguered visitors napping with a quick tap to add to the score at 79-0, Rich Sumner burst from a ruck 84-0 but a further try went begging from a dropped pass meant the century would now be difficult to achieve.

The side did make a determined effort to get there with debutant Freddie Cleland half break leading to Jay Hodges’ picking the ball off his toes to outpace the defence 89-0 before a swift handling move found Lawrence hugging the touch line to finish off the move in the corner which Lamont converted to make the final score 96-0.

Credit must go to Chichester who stuck at their task valiantly despite several late team changes.

 

After the game head coach Jason Berry purred “Today, the lads demonstrated the essence of our style—dynamic, running rugby. Despite an initially challenging start to the league campaign, our resilience and determination have kept us competitive, and today, our efforts were duly rewarded. I would also like to extend my sincere appreciation to the referee, whose performance I thought was exemplary.

Looking ahead, we prepare to face Petersfield next week, a formidable opponent, but one we are confident in our ability to challenge. I was particularly impressed with Rich Sumner’s commanding display and the continued robust performance from Jay Hodges on the wing.”

 

Skipper Harrison Scott added “I thought this game was a true sign that amongst the losses than have come this season progress has been made and that showed today. A good platform for the last 3 games before Christmas”.

 

This week sees the side playing Petersfield 2s at a venue to be determined by the weather forecast

 

Romsey RFC was also saddened to hear the news of their former full back Robin Smith who played for the club in the 1988 season when unable to tour India and also guested for the vets’ side on a couple of occasions and officially opened the old clubhouse at the sports centre. He was also a rather handy cricketer in the off season.

Taste the Festive Spirit with Flack’s Christmas Cracker!

This Saturday at Romsey Rugby Club, enjoy a pint of Flack Manor’s Christmas Cracker – a rich, malty winter ale brewed locally in Romsey, with warming notes of spice and dried fruit. Perfect for a chilly matchday!
🏉 Romsey v Chichester – Kick-off 2:00 PM
Cheer on the team in what promises to be an exciting clash!
🍽️ Matchday Lunch – Final Tickets Available
Make it a full day of rugby and great food. Book your spot now at 👉 events.romseyrugby.club
Local ale, local rugby, local community – don’t miss it! ‎<

Romsey vs Southampton 22/11/25

Following a bruising run of fixtures, Romsey were looking for a strong bounce back against Southampton. A rematch of last seasons finale where Romsey put in a below par performance and gifted Southampton a 2 point win. Spurred on by the poor performance last season (And some interesting comments in Southampton’s Match Report) Romsey were looking for a big win.

In disgusting weather, Romsey started strong a kick off being dropped by Southampton gave Romsey some early territory. Following a great run by hooker Ben Hoad, Skipper Harrison Scott was hit very late (First of Many…) after passing to No.10 Jim Lamont giving Romsey an early shot at 3 Points. Unfortunately, the kick just slid wide. On the resulting 22 drop out Scott charged it down putting Southampton under immense pressure, a missed touch from their centre increased the pressure. Following another carry by Hoad the Southampton defence were very narrow, after a couple of passes Romsey’s flying fullback Sam Adams went through for his first try of the game from his first touch of the ball. Conversion made by Lamont.

Unfortunately, Romsey were forced to make an early change with Hoad receiving a nasty cut which required a blood substitution with Dylan Argent coming on temporarily. From kick off Romsey put themselves under pressure inside their own 22 with a forward pass. However, incredible scrummaging from the Romsey tight five consisting off Tom Bird, newly introduced Dylan Argent, Alfie Lawrence, Brad Hughes and Brad Piper pushed Southampton out of the 22 (first of many dominant Romsey scrums) and earning a penalty in the process. Following the lineout Romsey 9 Will Davies was cynically hit late (again…) giving Romsey an easy exit uptowards halfway. Unfortunately, a couple of silly penalties led to Southampton being camped on Romsey’s 5, however great pressure by Romsey’s flankers Ryan Daly and Tom Johnson forced a knock on. The clearing kick from the scum by Lamont was an excellent one putting Southampton back inside their own half. Following a quick tap penalty there was an unfortunate knock on by Romsey, at the resulting scrum Southampton were too egar in trying to recover some pride following the earlier scrum and gave a way a free kick. Which quickly turned into a penalty at the next phase sadly for Romsey the lineout didn’t go to hand.

A bad Southampton exit was slapped down by Romsey centre Admire Munega into the waiting arms of Johnson who like he had all game made plenty of metres. However, a couple of knockons by both teams gave Southampton a scrum on their 22. Romsey’s dominant scrum showed its teeth again by walking Southampton off their own ball (for the second time in the match) however the resulting attack led to nothing.

A couple of penalties and a few knock ons later Southampton managed to pull the ball out of their rapidly reversing scrum and attack down Romsey’s left wing. Quickly shut down by Romsey winger Jay Hodges, following a couple of phases of gaining very little off the brilliant Romsey defence. Southampton kicked the ball down Adams throat who got up to Southampton’s 22 before being taken down and sadly the support wasn’t there so Romsey gave away a penalty to release all the pressure they had piled on. Following great touchline work by Romsey’s flanker come centre Dan Murrant kept the ball alive and back into the arms of Johnson who yet again made great metres.

A little grubber through the Southampton line was picked up and sent out to the Southampton winger who tried to line up his opposite number Olly Soundy who preceded to cut him in half giving Piper an easy jackal however the referee pulled it back for an earlier knock on. At the resulting scrum Romsey (yet again) walked Southampton off their own ball unfortunately this was then dropped by Murrant. Looking to make up for the unfortunate mistake at the scrum Murrant flew out of the line and smashed his opposite number forcing a knock on in the process.

In a period of great rugby marked by some dominant runs by captain Scott and winger Soundy and some unfortunate knock ons Romsey ended up with a penalty which, after discussion between Lamont and Scott, they decided to kick for the posts. Despite the great distance Lamont’s kick looked to be heading through the posts until at the last minute it dropped onto the crossbar Romsey winger Hodges was the only player on the pitch awake to capitalise on the short kick, stepping three players in the process of scoring to put Romsey 10-0 up. The first half ended with some more dominant Romsey scrums but unfortunately the discipline gave Southampton an easy way into the Romsey 22. But again great Romsey defence kept Southampton scoreless in the first half.

Having gone in for a pink fluffy towel and a change of shirts Southampton kicked off the second half well drawing an early penalty (despite appealing for far more then they got) which they kicked to start their points tally for the afternoon. For the next 5 minutes Romsey dialed the pressure right up great running by all. Unfortunately, a spill on the Southampton released all the pressure. However, Adams got the ball in hand again ran round all but one Southampton player lodging Romsey back onto the Southampton 5 metre line. This time Romsey managed to capitalise, scoring in the corner to go 15-3 up. Full of enthusiasm Romsey centre Admire decided he had not done enough running in the game yet so went charging after Lamonts conversion attempt (which had slide wide) much to the amusement to all of the Romsey supporters.

The second half continued in the same vein as the first, some great running by Romsey forwards and centres but sadly the weather made it very difficult to capitalise on the great attacking play. Southampton grew into the second half after capitalising on a bouncing ball (having first taking the Romsey player without the ball out) were camped on the Romsey 5. Great defence kept them at bay for a while but Southampton found a way to get themselves a try. 8-15. The second half gave Silas Clarke a Romsey debut on the wing as well as bringing Oli Pike into the second row, both had a great half. Despite the Romsey dominance in the scrum (making at least 30 metres just off the scrum alone) and ball carrying they weren’t able to add to their points tally for the second half par a penalty slotted by Lamont. Some late Southampton pressure led to them scoring to make it a 3 point game with 20 seconds on the clock. Romsey managed to force a knock on ending the game 18-15 in favour of Romsey.

Coach’s thoughts, Jason Berry – “A wet cold day should have played into Southampton’s style of play and nearly did. However, our first half dominance was enough, the scrums were fantastic and on a dry day we would have ended up with a cricket score but it was not a dry day and we still found a way. Proud of the lads and we keep chipping away up next Chichester.”

Captain’s Comments, Harrison Scott – “I though the team played well across large parts of the game. With a slight lapse in energy in the last 15. This continues our good performances over the last few weeks. With a good run until Christmas we will be right in the thick of this league.”

More Images

Pre-Match Lunch 29th November

Beer, Batter, and Banter – RRFC Pre-Match Lunch 29th November

🍽 Menu:

  • Battered Fish, Triple-Cooked Chips & Garden Peas • Milk Chocolate Fondant with Chantilly Cream • Cheese Platters & Biscuits served after the game

🏉 Match: Romsey vs Chichester

⏰ Kick-off: 14:00

🏠 Clubhouse opens: 12:00

🍴 Lunch served from: 12:45

🍺 Bar open after the match – Real Ale on the hand pump!

🎟 Raffle prizes drawn before the match

✍️ Bring a tip for the waiting staff!

All are welcome – come for great food, rugby, and good company!

👉 Book your tickets now: https://events.romseyrugby.club

100 Club Winners

We are thrilled to announce our November results

Caroline Egg – 1st (£67.50)

Howard Finch – 2nd (£40.50)

Harrison Scott – 3rd (£27.00)

Due to increased membership the Fist Prize is now over £50!

Join Club 100 and Support Romsey Rugby Club – Join here.

The more members the higher the prizes!

50% of 100 Club payments help towards club running costs.

 

On the big screen

🏉 BIG SCREEN RUGBY AT ROMSEY RFC!

 

Join us this weekend as England take on Australia in the Autumn Internationals!

📅 Kick-off: 15:10

🍔 Hot food & bar open: from 14:30

 

Bring your mates, bring the family — everyone’s welcome! Enjoy great rugby, great company, and great food as we cheer the boys on! 🙌

 

Let’s pack the clubhouse and roar England to victory! 🏆🔥

 

📍 Romsey Rugby Club

🕒 Doors open 14:30

Bid for England v New Zealand Tickets

England v New Zealand at Twickenham on Saturday 15th November.

We have two tickets for this mammoth game – generously donated by our friends at Winchester RFC in aid of the Jibraan Chaudhary Sepsis Research Foundation. Championed by our under 15’s, with a  charity match at the end of last season, the Foundation was set-up in memory of Jibraan who died aged just 18 of sepsis relating to leukemia. Like many of our under 15’s, Jibraan was an Embley student and having completed his A Levels was just about to head off to university when after suffering what was thought to be a cold was diagnosed with leukemia.

Place your bids

We continue to support the JCSR Foundation and there is another charity match at the end of this season – but for now- please make your bids for these tickets for England v New Zealand at Twickenham on Saturday 15th November. All proceeds to the JCSR Foundation.

Click here to make you bids

If for what ever reason you cannot open this link. Please email your full name, your bid and your contact number to chairman@romseyrugby.club

Detail stuff

Bidding ends Saturday 8th November at 12 midnight.  Starting bid £250 for the pair.

The winning bidder will be contacted and the tickets will be transferred via the Allianz Twickenham app. For more info contact under 15’s manager and coach, Rachael and Matt Southey.

Hungerford vs Romsey 20.09.25

The rain greeted Romsey as they arrived for their first cup game in Berkshire against Hungerford RFC. The first team to get points was Romsey as fly-half Jim Lamont, renowned for his length, slotted a penalty from close to 50 meters out. Hungerford responded after a panicked response from Romsey when receiving the kick off that gave the home side possession within sight of Romsey’s try line; several phases from the resulting scrum put Hungerford over the line.

Hungerford didn’t relent after a knock on from the kick off from winger Alex Watts, giving the hosts a scrum that gave their backs the chance to make a play and put the ball over the line under the posts, giving them a clear lead.

Romsey didn’t lose hope as after some dominate attacking effort’s from Captain Harrison Scott’s pack of forwards battled their way within fifteen meters of the Hungerford try line and after a dominating driving maul from a line out put them within only five and then only two phases later, youngster Oli Pike, found the gap and dove over the line and after a successful conversion, Romsey were back in the fight at half time.

Replacements of wingers Josh Cleife and Alex Watts for Ollie Wise and Jay Hodges. The second half started rather uneventfully despite incredible scrummaging from forwards Dylan Argent, Alfie Lawrence, and Ryan Daly, as well as great defensive efforts from Admire Munenga, Sam Wilding, and Dan Murrant; complemented by some impressive attacking moves from Will Davies and Dan Penn-Newman. Additionally, a replacement for Elliott Johnson was made for Darren Hall. However, Hungerford hungered for the try line, after several phases of slowly but surely making their way from the twenty-two to the five-meter and then the try line.

Spurred not to fail, Romsey gathered all their remaining strength in the final five minutes after a driving maul from a line out drew in the defence, allowing space for the back to get the ball out to speedster Sam Adams to sprint around the defence and place one down for one final converted try but the efforts came short for an equaliser in the remaining five for a final score of 24-17

 

Thoughts from the coach:

Today we travelled into the unknown to Hungerford. There were a few changes, but I was really pleased with the lads coming in – they’re more than capable of playing week in and out for our club. The weather didn’t help, and it seems we didn’t get the rub of the green with some calls against a gnarly opponent . We’ll take it on the chin what we’ve learned and move on, with another game at home against Havant in two weeks. We go again.

 

Match report by Alex watts

Romsey vs Fareham Heathens- 13.09.2025

After last week’s disappointment against Farnham at Ganger Farm, a game in which really
Romsey should have come away with much more. This meant the boys in blue and gold felt as if
they had a point to prove after the heartbreak of the previous Saturday. The message from head
coach Jason Berry and throughout the dressing room was pretty simple which was: ‘We need to
show this league we aren’t here to make up the numbers’. The task at hand was a small trip
across to Fareham, who after two years at Hampshire counties 2 level would provide a stern test
for the visitors.

After a frenetic start from the hosts building a couple of phases together, the ball managed to spill
out into hands of Romsey scrum half Dylan Scott who belted the ball the best part of sixty metres(
mainly due to the prevailing winds throughout the afternoon unfortunately the kick went a little too
far and the subsequent goal line drop out missed the bread basket of Alfie Lawrence and
ultimately resulted in a Heathens scrum just inside their own 22 metre line.

Romsey moments later thought they had taken the lead through flyer Sam Adams after a great
piece of invention from Lamont, returning to his more favoured fly half position this week, but the
referee deemed there to have been a knock on when placing the ball down.

Then after a couple of stop start scrums and line outs within the Fareham Heathens 22 the
pressure finally told after a well worked backs move off one of the many scrums this game
witnessed. Some brilliant interplay between Scott and Lamont as well as an excellent 20 metre
pass from outside centre Aidan Cleland into the grateful arms of Sam Adams who was denied just
minutes before. Then he dotted down for a fairly straight forward score. Unfournately Sam’s try
was unconverted by Lamont.

After a period of sustained pressure from the hosts and a number of penalties and handling errors
from Romsey the home side through some good kicking from their captain and fly half. There was
some valiant defending in there from the visitors but after some decent phase play they calved
their way through to make the scores level at 5-5. The try remained unconverted as the Heathens
fly-half narrowly missed the posts.

Romsey responded well to the scored being tied up with some brilliant carries from the forwards
from the likes of the returning Nate Greathead and co. Before the ball was again spread brilliantly
by Cleland to the ever present threat Adams who was just held up about 5 yards before the line.
Luckily Adams managed to free his hands up to give the ball to pocket battleship and summer
arrival Ethan Hunt who crashed over for his first score in Romsey colours. Due to the wind kicking
conditions continue to cause havoc so this score wasn’t converted either 5-10.

The blue and gold then pushed to extend their marginal lead with again some brilliant carries and
phase play using some big hitters to tire out the Heathens Pack with the likes of Elliot
Johnson(EJ)battering the visitors around the breakdown. As well as some great turnover work
from skipper Harrison Scott and his back row partner in crime Ryan Daly. The pressure finally told
as Heathens gave away a needless penalty as Romsey began to creep in to the red zone and a
piece of intuition from Dylan Scott to take the quick tap penalty whilst the defence were retreating
led to the scrum half weaving his way over the whitewash for Romsey’s penultimate try. Cleland
attempted the conversion for this try, not helped by the fact that Scott did not run under the posts
for the try and instead went for flamboyant dive over the line so the angle was difficult in the
conditions therefore another two points were missed. Score now 5-15.

After a heavy downpour of rain at the end of the first half the visitors came out strongly again with
Dylan Argent and Dan Murrant carrying well providing some great go forward ball. The second
half saw the introduction of Romsey debutant Sam Matchan, who did not look out of place
producing some superb chop tackles. Eventually, this pressure forced an error from Heathens
giving away a penalty in a kickable position which Cleland slotted away with ease to extend the
Romsey lead to 5-18.

What followed this can only be described as a back’s worst nightmare with line outs and scrums
galore but against an experienced pack the relatively young pack of Romsey held their own especially one of                                                                      our many Sam’s on the side making his debut Sam Wilding. Much like his new
teammate Matchan, Wilding was like a duck to water handling the attrional set pieces with ease.
The theme of the game though beside some wonderful backs moves was the defensive effort
throughout the team keeping Heathens scoreless in the second half with relentless first up
tackling and break down work.

The visitors had more points in there sights and great turnover work again by Daly gathering
spilled ball and charging up the field. Possession was then shared for a while after a number of
handling errors from both sides. The ball came lose yet again in the Heathens back line which fly
half Lamont capitalised on putting boot to ball and running hell for leather up the other end of
pitch and it looked as if he was through until 10 metres from the line a try saving tackle put a holt
to the attack forcing Lamont to cough the ball up forwards.

Finally to take the maximum five points back to Ganger farm some lovely interplay from Admire
Munenga and Alfie Lawrence made sure that Romsey made positive in roads deep into the
Heathens 22. Before finally fresh off the bench Veteran Ben Hewitt quickly took the ball from base
of ruck and sucked multiple defenders in before producing a neat pop pass to Dylan Scott to
score his second try of the afternoon to round off a successful afternoon for Romsey. This try was
converted efficiently by Lamont leaving the final scored 5-25 to Romsey.

Romsey head away to Hungerford for an exciting cup fixture next weekend and then back in the
league at Havant III on the 4th of October back at Ganger Farm make sure you come down and
show your support for the lads.

Coach’s comments
JB: Today’s fixture showcased a resilient defensive display from the entire squad, with players 1
through 18 demonstrating unwavering commitment and tenacity a true reflection of the team’s
spirit. Fareham’s side posed a physical challenge, utilising a direct, route-one approach that put
our defensive organisation to the test.
Despite the stiff opposition, we maintained control of the game and capitalised on scoring
opportunities with precision and composure. While we could have potentially added more to the
tally, our performance was both disciplined and effective.
Looking ahead, the team is preparing for an important cup match before facing a formidable
Havant side at Ganger. Supporters are encouraged to rally behind the lads in full voice, as their
encouragement remains vital in pushing the team towards success.

Captain’s comments
HS: Thought the team fronted up well in an away fixture that has previously been a unsuccessful
hunting ground for us. Players such as Dylan Argent and new boy Sam Matcham really stood out.
Overall a very complete 5 point performance.

Written by Will Davies

2026 Six Nations Tickets

Applications from members are now being taken for the Six Nations 2026.

Here are the men’s Guinness Six Nations 2026 fixtures.

  • England v Wales – Saturday 7 February 2026- Twickenham Stadium – KO 16:40
  • Scotland v England – Saturday 14 February 2026 – Murrayfield Stadium – 16:40
  • England v Ireland – Saturday 21 February 2026 – Twickenham Stadium – 14:10
  • Italy v England – Saturday 7 March 2026 – Stadio Olympico – 16:40
  • France v England – Saturday 14 March 2026 – Stade de France – 20:10

We have a limited number of tickets at £133 each for Wales and Ireland with 15 and unders priced at £36. Away prices are £126 for Scotland, £40 for Italy and £98 for France.

If the number of applicants exceeds the number of tickets a ballot will be held for them at the November committee meeting.

The closing date for applications is 23:59 on Friday 31st October 2025 with payments to be made after notification of the ballot.

Further tickets may be available via the ticket exchange at a different price closer to game dates so be aware that you may get lucky and get all the tickets you ask for and thus be required to pay for all of them.

Currently we only have one pair for each of the away games but I hope to try and get more.

When applying for tickets applicants should refer to the International Ticket Guidelines found on the Club website (www.romseyrugby.club) under Information – Documents – General.

TICKETS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED DIGITALLY FROM NOW ON SO PLEASE DOWNLOAD THE TWICKENHAM APP

Application by email only to squealer13@yahoo.com.

Any questions please email me at squealer13@yahoo.com or via 07801323075.

Nick Creal

Matchday Real Ale Confirmed

Romsey Rugby Club’s intrepid beer connoisseurs (messrs Messenger, Bourne, and Paxton) have opted to open the season with Goodens Gold.

A unique blend of some of Hampshire’s finest low colour and lightly caramelised malted barley with a selection of British and North American hops. Known as a classic “Golden Ale” with a good level of bitterness and flavour to balance the gravity, the multi award winning Goodens Gold is named after Godwins who farmed the Flower Pots land in the early 19th Century and who famously produced the first Flower Pot pint of ale.

Available at the bar whilst stocks last – don’t miss yours.

Final few tickets available for the prematch lunch. Prematch Lunch Tickets

 

From The Chair – Romsey Rugby Club

 

Dear Romsey Rugby Club Members,

What a summer it’s been! As we gear up for another exciting season, I wanted to take a moment to reflect on the incredible energy, generosity, and community spirit that continues to define our club.

🌟 Highlights from the Off-Season

  • MNDA Fundraiser: Huge congratulations to Nick Smith and team for raising over £10,000 through a heroic bike ride, walk, and visits to every rugby club in Hampshire. An amazing achievement for a vital cause. https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/nick-smith-mnda.
  • Romsey Bed Race: A roaring success in July, with two club teams taking part—including the winning team! A massive shout-out to Tash Campbell and crew for making it happen.
  • Beer Festival: Back in June, we raised over £800 for club funds. Hats off to Ian Paxton, Dave Richardson, and the whole delivery team for a cracking event.
  • Awards Night: Celebrating our players and volunteers in style—check out the winners on our website.
  • Summer Camp: A huge success—thanks to Paul Finney for leading the charge. More notes to follow!

🚀 Looking Ahead

There’s so much going on—and it’s all thanks to our volunteers and sponsors. We simply couldn’t do it without you.

  • Referees Matter: As we head into the season, let’s remember the “R” in TREDS stands for Respect. We only get to play rugby because of our referees—let’s treat them accordingly.
  • Stay Connected: Join your relevant WhatsApp and Spond groups to stay in the loop.
  • Minibus Mission: A working group is now in place to source a new club minibus for this season.
  • 100 Club: It’s tripled in size—but our treasurer Neil Prowse (aka “Grumpy”) still wants YOU to sign up! Just £5/month, with 50% going to club funds and 50% in prize money. Join here.

📅 Upcoming Events

All events are now listed on our Ticketpass site. This season includes:

  • 10 Matchday Lunches – open to all, with juniors providing mascots for each home match.
  • OktoberfestChristmas PartyBurns Night, and Dinner Dance – all returning for another round of fun.
  • Senior Tour – pencilled in for Summer 2026.
  • Friday Co-Working Space – test opening from September.

🏃 Weekly Activities

  • Ladies Touch Rugby – Wednesdays from 10th September, 8–9pm on the 4G.
  • Veteran Men’s Touch Rugby – Mondays, 8–9pm.
  • Walking Rugby – Sundays, 11–12pm.
  • Senior Training – Mondays and Thursdays.

💼 Sponsorship & Recruitment

  • New Sponsors: Welcome aboard Spire Health and Ask About Mortgages!
  • Volunteer Roles Open:
    • Head of House
    • Social Media Content Generator
    • Social Media Poster
    • Event Organisers (individual or series)

If you’re keen to get involved, please reach out—we’d love to have you on board.

Thanks again for being part of this amazing club. Here’s to another season of rugby, camaraderie, and community.

Warm regards,
Tristan Pattison
Chair, Romsey Rugby Club

President’s Note

As we look ahead to an exciting new season, I want to take a moment to reflect on some recent successes and share a few updates.

Our rugby summer camp we held in August was a great success, and it’s important we continue to promote the value it brings to the club. The club coaches who supported the camp did a fantastic job and the camp coaches supported a great session with our seniors and colts, which received excellent feedback. The colts commented on how much they enjoyed and benefited from the session, which speaks volumes about the quality and commitment of our coaching staff and bodes well for the clubs future players . We’re pleased to say the camp coaches are already keen to return next year. While they are paid for their time, it’s clear they genuinely enjoy being part of our club community.

Looking forward, we’ll be promoting not just our on-field efforts but also the off-field initiatives that help bring us together—such as this year’s club lunches and the 100 Club. These are key parts of what makes our club special and we encourage everyone to get involved.

After last season’s seniors promotion, we know this year will bring new challenges, but we’re excited for what lies ahead. The squad is looking strong and has already shown real promise, with a win in our first friendly providing a great boost as we build toward the competitive season.

Thank you all for your continued support—we’re looking forward to a successful and enjoyable season together.

John

President

Safeguarding

At Romsey RFC the safety, wellbeing, and respect of every player, coach, volunteer, and supporter is our top priority — both on and off the pitch. We follow the RFU code of conduct and safeguarding practices for safe recruitment.

If you have any concerns — whether about player safety, welfare, or conduct — speak to our Club Safeguarding Officer, Katherine Glanville, at safeguarding@romseyrugby.club or 07801930097 . All reports are confidential and taken seriously.

We’re a team on and off the pitch. By following these safeguarding guidelines, we help make Romsey a safe, welcoming, and respectful place for everyone to enjoy rugby.

Matchday Lunch Invite – Romsey v Farnham*

 

🍽️ You’re invited to our first Matchday Lunch of the season!

Come along on Saturday 6th September for a cracking afternoon at Romsey Rugby Club as we take on Farnham RFC.

 

🕰️ Bar opens at 12:30

🍴 Lunch served around 1:00pm

🏉 Romsey v Farnham – Kick-off at 3:00pm

 

Enjoy a delicious three-course lunch served by our Juniors & Colts, and soak up the matchday buzz with fellow supporters. VPs eat FREE* — and *everyone* is welcome!

Starter

Warmed Focaccia, Beef Tomato and Bruschetta with Parma Ham

Main

Lasagna al forno, Potato wedges and Mixed Seasonal salad

Dessert

Classic Tiramisu with teas and coffees Cheese Board Selection

 

🎟️ Book now: https://ticketpass.org/event/EAKEBR/matchday-lunch-romsey-v-farnham

 

*VPs have three inclusive lunches per season.

Scrum down, temperatures up at Romsey RFC Camp

This year’s Romsey RFC Summer Camp took place at Ganger Farm under blue skies and a very hot sun. The 86 young players and 7 international coaches had to drink a great deal of water and apply equal quantities of sun cream during the course of the three days. It was exhausting, but the smiles and laughter showed that everyone was having fun.


The boys and girls were treated to some specialist coaching by such rugby names as Thinus Delport and Stuart Corsar. Thinus is well known to rugby fans as a pundit on BT Sport, and was a Springbok international. Stuart played for Glasgow and now works in the Scotland Women’s coaching team.
Andy Barlow, the coaching coordinator, thoroughly enjoyed his second year at the Romsey camp, saying that “the energy, skills and smiles on the pitch have been fantastic”


The camp’s success was also enjoyed by the Romsey coaches, who learnt as much as the players. Peter Jones, who is part of Romsey RFC’s Community Outreach team, said that the camp showed that “the club is ambitious and committed to growing the game.”

Senior Fixtures 25/26

Check out the new fixtures for our senior team. Next game against the Wheatsheaf cabin crew on the 23rd August.

Beer Festival 27 & 28 June

RRFC Beer Festival is LIVE!

Join us at Romsey Rugby Club for a cracking weekend of beers, live music and good times:

 

📅 Friday 27th June | 6–11pm

📅 Saturday 28th June | 4–10pm

(Plus a chilled-out Sunday to finish off any leftovers)

 

🎟 Tickets are £10 (+ fees) per session and include your first drink!

🍻 Beers by Cocky Anchor

🎶 Live music both nights

🌭 Food available to purchase

 

Everyone is welcome – club members, friends, family, and the local community.

🎫 Get your tickets now: https://events.romseyrugby.club 

Take your festival to the next level!

  • Volunteer for 1 session and get a free ticket to the other! (club members only)
  • Sponsorship opportunities from £60 to £250 with perks!
  • Contact the organising team for more details

All proceeds support RRFC fundraising.

Fancy a Cycle Ride for a Great Cause?

Join us on Sunday 22nd June for a community bike ride in support of Nick’s MND fundraising efforts as part of the **Rugby 4 Motor Neurone Disease** campaign.

This is a fantastic chance to get some fresh air, enjoy the countryside, and raise vital funds for the **MND Association**.

📅 Event Details:

Date : Sunday 22nd June

Start Location: Kings Chase Pavilion

Start Time:10:00am sharp

* **Route:** Cycle to **Winchester RFC and back** – with the option to extend your ride to include other local rugby clubs if you’re feeling adventurous!

How to Register:

Simply write to Chairman@romseyrugby.club to confirm your interest, or sign up in person at the clubhouse. All participants are encouraged to give what they can to support this important cause.

Whether you’re a regular cyclist or just fancy a social Sunday ride, **everyone is welcome**. Let’s come together to show what our rugby community can do!

Donate or support Nick’s ride here

https://www.justgiving.com/page/romseyrugbyclub4mnda

#Cycle4MNDA #Rugby4MNDA #MNDfundraiser #NickRides4MND #HampshireRugby

All Age Mixed Touch Rugby

When: Every Friday through the summer 6.30pm to 7.30pm

Where: 4G Pitch at Ganger Farm

No experience needed just turn up and have fun.

From 7 years up.

 

 

 

 

Hampshire Rugby 4 MND

The power of rugby beyond the pitch.

We are raising awareness and fundraising for all the MND community. Romsey RFC member and long-serving vice president, Nick Smith is living with MND. Nick is pictured here alongside his son Henry of Andover RFC Vets.

The idea is that you can cycle, run, walk or drive between any or all 34 Hampshire rugby clubs on any days between 14 – 22 June 2025. This is open to all ages and families not just limited to rugby club members. As you move from one club to another across the county take a photo then post and tag on social media.

Romsey Rugby Club is supporting Hampshire Rugby 4 MND and will be running a series of walking, running and cycling events across the 9 days from 14-22 June.

Join us on the 15th June for our walk from Romsey to Winchester – more details here

#HampshireRugby4MND

Contact: Tristan Pattison 07769 972135 or via chairman@romseyrugby.club
or simply approach your local Hampshire Rugby Club

Romsey RFC and MNDA Hiking Fundraiser

We’re lacing up our boots for an incredible cause, and you’re invited to walk with us in support of the Motor Neurone Disease Association (MNDA)
Date: Sunday 15th June 2025
Start: Romsey RFC, Ganger Farm Sports Park, SO51 0EE
Time: 9:00am (arrive 30 mins early)
Distance Options: Full route (12 miles): Romsey RFC ➡ Hursley ➡ Winchester RFC; Half route options available; Optional “third half” at Winchester RFC bar with other clubs
This walk is open to all – rugby clubs, families, friends, and four-legged companions too. Let’s show our colours and support Hampshire Rugby 4 MND and Nick Smith’s fight.
 Then join the WhatsApp Group (UK numbers only): 👉 https://chat.whatsapp.com/ICMiHSdYeVg3p7aJ5VU6a1
Can’t join the walk? You can still make a direct donation to support MNDA:
Let’s walk with purpose. Every step helps us get closer to finding a cure for Motor Neurone Disease. Please share with your friends, teams, clubs, and family.

Beer Festival Barrel Sponsorship

Beer Festival Barrel Sponsorship Packages
Support Romsey Rugby Club and enjoy great benefits by sponsoring a barrel at our Beer Festival! We’ve got four fantastic packages to suit all budgets, each offering increasing exposure and perks:
 Firkin Package – £60
* 2 entry tickets
* 5 drinks tokens
* Your name on the barrel and in the festival programme
 Kilderkin Package – £100
* 4 entry tickets
* 10 drinks tokens
* All Firkin benefits **plus** a focus page feature on the festival TV screens
 Hogshead Package – £150
* 6 entry tickets
* 12 drinks tokens
* All Kilderkin benefits **plus** a half-page advert in the festival brochure
Puncheon Package (Two Barrels) – £250
* 8 entry tickets
* 20 drinks tokens
* All Hogshead benefits **plus** a dedicated social media post promoting your business
 
Get involved, raise your profile, and help make the festival a cracking success! Contact chairman@romseyrugby.club for more information.

Player Sponsorship – Cracking Packages!

Sponsor a Player – Enjoy the Beer Festival and So Much More!

Romsey Rugby Club is excited to offer fantastic sponsorship packages that not only support your favourite player, but also give you access to amazing events – including our legendary Beer Festival & Dinner Dance! Whether you’re a business or an individual, this is your chance to get involved, enjoy exclusive perks, and be part of the RRFC family.

🍺 Sponsorship Levels & Benefits:

🥉 Bronze – £250

  • Name next to player on the team sheet
  • A pair of tickets for any two pre-match lunches
  • Perfect for casual supporters or first-time sponsors

🥈 Silver – £400

  • All Bronze benefits, plus your name on our Clubhouse TV page all season
  • Your chosen player gets: a choice of club socks or shorts, and either a club tie or bow tie
  • You get: 8 matchday lunch tickets to use throughout the season, and
  • 2 tickets to the RRFC Beer Festival
  • Great visibility and a toast to good times!

🥇 Gold – £550

  • All Silver benefits, plus a dedicated social media shout-out
  • Club socks and shorts for your player, plus a club tie or bow tie and £100 bar credit
  • You get: 12 lunch tickets, and
  • 4 tickets to the RRFC Beer Festival
  • More perks, more pints, and more presence!

🏆 Platinum – £750

  • All Gold benefits, plus a dedicated website feature
  • Full playing subs covered for your player plus socks, shorts, tie & bow-tie – all provided
  • You get tickets to every first-team matchday lunch, plus
  • 4 tickets to the Beer Festival, plus
  • 4 tickets to the Dinner Dance
  • Top-tier sponsorship for top-tier experiences

🎉 Get 30% off when sponsoring a second (or more) player!
📧 Ready to support? Contact treasurer@romseyrugby.club to secure your sponsorship or find out more.

Be part of something special – support a player, get involved, and join us in raising a glass to the RRFC spirit! 🏉🍻

Romsey Rugby Club AGM

Romsey Rugby Club AGM 2024/25 Agenda
First Notice

The forthcoming AGM to be held at the clubhouse at Ganger Farm on Tuesday 3rd June 2025. Doors at 18:00.

Agenda will be as follows:

1) Welcome and Introductions
2) To receive apologies for absence
3) To consider and approve the Minutes of the Annual General Meeting held on Thursday 4th June 2024
4) To receive a report from the President
5) To receive a report from the Chairman
6) To receive a report from the Junior Section
7) To receive a report from the Director of Rugby and Club Captain, and to outline their visions and aspirations for next season
8) To receive a financial report from the Treasurer setting out financial performance for the season, the current asset and liability position, and future projections
9) To elect the Members of the Executive Committee for next season – details to follow. Please note the deadline to nominate a candidate is 20th May 2025. For further details, please contact a member of the Executive Committee
10) To hear any other business for the consideration of the Executive Committee during the ensuing year but on which no voting shall be allowed

 

 

 

 

Old Technicians RFC 27 Romsey RFC 10

Romsey fall 3 games from Twickenham

Romsey senior men’s team season finally ended in a hard-fought defeat away in the depths of Devon at the hands of Old Technicians in the last 16 round of the Papa Johns Cup. The team took the field with high hopes after a promotion gaining season but the long away trip to Plymouth was a step too far for head coach Jason Berry’s squad which was a blend of youth and experience, the combined age of 7 players was 258, the other 12 came to 248.

 

The game started brightly with Dan Murrant taking the opening kickoff back with interest which allowed his brother Jack to unleash Romsey’s backline but a knock on thwarted the move. The first scrum saw Romsey under a bit of pressure as the squat Devonian front row manage to get lower and drive the visitors backwards giving them a penalty and a chance to relieve the pressure. From the ensuing lineout they sent waves of heavy runners at the Romsey defensive line but were repulsed by solid tackling by debutants Oli Pike and Ricky Drewitt and this combined with the jackaling skills of Dylan Argent and Harrison Scott kept the home side at bay before a thundering clearance kick from Ben Powell cleared their lines.

From the lineout OTs attacked but their handling let them down and the pass out in the centres was allowed to hit the floor allowing Tyler Beardsley to swoop and show an electric turn of tofu powered speed to outstrip the defence to give Romsey the lead slightly against the run of play. Jim “the prop playing 9” Lamont added the extras to make it 0-7 after 10 minutes.

With Elliott Johnson propelling Ryan Daly skyward at lineout time the ball was slickly passed down the line to Ollie Soundy who shimmied his way past his opposite man fed back inside to Dylan Scott who was thwarted by a fine tackle by his opposing full back but OTs had infringed earlier in the build-up and this gave the kicking prop Lamont a chance to extend the lead which he took with aplomb to make it 0-10.

OTs regathered the kickoff and began to use their forward runners to wear down the Romsey youngsters and their efforts bore fruit as they finally found a gap in the defence and opened their account to bring the score back to 7-10. Unfortunately, the restart failed to go the requisite 10m and from the ensuing scrum OTs attacked and set up a ruck just inside the Romsey half, when Ian Milanak had a momentary “Marty McFly” moment, forgot that you need to enter the ruck from behind the rear foot and returned to his college linebacker days coming on qb blitz round the corner and was deemed to have made contact slightly high and dangerously, resulting in a yellow card. The penalty was converted to make the scores level at 10-10.

A reshuffle saw the aging Darran Hall join the fray along with local boy Oliver Glanville and while Romsey were adjusting the OTs winger snuck over to give them the lead for the first time at 17-10.

Romsey attacked valiantly with Jack Murrant breaking through but he had elected to have boom and pow on his boots rather than long studs and slipped approaching the final defender which allowed the OTs to hold out until half time.

The second half started cagily with both sides making mistakes and not being able to capitalise on them although Jay Hodges did make a long mazy run after receiving a clearance kick and then analysing his route before setting off which gave Romsey a penalty that the wind forced wide.

With 10 minutes gone in the second half, Milanak looking for a late round draft pick to join the Steelers, launched himself into a large tackle on the chest of his opposite number but forgot to wrap his arms which the referee deemed to be worthy of a yellow card. Unfortunately, this meant that it now became a red and Romsey were to play the last 30 minutes with 14 players. The resulting penalty was slotted to make the score 20-10.

In a cunning attempt to fill the space the coach sent on a man the same width as 2 players, the veteran Nick Creal, who delved into his full locker of shithousery during his time on the pitch in an attempt to spark a comeback.

This almost paid off after one rampaging run the ball was sent wide to Josh Cleife, fired up by a broken phone screen, bounced of a defender and outpaced another before being hauled down by the last man.

The visitors held out valiantly until the final minutes when the effects of the 36-week long season finally told and OTs scooted over to make the final score 27-10 and end Romsey’s hopes of getting to Twickenham.

 

Post match head coach Jason Berry was magnanimous in defeat saying “Congratulations to Old Techs for the win. Massive well done to the two colts for stepping up. It was a nice physical game, with a full bench and a full strength team I think we would have won this type of game. However, it’s been a long season and a 12 hour day is a big ask so thank you to the lads that said yes”.

 

Captain Harrison Scott said “I thought we defended well for large parts of the game, a real welcome to rugby for a few of the upcoming colts but perhaps it was just a game too far for this young team”.

 

Thus, the curtain falls on a highly successful senior season which saw Romsey win 16 games, draw 2 and only lose 4 whilst gaining promotion to Counties 2 Hampshire using a total of 47 players, along with getting a twos side out of 3 occasions, the future is looking bright for the club as a whole.