Celtic Warriors

For other uses, see Celtic warrior.
Celtic Warriors
Founded 2003 (disbanded in 2004)
Location Bridgend, Wales
Pontypridd, Wales
Ground(s) Brewery Field
Sardis Road (Capacity: 12,000
7,861)
Chairman Leighton Samuel
Coach(es) Wales Lynn Howells
Captain(s)

Wales Gareth Thomas

EnglandRichard Bryan
League(s) Celtic League
2003–04 4th

The Celtic Warriors were a regional rugby union team from Wales, who played in the Celtic League and Heineken Cup between 2003 and 2004 following a merger between Welsh clubs Pontypridd RFC and Bridgend RFC at the inception of Regional Rugby in Wales. The two clubs still compete at a semi-professional level.

History

Celtic Warriors badge - 2004/05 season (unplayed)

The Warriors were one of the five original regions of the Welsh Regional Rugby Era. The club came into being in the summer of 2003 when the Welsh Rugby Union controversially elected to reduce the current top tier of Welsh Professional Rugby from nine clubs into five regions, attempting to mirror the successful formats in Ireland and the Southern Hemisphere countries of South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.

Officially representing the mid-Glamorgan area, including Merthyr Tydfil, Aberdare, Pontypridd, Caerphilly, Maesteg and Bridgend, and south Powys, the Celtic Warriors was in practice a combination of the Pontypridd RFC and Bridgend RFC Welsh Premier League Clubs. With Bridgend RFC having clinched the 2002/2003 Welsh Premier League title and Pontypridd RFC being consistently strong in those competitions, the Warriors were considered one of the strongest line-ups of the five Welsh regions.

However, problems dogged the region from the very start, as they similarly did with the other merged regions of the Neath-Swansea Ospreys and the Newport Gwent Dragons. Discussions and arguments abounded about the team name, colours and home grounds for most of the summer of 2003. The name "Valley Ravens" was a controversial choice but seen by many as a fair compromise (Bridgend's nickname was the Ravens while Pontypridd fans welcomed the Valley reference), however various marketing persons within the Welsh Rugby Union did not like it. "The Crusaders" and "Celtic Crusaders" met with widespread disapproval from both sets of fans as it incorporated neither team's identity. "Celtic Warriors" was finally decided upon more out of the need for a name than from any real agreement.

Argument over team colours ran alongside the naming problem until a compromise blue, black and white shirt was unveiled and satisfied most people, as did the initial decision to play an equal number of games at Bridgend's Brewery Field and Pontypridd's Sardis Road.

The team itself performed well for a squad almost completely rebuilt over the summer, acquitting themselves well in both the Celtic League and European Rugby Cup. However financial problems at Pontypridd RFC led to the sale of their half of the Warriors to Bridgend RFC owner Leighton Samuel, which he in turn gave to the WRU, a move that would later condemn the club. Further problems occurred as Samuel made the decision to abandon Pontypridd's Sardis Road in favour of playing all Warriors games in Bridgend. This brought the club into conflict with a large proportion of its fan base and attendances fell.

Trouble followed in the Spring and early Summer of 2004 where Leighton Samuel repeatedly threatened and revoked threats of selling the club; one such instance went as far as Samuel accepting an offer from the WRU before changing his mind. This transaction was considered to be legally binding, and the Warriors became 100% owned by the WRU who decided to liquidate the club on 1 June 2004.[1]

Samuels claimed that the WRU had promised to keep the region going for a second season but reneged on the deal. He challenged the Union over this in a high court case which the Union settled just before it came to court.

Aftermath

With the demise of the club, players' contracts were effectively torn up as they were pushed around to fill positions in the other four regional sides. A number simply chose to turn their back on the Welsh game and moved to teams in England and France. This left the ex-Warriors' fans feeling alienated from the professional game.

In the aftermath of the demise of the Warriors, a new rugby league club Celtic Crusaders was formed and played out of Brewery Field. They were funded by Leighton Samuel, who claimed that they were the reincarnation of the Warriors franchise. The club lasted four seasons in Bridgend before relocating to Wrexham under new ownership.

Home Ground

The "Warriors" shared their home games between Bridgend's Brewery Field ground (home of Bridgend RFC) and Pontypridd's Sardis Road ground (home of Pontypridd RFC).

The region included two Welsh Premiership teams namely Bridgend RFC and Pontypridd RFC

Statistics

Celtic League

SeasonPosPlayedWonDrawnLostBonusPoints
2003–044th221408965

Celtic Warriors 2015 Super rugby champs. Neil jenkins top point scorer

Celtic League Cup

Seasonvs.RoundScore
2003–04Glasgow1st19–9

Heineken Cup

SeasonPool/RoundPosPlayedWonDrawnLostBonusPoints
2003–04Pool 62nd6402420

Squad

Note: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-WR nationality.

Player Position Union
Mefin Davies Hooker Wales Wales
Matthew Rees Hooker Wales Wales
Andrew Joy Hooker Wales Wales
Christian Balshen Hooker Wales Wales
Gethin Jenkins Prop Wales Wales
Chris Horsman Prop Wales Wales
Christian Loader Prop Wales Wales
Martin Jones Prop Wales Wales
Phil Booth Prop Wales Wales
Geraint Morris Prop Wales Wales
Dwayne Goodfield Prop Wales Wales
Robert Sidoli Lock Wales Wales
Brent Cockbain Lock Wales Wales
Ryan Jones Lock Wales Wales
Deiniol Jones Lock Wales Wales
Maama Molitika Flanker Tonga Tonga
Richard Parks Flanker Wales Wales
Nathan Budgett Flanker Wales Wales
Nick Kelly Flanker Wales Wales
Cory Harris Flanker Wales Wales
Mark Lewis Number 8 Wales Wales
Richard Bryan Number 8 England England
Player Position Union
Gareth Cooper Scrum-half Wales Wales
Sililo Martens Scrum-half Tonga Tonga
Paul John Scrum-half Wales Wales
Neil Jenkins Fly-half Wales Wales
Ceri Sweeney Fly-half Wales Wales
Sonny Parker Centre Wales Wales
Dafydd James Centre Wales Wales
Jonny Bryant Centre Wales Wales
Lee Thomas Centre Wales Wales
David Bishop Centre Wales Wales
Shaun James Centre Wales Wales
Gareth Thomas (c) Wing Wales Wales
Aisea Havili Wing Tonga Tonga
Matthew Nuthall Wing Wales Wales
Richard Mustoe Wing Wales Wales
Emyr Lewis Wing Wales Wales
Gareth Wyatt Fullback Wales Wales
Kevin Morgan Fullback Wales Wales
Gareth Cull Fullback Wales Wales

British and Irish Lions

Other notable achievements

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. "WRU axe falls on Warriors". bbc.co.uk. 2004-07-01. Retrieved 2008-03-01.
  2. Three poles challenge for rugby player Richard Parks
  3. "Richard Parks secures record with seventh summit". BBC Sport. 12 July 2011. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
  4. "Richard Parks claiming 'fastest Briton' record to reach South Pole", BBC News, 4 January 2014
  5. Smith, Gary (3 May 2010). "Gareth Thomas... The Only Openly Gay Male Athlete". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 12 June 2010.
  6. Hugh, Montgomery (1 August 2010). "The IoS Pink List 2010". London: The Independent. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  7. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3808679/
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.