Wasps Women
Before they conquered all, Wasps Women worked shifts in the club kitchen just to validate their existence. For forty years they’ve been the great entertainers of the women’s game, until they weren’t. When the men’s side imploded, the impact reverberated from Coventry down the M40, with the women’s team forced to leave the division they once dominated.
Alex Goode
Glued to the television, a twelve-year-old Alex Goode didn’t miss a point as he watched Britain capture their first-ever badminton medal at the Olympics. He’d found his sporting hero, who just happened to also be his Aunty Jo.
Mark Atkinson
He was let go by both Sale and Wasps, and then found himself in the basement of the English second tier, but Mark Atkinson found the road to redemption began at Goldington Road, known for having a Lazarus-like impact on lost rugby souls.
Dorchester
The Dorchester Gladiators arrived for the tour match wearing heavily the impact of the night before, which had ended only a few hours earlier. As they stepped from the bus, they found themselves facing photographers and TV crews. On the pitch, things got worse, as they faced the 24-time Romanian champions, with every minute broadcast live on national television.
Royal Navy Rugby
One month they could be facing the Army in front of 50,000, the next they’re facing Somali pirates armed with assault rifles in hostile waters. Their greatest honour is made from the timber of Lord Nelson’s ship, and HMS Ark Royal once ruled the rugby pitch, as it did the waves. Royal Navy rugby is never dull.
Andy Allen
Imprisoned for drink driving; sharing a prison cell with a man who’d tried to burn down a house with his kids inside; fearing that cancer might take him, like it took his mum; former Welsh lock Andy Allen was put on suicide watch. He’d thought about it before, so much had happened, but this time it was a failed fraudster that helped save him.
Elaine Vassie
Losing 148-0 is no way to start a national league rugby career, but Elaine Vassie is made of sterner stuff. A rugby career that began as the result of a crash with an Army Land Rover, has zigzagged its way upward to Dallas, Texas, where she’s now helping to shape a new frontier in American rugby.
BUCS Rugby
University rugby was once considered the game of the elite, but the rise of BUCS rugby has changed the face of the sport. At a time of instability within the professional game, our educational institutions could provide an answer.
Leeds
Sunday 2nd September, 2001. The SkyRack was bouncing. Phil Davies was bouncing, dual-international Steve Bachop was bouncing, young Tom Palmer was bouncing, the whole place was bouncing… ... this was a night like no other for professional rugby union in the city of Leeds. Once-mighty Bath had been beaten, 10-6, by the upstarts from Headingley and the city was in celebration mode. There’s only one way rugby in Yorkshire is going from here…
Exeter Chiefs Women
They arrived from Spain, America, Holland, France, Japan, Canada, some just in time for kick off. But with a core of local talent, Exeter Chiefs somehow managed to beat the very best in the Allianz Premier 15s.
Rachel Taylor
She was a pioneer in the Welsh game. A fully professional, female coach of a national side. Rachel Taylor started the job in November but left the following March. A career with Wales that spanned three World Cups shouldn’t have ended like this. And it won’t. Not if the North Walian backrower has her way.
Mark Bingham
Mark Bingham rang his mum from United Airlines Flight 93. She was a flight attendant and insisted he sit down and not get noticed but, together with other passengers, that wasn’t going to happen. “He was six foot five, he played rugby. He was never going to sit down.”
Ayaz Bhuta
For his first fourteen years, hospital was a second home for Ayaz Bhuta. Some people, even relatives, said he wasn’t ‘normal’. They were right. Becoming world champion isn’t something ‘normal’ people do. This is the ‘Jonah Lomu of wheelchair rugby’ we’re talking about, a man so special he never has to pay for fried chicken again.
Aly Muldowney
Stafford, Staffordshire. Seemingly unremarkable, with a ‘favourite son’ that penned the seminal works on fishing and another finding fame with Boon and Bob the Builder. It’s had its moments of excitement too, with Viking invasions and civil wars and was branded ‘Little London’ by James I. Now, it has a somewhat lesser-known, but still loved, favourite son back in the fold: Aly Muldowney.
Tonga
To some Tonga is seen only as an island paradise. To others, it’s a country caught up in a global drugs trade, with an economy that relies on overseas relatives, and is being forced to accept a growing influx of convicted criminals. To put it another way, losing a rugby match 102-0 to the All Blacks is the least of its worries.