Wed 04 Nov 2020 21:33

A long long time ago in a galaxy far far away there was a small school, in a small town on a small Island with a group of schoolboys with nothing in common but a taste for beer and a liking for oddly shaped balls. It was from these humble beginnings that Ramsey Rugby Union Football Club was born.

Under the expert tutelage of Graham Atkinson and Peter Hooson-Owen, Rugby Union was introduced as a curriculum sport at Ramsey Grammar School in the mid 1970s. Both Graham and Peter were playing for Douglas Rugby Club at that time and were keen to share their knowledge with an eager northern audience.

Rugby was a success in the school and as the first batches of pupils began to leave the education system, they found that there was nowhere to play in Ramsey and the north. There were clubs in Peel, Douglas and Ronaldsway, but nowhere else. The decision to form a team was easy to take and in the late 1970s the first Ramsey side took the field. The game was played against Douglas and we won!! The score and other details like that have been lost in the mists of time however Victor Ferreira apparently scored the winning try under the sticks at the school end of the back pitch at the Grammar School.

In the early days, kit was borrowed as was the odd player needed to make up the numbers. The club took part in the big Douglas Easter Festivals as well as playing friendlies against the local sides. The side was made up mainly of youngsters who were fairly new to the sport so it wasn’t a great surprise to find that defeats were common and often heavy. In fact at times, the results were so poor that it was suggested to fold the club. The early diehards had none of this however and good or bad, right or wrong, win or lose the club carried on and on 1 December 1982 was finally admitted to membership of the RFU.

1980s
RFU membership meant recognition. The club was listed in the RFU Club directory and contact details were instantly available to clubs around England. As a full member, Ramsey was also entitled to a vote at RFU meetings and an allocation of International tickets. RFU membership also brings with it certain obligations. Colours were needed; players insurance, subs had to be paid not just to Twickenham but also to Cheshire RFU and a whole host of other bits and pieces of admin work which crop up the minute a club becomes official.

It was during this period that the club appointed its first full time official in the rather large shape of Bryan “Doobie” Strickett. Doobie wasn’t actually full time as such however after a back problem ended his playing career, he invested so much of his personal time in Club work that he may as well have been full time. Doobie was the Club Secretary and he used this role to involve himself in as much of the club’s operations as he could. He booked pitches, organised referees, helped out at training, collected subs, acted as touch judge and sponge man. He kept records, photographs and press cuttings. He organised the Club’s dinners, the Christmas Disco, he kept minutes of meetings, he ordered kit and he dealt with all Club correspondence and represented Ramsey at the Isle of Man Federation of Rugby Clubs. If anyone ever deserved the title Mr Ramsey Rugby in the 1980s it was Doobie. Without the effort he put into these early years, the club wouldn’t be the success it is now.

The Club initially played in what was known as “The Second Team Shield” however as the 1980s neared an end another new club sprung up on the Island (Southern Nomads) a sponsor was found for the competition and a formal domestic league was set up. The Castletown Ales Manx Shield as it was known then was played in much the same way as it is now. Everyone plays each other home and away and the winner is the team with the most points at the end of it all. New club Southern Nomads won the first Manx Shield in 1987/88 and Ramsey bagged it in 1988/89 to show that the decision to carry on playing was a good one. 1988 also saw the club make its first Tour which was to Peebles in the Scottish borders.

1990s
The Manx Shield was dominated by Vagabonds B in the early 1990s. Ramsey were right behind them and rivalry was pretty fierce on the field (and off it too on occasion). Games between the two were very close, often decided by a single penalty and this only served to intensify the rivalry. In May 1994 however the annual General meeting of the Club took a decision which was to change the fortunes of the club on the field and kick start a whole new phase of domestic domination for Ramsey. What did they decide? I hear you cry, well, they made Alf Cannan Captain.

Under Alf’s leadership Ramsey took the Manx Shield in 1994/95 and again in 1995/96. We also won the Shield in 1996/97, 1998/99, 1999/00, 2000/01, 2001/02, 2002/03, 2003/04, 2004/05 and 2006/07 in a period of domination which saw the club outgrow domestic competition.

Another landmark in the 1990s was the introduction of a second team. The Shield success in the late 80s saw a big influx of new players to the club and eventually there were just too many to try and fit in one team. The seconds competed in the Shield along with the firsts and while they weren’t as successful the second team proved to be an excellent breeding ground for future first teamers.

The final big development of the 1990s was the Mooragh Project. After much soul searching the club decided to embark on a pitch development at the Mooragh. Much fundraising had been done for this but even so the project took just about every penny we had and only for Ramsey Town Commissioners weighing in with £5000 we would have been on our uppers. Thankfully, the pitch project was a huge success. The surface is excellent for running rugby and it drainage is second to none. Since the pitch was opened in 1996 we’ve lost very few games to bad weather. At the time it cost around £35000 which now seems like money well spent.

The noughties and beyond
The Shield became Ramsey property more or less and while a slight fall in playing numbers saw us drop the second team we formed an alliance with Southern Nomads and launched the Northern Spaniards. This loose association allowed us to continue blooding new players until we were strong enough to stand on our own again. The Spaniards’ final game saw them lift the Shimmin Wilson Manx Bowl at the end of 2006/07. We are now back up to 2 teams of our own and have moderate success both on and off Island.

By far the biggest development in the 2000s to date has been the building of our very own clubhouse. This project was driven by Garry Vernon and Sally Mason and was funded by our own money raising, an interest free loan from the RFU and Sports Council & Lottery Grants. The building opened in December 2003 and has seen plenty of use from both the club and members of the local community. In 2013 the facilities were enhanced by the addition of match standard floodlights at the Mooragh which helps with training, making links between the club and Ramsey Grammar School, and those winter late kick offs.

Thanks are due to many people for this pivotal development for the club and there are too many to mention here. Special thanks are however due to our representative at the RFU the late Mike Lord for all the support he gave us in the corridors of power and also to the late Eric Quinn whose firm E&E Construction did the building work.

Cheshire Cup and Plate
With success coming on the Island in the 1990s it was the right time to try and build some off the Island and the club entered the Cheshire Cup for the first time. We lost away at Shell Stanlow (now Ellesmere Port) and Old Anselmians but finally we got a few wins too. Port Sunlight, Wallasey, Parkonians, Helsby and Runcorn all crashed out of the competition against non-league Ramsey at some stage and we have also given bigger clubs plenty of scares along the way.

In recent years however reorganisation of the County competitions has seen our entry restricted to the Cheshire Plate only. The building of a bar and clubhouse has meant that we can play our home fixtures at home and use the bar revenue to assist with the travelling costs which we have to pay. For those of you who don’t know, the Manx side have to meet the travelling expenses of the UK side in full. For this reason we’ve not entered for many years.

Ramsey Juniors
In the early 2000s it became readily apparent that we needed to become more proactive in player recruitment. We had and still have a fantastic game to be involved with both on and off the field but we were doing nothing to market it.

Club coach Gareth Hinge MBE together with a dedicated band of volunteers took the bull by the horns. Coaching qualifications were obtained and contacts were forged with local schools and we started to bring rugby to the north. Our junior section was formed and we are now seeing the fruits of all this hard work with juniors making the leap into our senior sides.

Their finest hour?
No resume of the club’s history would be complete without a mention of the Manx Cup. The Cup had been the exclusive property of Douglas and Vagabonds for a long long time. The draw was seeded each year and we always fell at the semi final hurdle when we met the league sides. All that changed in 1995 when a semi final victory against Douglas put us into the final. We were out muscled by Vagabonds in 1995 and again the following season. A third consecutive final was ruled out in 1997 when MRFU awarded a drawn semi to Douglas year and the run seemed all but over…….until 2001.

We beat Nomads 63-0 in the opening round and went on to meet Vagabonds in the semi final. We lost 18-13 at the Mooragh but the MRFU ordered the game to be replayed after Vagabonds fielded ineligible players. They were unable to comply with the replay order and our place in the final was secured.

The final against Douglas was on 5 May 2001 and a try by Chairman Billy Kneale saw us squeeze out Douglas 20-15 in a magical afternoon which saw skipper Mike Caine lift the Cup to make Ramsey the first and only team to do the Manx Double.

For the record the squad that day was Simon Mason, Billy Kneale, Chris Melvin, Darren Ideson, Tynan Pritchard, Mike Caine, Will Moffatt, Mark Corkill, Geoff Quayle, Matt Moffatt, Aneurin Pritchard, Gareth Hinge MBE, Garry Vernon, Myles Ellis, Dave Harding, Mickey Melvin, Chris Penketh, Matt Livesey, Jason Walker, Andy Gale and Rupert Leaton.

The League years
After several seasons of struggling with domestic fixtures the Club was finally admitted into the English Clubs Championship in 2008 and details of that are below. There was promotion and relegation along the way but the team bagged its first league title in 2019 when we won Lancs/Cheshire Division 3.

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