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Author : Topic: London Cornish  Bottom
 DICKON
 Posts : 169
 National League 2
  Posted 17/02/2008 09:33:23 PM
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Thanks Skippy - will do. If I get time will pen a report on the game too. Merlin - yes, Telegraph is about a 10 minute taxi ride away depending on traffic, and they are expecting us! Let me know roughly how many you think will come back.

 Bay
 Posts : 3867
 Bay
  Posted 17/02/2008 09:44:42 PM
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There will be at least 20 of us coming over

 The Druth Hurts
 Posts : 1462
 World Cup
 The Druth Hurts
  Posted 17/02/2008 09:54:40 PM
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And furthermore

Oh yes!

I think I shall stick to what I'm good at and, as soon as I can work out what that is, I shall stick to it!
 Pz01
 Posts : 1047
 World Cup
 Pz01
  Posted 18/02/2008 08:07:25 AM
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You will be pleased to know that your driver has been to the Telegraph before, so have a good idea where it is.

Youth & Talent are No Match for Age & Treachery
 BayofPlenty
 Posts : 2811
 BayofPlenty
  Posted 18/02/2008 11:01:33 AM
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Ah, but are you still allowed in there, mate?  

The Wirral Panacea. Most efficacious in every case.
 merlin
 Posts : 3770
 merlin
  Posted 29/02/2008 07:47:11 PM
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Another tough game tomorrow Dickon,at least the lads have had two weeks to get over the bumps and bruises.Have a good day.  

Mounts Bay Rugby---Pride Of Penzance & Newlyn
 DICKON
 Posts : 169
 National League 2
  Posted 01/03/2008 08:35:42 AM
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Thx Merlin. Set fair here with string breeze but dry, bright conditions. Should be a decent game.

 BayofPlenty
 Posts : 2811
 BayofPlenty
  Posted 01/03/2008 10:46:09 AM
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Good luck, Cornish  

The Wirral Panacea. Most efficacious in every case.
 merlin
 Posts : 3770
 merlin
  Posted 01/03/2008 04:56:49 PM
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Well done L.C. great result today.

Mounts Bay Rugby---Pride Of Penzance & Newlyn
 Pz01
 Posts : 1047
 World Cup
 Pz01
  Posted 01/03/2008 06:47:42 PM
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Yes, well done Cornish, must have been a great second half, must have picked up somthing at Scottish last week.  

--Last edited by Pz01 on 2008-03-01 18:48:08 --

Youth & Talent are No Match for Age & Treachery
 DavidW
 Posts : 1647
 World Cup
 DavidW
  Posted 01/03/2008 07:00:18 PM
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Well done Cornish, keep it going

 DICKON
 Posts : 169
 National League 2
  Posted 01/03/2008 10:36:36 PM
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LONDON 3 SOUTH-WEST
01/03/08
LONDON CORNISH v WINCHESTER

London Cornish 35 - Winchester 11

A superb all round performance against Winchester landed London Cornish their 9th win in their last 12 league matches and their 6th straight home win, as they cemented 5th place in London 3 South-West in their first ever season at this level. That the result turned round a 34-0 defeat against the same opponents back in September demonstrates just how much improvement there has been from the exiles as they won this match by 1 goal, 5 tries and a penalty to a try and 2 penalties.

Cornish were able to call on a raft of players unavailable for the Cobham match, James Turnbull, Thornton Williams, Chris Milne, James Strover, Joe Purcell and Jim Reynolds all called in to the squad, the latter for his league debut. The pitch at the REMPF was once again in fantastic condition, and the game began in fine conditions between 2 sides closely matched on league placings. The formlines however, told another story, the visitors on the back of a run of 6 straight defeats. Despite this, the Hampshire side were quicker out of the blocks and, with the aid of a very strong wind at their backs, they dominated the first 10 minutes. Cornish tackled hard, Will Ho, Rod Petre and Skipper Mike Allewell at the forefront of the barricades. Cornish were penalised for offside on 8 minutes and the visiting kicker slotted the kick to give his side the lead. With their first real sortie into the visitors half Cornish scored. A lineout on halfway was worked left to right for fly-half Dan Pollard to hoist a kick in behind the Winchester defence. The ball bounced awkwardly and was grabbed by the chasing Williams, who drove over the line to give the exiles the lead on 12 minutes. The conversion attempt slammed into an upright and went wide. Cornish failed to gather the restart and were made to pay, two phases resulting in a scrum from which the Winchester no 8, a decent ball carrier who had a fine game, slipped under an attempted tackle and burst clear to score wide left. This conversion attempt also hit an upright and went wide to leave the visitors 8-5 up. Back came Cornish again, on 15 minutes centre Henry Mitchell bursting a tackle and clearing away from just inside the Winchester half to power over to the left of the posts. Pollard, for the first time this season, struggled with the windy condition when place kicking and his attempt again went wide. The lead would not last long as with their very next attack on 18 minutes, the Hampshire side caught Cornish offside at a scrum and the resultant penalty was well struck by their kicker to give his side back the lead. Now the game settled down and Cornish began a steady process of gaining dominance up front, Pete Calvert and Milne making a real nuisance of themselves at the lineouts. In the tight Cornish also began to turn the screw, Turnbull, Allewell and Ben Shribman forcing strikes against the head in the opening period. On 26 minutes and with Cornish now the dominant force, centres Mitchell and Graham Dodge forged up the middle and onto the visitors 22. Winchester were penalised for not rolling away and Pollard drove his kick into the wind and between the uprights to register the sixth change of lead in the game so far. Crucially, this was also the last one. Though Cornish dominated possession for the remaining minutes of the half, the strong wind aided the booming boot of the Winchester fly-half who could clear his lines with interest. The visitors did win a penalty on half-way but their kicker scuffed his attempt wide of the posts to leave the score at the break 13-11 to the exiles.

Though the wind was now in their favour, few could have foreseen the gearchange Cornish found in the second half. Within minutes of the restart the home side disrupted a Winchester scrum in their half, turned over the ball at the base and spread it wide right. Wing George Bramble cut a great line at the angle to dash over on the right flank, the conversion again drifting narrowly wide. 48 minutes on the clock and the lead was extended again, a penalty kicked to the corner for Calvert to snaffle and the forwards driving over for Ho to claim the score, the kick missing again. Almost immediately, a fantastic passage of play saw the ball move through 7 pairs of hands as forwards and backs linked to send Bramble clear for his second score under the posts, Pollard adding the extras. In the space of 12 minutes Cornish had scored 17 unanswered points to effectively settle the match with three high quality tries. Though Winchester toiled hard, their tactic of using a series of runners close to rucks and mauls was simply not testing enough and now playing into the wind, they could not gain field position. They were also increasingly picking up knocks with players left behind on the floor following many of the rucks and mauls, a surefire sign of a side under pressure. With Jim Strover joining in attacks from full back, the range of options available to Mike Dardis and Pollard was wide and varied. Cornish made a couple of changes to freshen the side, Milne who had suffered from cramp having only recently returned from New Zealand, being replaced by Purcell at 8, Bramble resting a troublesome knee to allow Reynolds to make his debut, and Turnbull (who continues to enjoy fine form at scrum time) giving way to Simon Wood. The one way traffic was not disrupted by the changes, Purcell in particular making a real impact with his powerful ball carrying from the base of the pack. On 64 minutes Cornish scored their last and arguably best try. Wing Mike Harvey had repeatedly demonstrated strength and pace when in possession during the game, and now he was given some room just inside the visiting half. He ran at the outside shoulder of the Winchester 13 and stepped away from him to be faced by his opposite winger who showed him the outside. Mistake. Burned on the outside and clutching at thin air as Harvey flew by, he saw his full back dismissed in a similar vein as the flying exile crossed the whitewash without a finger being laid on him to dive over wide left. This was finishing of the highest order and was warmly greeted by the home crowd. Though the kick fell short across the freshening breeze, the lead was now out to 35-11. Winchester reinforced their reputation as side who never give up in the remaining minutes, their combative forwards continuing to work overtime. They eschewed kickable penalties to try and rumble Cornish back from lineouts, a tactic that has foundered every time it has been tried against the exiles in the last few months. Cornish also tried to repeat the earlier success of this tactic late on, but were held up. Two penalties were won in the shadow of the visitors posts, a scrum and a tap penalty not resulting in any further scores, though Ho was cut in one and could take no further part in the game. Since there were only 90 seconds left, being down to 14 men made no difference to the score, the final whistle going on a well refereed encounter.

Winchester may well have underestimated their opponents on this occasion, the ease with which they had dismissed Cornish in the reverse encounter masking the improvement shown by the exiles since then. With these two sides poised to be facing each other again next season, it is unlikely they will underestimate them again. The Winchester crew all made it back to The Telegraph and were good value. With no promotion or relegation issues to bother them, they can enjoy their remaining games this season. Cornish remain in tremendous form, and with their massive squad being bolstered by the day, the exiles will present an awkward task for all of their remaining opponents in London 3 South-West. This is a young side too, so there should be plenty more to come...



LCRFC – Jim Strover, George Bramble (Jim Reynolds), Graham Dodge, Henry Mitchell, Mike Harvey, Dan Pollard, Mike Dardis, Chris Milne (Joe Purcell), Rod Petre, Will Ho, Thornton Williams, Pete Calvert, James Turnbull, Mike Allewell (Capt.), Ben Shribman.


 DICKON
 Posts : 169
 National League 2
  Posted 08/03/2008 08:14:41 PM
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Effingham & Leatherhead 9 London Cornish 9

Despite dominating possession, fantastic defence from the home side prevents Cornish from crossing their line in a turgid match in London 3 South-West. Full report to follow tomorrow.

 Newlyn Boy
 Posts : 1229
 World Cup
 Newlyn Boy
  Posted 09/03/2008 00:30:48 AM
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Was that a disapointing result? Would you have taken it before kick off?

Ben Batten's Newlyn rugby jersey
 DICKON
 Posts : 169
 National League 2
  Posted 09/03/2008 06:37:14 PM
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LONDON 3 SOUTH-WEST
08/03/08
EFFINGHAM & LEATHERHEAD v LONDON CORNISH

Effingham & Leatherhead 9 - London Cornish 9

London Cornish secured a decent point at Effingham on Saturday in London 3 South-West, and the young squad will have learnt much from such a turgid encounter against opponents they dominated for long periods of the game. With both sides registering 3 penalties each, it was nevertheless a fascinating match albeit not one for the purist, as both sides struggled with the conditions and with a referee who may need to work on his fitness.

With the skiing and wedding seasons now upon us, it is frustrating that Cornish had to make 7 changes from the squad who produced such a fine performance the previous week, Ben Wheeler, Rob Aird, Mark Williams-Jones, Pete Drewett, Adam McVicar, Keith Thompson and Justin York all coming in to the squad, the latter for his league debut from the bench. Effingham are a crafty outfit, switching the match from their big, wide 1st team pitch to a far narrower and smaller one some distance from the clubhouse. Evidently, this suits their style since they like to keep the ball close to the forwards and use the blind side plenty, a tactic which had caught a much weakened Cornish out in the reverse encounter back in September. The home side had been in decent form recently, having held promotion chasing PJF to a draw away from home a couple of weeks ago. The stats also demonstrated that Effingham neither concede nor score many points, so it was entirely possible this one could be a tight affair. The game began in driving rain, the home side electing to play slightly into the elements in the opening period. As it turned out, those conditions of playing down a slight slope with the strong wind driving the rain from left to right across the home sides faces, were not quite the advantage many watching thought they would be. Cornish were on the board inside 5 minutes when Dan Pollard drove a penalty kick for offside between the uprights from just outside the home 22. This award was given against the home centres who were consistently able to avoid the referee's radar from this point, rushing up as the arbiter spent much time focussed on the technical elements of the forwards battle. Cornish quickly gained an ascendancy in the lineouts thanks to a superb performance from Pete Calvert, who repeatedly drove the home coach to distraction by pinching the Effingham ball. The exiles were guilty of conceding far too many penalties in the opening quarter of the match, nullifying the apparent advantages of the conditions and allowing the decent home 10 to clear his lines. Two such offences on 12 minutes were enough to present Effingham with the chance to level the scores, and an excellent strike by the aforementioned 10 made it 3-3. The response from Cornish was strong, carries by returning Skipper Aird and centre Henry Mitchell well supported by openside Williams-Jones, who punched above his weight throughout the contest. On two occasions Cornish worked an overlap but the final pass to waiting wing Mike Harvey went awry both times. Cornish also demonstrated a capacity to launch rolling mauls that carried some distance, but the home side were adept at not conceding lineouts close enough to their line to let these become a try scoring issue. With the tight fairly evenly contested and the rain making fluent backs play a near non starter, the game was riddled with errors from both sides. Cornish regained the lead on 26 minutes when Pollard again struck a penalty between the posts after an Effingham forward was caught offside at a ruck. Mitchell in particular was causing alarm amongst the home defence every time he took the ball on, but the repeated penalties for technical offences prevented the visitors from being able to sustain pressure long enough for it to hurt. On 34 minutes the home side found their way into Cornish territory again and after winning a penalty after an offence at a scrum, their kicker again levelled the match. Towards the end of the half, the front row of James Turnbull, Mike Allewell and Simon Wood pinched a scrum against the head for Aird to drive deep into the heart of the Effingham 22. As the ball was worked from right to left and back again, the home side demonstrated why they have rarely shipped multiple points as their defence held strong. When the half time whistle went they clearly thought the hardest part of their task was over as they greeted it with jubilation!

Cornish have also repeatedly shown themselves to be a cussed side to break down in the last 13 league games, and Effingham did not get anywhere near to scoring a try in this match despite the conditions being in their favour in the second period. This was due in part to the fact that Calvert had honed his considerable radar to their lineouts and snaffled most of them at source. With little clean ball from which to work, the home side would have to be content with breaking up the visitors game to enable them to stay in the game. Early on the second period, both sides were reduced a man after a fracas at a ruck saw two yellow cards produced. Gradually forced to defend further and further up the pitch, Effingham's ranks were clean broken by Mitchell on 46 minutes as he darted through just inside the home half. He was checked by the full back but drove deep into the home 22 only for the scrambling defence to turn the ball over before his support could arrive. On 53 minutes a penalty was kicked into the home 22 and the driving maul from the lineout brought down close to the home line. It was recycled right to left for Mitchell to crash across the whitewash in the company of two defenders. Without the benefit of a TV replay (where are the cameras when you need them?!), the referee could not award the score. From the ensuing scrum 5, Pollard saw a gap and dashed through it only to again be held up as he crossed the line, the excellent home D proving rock solid again. The weather now began to change, the rain ceasing and the wind dropping. This encouraged Cornish to put more width on the ball and more was seen of Keith Thompson, Graham Dodge and wing Jim Reynolds who was making his full debut. The latter had shown real strength in making a series of carries in the opening period and again went close wide right after an interchange with Will Ho at 8. The visitors made changes now to freshen up the pack, Aird moving into the row in place of Thornton Williams with Pete Drewett coming on a blind side, and Wheeler coming on in place of Wood. On 64 minutes Pollard struck a penalty that fell short, which was then knocked on by a home forward and then fielded by his team mate in front of him, resulting in a far more kickable penalty. Pollard made no mistake and Cornish had a deserved lead once more. As Cornish upped the ante, they were guilty of moving too wide too soon in the still slippery conditions. Twice in this period the ball was spilled in attacking positions and fly-hacked through by the Effingham backs. On both occasions Cornish were quickest to respond, Thompson and Dodge snuffing out the danger as the ball crossed the line. A rare foray into Cornish territory on 70 minutes saw the visitors concede an equally brainless penalty when a forward came in from a clearly offside position to break up a maul. Though some distance out, the home 10 measured his kick perfectly to square it up at 9-9. A final change saw York replace Reynolds for his debut, reward for some excellent effort at training and in recent 2s matches. Shortly after, the referee awarded Effingham a tap penalty for a scrummaging offence. This was taken quickly from behind him, though play was allowed to continue. Though driven back at the breakdown, the home side won another penalty just inside the Cornish half. This time their kicker struck it horribly and it went well wide. Cornish won another penalty in the dying minutes too far out to kick. For about the only time in the match, Effingham won one of their visitors set pieces and scrambled the ball to safety. The final whistle went with the score all square at 9-9, a strangely predictable result given the conditions.

Judging by the comments on the Effingham website in recent months, they are just delighted not to be involved in the relegation battle. Their recent results should encourage them to be more ambitious than that and their defence on this day demonstrated a real commitment to the shirt. There seems some confusion amongst teams in the division re relegation, but it is clear cut - 2 go down to London 4 S/W. The confusion stems in part from the moves of Chichester and Bognor to the London South-West division from next season. In all probability, this will mean some clubs being level transferred to London 3 South-East from this division, the number dependant upon the numbers coming down from London 2 South (likely to be 2) and whether the play-off winners for promotion to London 2 South come from London 3 South-West or not. Thus, assuming Guildford and Wimbledon come down from 2, and PJF win the play off, 2 sides are likely to head east from 3 S/W. This is worked out by measuring total mileages to all the sides in London 3 South-East. Where total mileages are very close, the side finishing higher in the tables has the choice of moving across or not. So, on current standing, Warlingham would be promoted from London 4 S/W but would head east and would be joined in all probability by Old Reigatians, allowing Chichester and Bognor (promoted from London 4 S/E) to switch to London 3 S/W. The fun really starts if PJF do not win the play-off, causing 3 sides to possibly be switched. What is certain is that clubs like Effingham and Old Reigatians will want to finish as high as possible to maximise their chances of staying put. Wherever Cornish end up next season, this young side will want to learn how to win 'sticky dog' matches like this one. They have clearly moved miles forward from the early season and will have a couple of weeks to hone those skills before the league recommences at the end of March.



LCRFC – Graham Dodge, Jim Reynolds (Justin York), Keith Thompson, Henry Mitchell, Mike Harvey, Dan Pollard, Adam McVicar, Will Ho, Mark Williams-Jones, Rob Aird (Capt.), Thornton Williams, Pete Calvert, James Turnbull, Mike Allewell, Simon Wood (Ben Wheeler).


 Tommy
 Posts : 134
 National League 2
 Tommy
  Posted 09/03/2008 10:21:40 PM
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Dickon have you fixed a date for when you are going to be playing Liskeard-Looe?

life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away
 DICKON
 Posts : 169
 National League 2
  Posted 15/03/2008 08:02:15 PM
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Tommy - not going to Liskeard-Looe now as tour is to be rescheduled as a pre season event.

 DICKON
 Posts : 169
 National League 2
  Posted 15/03/2008 08:03:27 PM
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London Cornish completed a fine 45-8 win at last weeks opponents Effingham & Leatherhead in a friendly today. We used 10 of the same players plus 7 others returning from injury or promoted from the 2s. No game over Easter weekend - I am heading home!

 merlin
 Posts : 3770
 merlin
  Posted 28/03/2008 09:47:10 AM
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Good luck to all your teams this week Dickon,i think you might hear the cheers in London from Walsham if the results fell kind to us.

Mounts Bay Rugby---Pride Of Penzance & Newlyn
 BayofPlenty
 Posts : 2811
 BayofPlenty
  Posted 28/03/2008 12:20:40 AM
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Sounds like they went to Leatherhead, & spent 80 minutes effing 'em!

The Wirral Panacea. Most efficacious in every case.
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