Chinnor R.F.C.

England Chinnor
Full nameChinnor Rugby Football Club
UnionRFU
NicknameThe Villagers
Founded1962 (1962)
RegionOxfordshire Rugby Football Union
Ground(s)Kingsey Road, Thame (Capacity: 2,500 (560 seats))
ChairmanNick Stainton
PresidentSimon Vickers
Director of RugbyNick Easter
Coach(es)Craig Hampson, Tom Cruse
CaptainWillie Ryan
LeagueChamp Rugby
2024–2510th
1st kit
2nd kit
Official website
chinnor-rfc.com

Chinnor Rugby Football Club is an English rugby union club based in Thame, Oxfordshire. They currently play in the second tier of the English league system, Champ Rugby, following their promotion from National League 1 having won promotion in the 2023–24 season. The club regularly runs five senior teams as well as a full youth setup from age 5 upwards. Chinnor's youth setup is widely thought of as one of the best in the country having produced top Premiership players such as Tom Varndell (Leicester Tigers), Tom Johnson (Exeter Chiefs), Dave Seymour (Saracens), Paul Volley (Wasps), and Sam Jones (Wasps). Chinnor became the first club in Oxfordshire or Buckinghamshire to establish an under-19 academy.

History

Chinnor RFC was formed in 1962, by Frank Angel, Cyril Perry and Marcus Cann at the Bird in Hand pub in Chinnor, playing its first game the following year.[1] Norman Baldwin (the sponge) was one of the first to play for Chinnor and wrote the club's first “song book”. The 1970s saw the club expand to include junior and youth teams and in 1976 the club won the Oxfordshire Cup. When the English league system started the club was placed in Bucks and Oxon Division 1 and progressed through the Southern Counties section to gain promotion to the National Leagues in 2006; the youngest club to do so.[2] The club gained a further promotion from National League 3 South West in 2012.

During the 2016–17 National League 2 South season, the club achieved a (then) record attendance at Kingsey Road of 1,580 during a top of the table clash against Bishop's Stortford, a game Chinnor won 27–25.[3]

On 13 April 2024, Chinnor beat Birmingham Moseley to take the National League 1 title with a game to go.[4] During this season, the club also smashed the previous Kingsey Road attendance with 2,270 spectators attending the top of the league clash with rivals Rams on 15 December 2023, which would also be the best attended game in National League 1 that season.[5]

Ground

Chinnor originally played at the Towersey Playing Fields in the village of Towersey being granted a 25 year lease in 1971 and building a club house in 1972, before moving to their current ground, Kingsey Road, 1.5 miles away in Thame in 1986.[6]

Kingsrey Road is situated on the eastern outskirts of Thame. The ground has been upgraded over its history with a 350 seated temporary stand added ahead of the 2024–25 season, which was upgraded to a permanent 560 seater stand ahead of the 2025–26 season.[7][8] Capacity is currently around 2,500, which includes 560 seated in the covered grandstand.

Honours

1st team:

2nd team:

3rd team:

Current standings

2025–26 Champ Rugby table
Pos Team Pld W D L PF PA PD TB LB Pts Qualification
1 Ealing Trailfinders 18 18 0 0 798 296 +502 16 0 88 Play-off
semi-finals
2 Worcester Warriors 18 12 0 6 654 426 +228 15 5 68
3 Bedford Blues 18 12 1 5 559 450 +109 14 2 66 Play-off
quarter-finals
4 Coventry 18 10 0 8 655 518 +137 15 5 60
5 Hartpury 18 11 1 6 502 477 +25 9 1 56
6 Chinnor 18 11 0 7 450 421 +29 6 4 54
7 Cornish Pirates 18 9 1 8 503 456 +47 11 3 52
8 Nottingham 18 8 1 9 439 401 +38 11 7 52
9 Doncaster Knights 18 7 3 8 490 422 +68 9 4 47
10 Caldy 18 8 0 10 422 516 −94 10 2 44
11 Ampthill 18 6 0 12 426 698 −272 10 3 37
12 Richmond 18 6 0 12 381 518 −137 4 4 32 Relegation play-off
13 London Scottish 18 4 0 14 336 611 −275 6 2 24
14 Cambridge 18 0 1 17 315 720 −405 6 4 12 Relegated
Updated to match(es) played on 21 February 2026. Source: England Rugby
Rules for classification: If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:
  1. Number of matches won
  2. Number of matches drawn
  3. Difference between points for and against
  4. Total number of points for
  5. Aggregate number of points scored in matches between tied teams
  6. Number of matches won excluding the first match, then the second and so on until the tie is settled

Current squad

The Chinnor squad for the 2025–26 season is:[12][13]

Note: Flags indicate national union under World Rugby eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-World Rugby nationality.

Player Position Union
Will Cave Hooker England England
Chris Moore Hooker England England
Luke Thompson Hooker Ireland Ireland
Alun Walker Hooker Scotland Scotland
Kabous Bezuidenut Prop South Africa South Africa
Rob Hardwick Prop England England
Kai Owen Prop England England
Lawson Porter Prop Ireland Ireland
Alex Pybus Prop Ireland Ireland
Ramaz Rukhadze Prop Georgia (country) Georgia
Conor-Terrah Brockschmidt Lock South Africa South Africa
Jamie Campbell Lock Scotland Scotland
Dan Cooke Lock Zimbabwe Zimbabwe
Isaac Ridge Lock England England
Jamie Carr Back row New Zealand New Zealand
Harry Dugmore Back row England England
Scott Hall Back row England England
Joe Harmen Back row England England
Geordie Irvine Back row England England
Karl Main Back row Scotland Scotland
Cameron Rafferty Back row England England
George Stokes Back row England England
Izzy Wharton Back row South Africa South Africa
Player Position Union
Luke Carter Scrum-half England England
Harry Charman Scrum-half England England
Charles James-Carter Scrum-half England England
Callum Pascoe Scrum-half England England
Nathan Chamberlain Fly-half Scotland Scotland
Nick Smith Fly-half New Zealand New Zealand
George Worboys Fly-half England England
James Bourton Centre England England
Sam Hanks Centre England England
Morgan Passman Centre England England
Tom Watson Centre England England
Toby Cousins Wing England England
Kieran Goss Wing South Africa South Africa
Grant Hughes Wing Scotland Scotland
Freddie Owsley Wing Scotland Scotland
Joe Brock Fullback England England

References

  1. ^ "Welcome To The Bird In Hand". chinnor-rfc.com. 30 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Club History" by former player John Gardner, at official website
  3. ^ "Bittersweet victory for Chinnor in pulsating match". Chinnor RFC (Pitchero). 1 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Champions! Chinnor celebrate in fine style". The RugbyPaper. No. 813. 14 April 2024. pp. 28–29.
  5. ^ "Results". The RugbyPaper. No. 796. 17 December 2023. pp. 30–31, 41.
  6. ^ "Building On Strong Foundations". Towersey Community Fields. Retrieved 29 December 2025.
  7. ^ "Chairman's BIG August Update". Chinnor Rugby. 2 August 2024.
  8. ^ "Minor/Major improvement works version 2". National League Rugby. 24 September 2025.
  9. ^ "South West 1". Archived from the original on 22 May 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
  10. ^ "Trelawny's Army Final League Tables 2007-2008".
  11. ^ "Champions! Chinnor celebrate in fine style". The RugbyPaper. No. 813. 14 April 2024. pp. 28–29.
  12. ^ "First XV squad". www.chinnor-rfc.com. Retrieved 8 January 2026.
  13. ^ "Chinnor squad for season 2025/2026". all.rugby. Retrieved 8 January 2026.