Hutchesons Aloysians

Hutchesons Aloysians RFC
Full name Hutchesons Aloysians Rugby Football Club
Union Scottish Rugby Union
Founded 1990
Disbanded 2002
Location East Renfrewshire, Scotland
Region East Renfrewshire
Ground(s) Auldhouse, Thornliebank, East Renfrewshire
Team kit

Hutchesons Aloysians RFC was an amateur rugby union club in East Renfrewshire, Scotland. The club no longer exists. In 2002, they merged with Glasgow Southern to form Glasgow Hutchesons Aloysians RFC.

History

Formation

The club was founded in 1990 with the merger of Hutcheson's GSFP and Old Aloysians.

As a struggling club about to be demoted to Division 7 of the McEwan's National League; the Old Aloysions members approved the merger first.[1]

Hutcheson's GSFP were in Division 4 of the National League. Their EGM to approve the merger on 24 May 1990 was won by 57 votes to 8.[2]

The new club Hutchesons Aloysians would take Hutcheson's GSFP's place in the league in Division 4 of the McEwan's National League for the coming 1990-91 season.[1]

National League

Starting in Division 4, the side secured promotion in its first year to Division 3. Hutchesons Aloysians then skirted between Division 3 and 4 before they finally made a challenge for the Division 3 title.

Anthony Posa became Hutchesons Aloysians first full international cap when he played for Croatia against Czechoslovakia in a World Cup qualifier in October 2001.[3]

In December 2000 he was interviewed before a match against Boroughmuir: "This is the first season I have played in the UK," says 29-year-old Posa. "So it is the first time I have played in the conditions you have in the depths of winter. Glasgow, particularly the guys at H/As, has treated me well. But the rain and mud are something else."[4]

In the club's last season, before a merger with Glasgow Southern, Hutchesons Aloysians finally ensured promotion to Division 2.[5] They won the title beating Berwick 37-15.[6]

Merger

On 12 February 2002, officials from Glasgow Southern and Hutchesons Aloysians met to discuss a merger. At the time both played in the same league, although Hutchesons Aloysians were at the top of table about to secure promotion. A potential higher league position in a higher division on offer was an incentive for Glasgow Southern to agree to the merger.[7]

It was recognised that Glasgow Southern's facilities at Braidholm were far greater than that of Hutchesons Aloysians. That was an incentive for Hutchesons Aloysians to agree to the merger.[7]

A further incentive to both teams was the success of the Glasgow Hawks merger. It was hoped that by merging two relatively strong Glasgow teams that they could emulate the success of the Hawks and then begin to challenge the Anniesland side.[7]

The merger went ahead and the two teams merged to form Glasgow Hutchesons Aloysians for the start of the 2002-03 season.[8]

Glasgow Hutchesons Aloysians now has one of the largest catchment areas in Scotland, with a virtual monopoly on the south side of Glasgow plus several rugby-playing schools across the city feeding into their ranks.[9]

Honours

  • Division 4 - 2nd place, 1990–91, promoted to Division 3
  • Division 3 - 1st place, 2001–02, promoted to Division 2[6]

Notable former players

Notable non-Scottish players

The following is a list of notable non-Scottish international representative former Glasgow players:

Croatia

  • Croatia Anthony Posa[3]

Glasgow District players

References

  1. 1 2 "No Headline Present".
  2. "Italian trippers".
  3. 1 2 "H/A must stand alone as Posa checks in for Croatia".
  4. "Posa hoping for a taste of glorious Auldhouse mud Boroughmuir hold no fear for the New Zealand-raised Croat".
  5. "Hutchesons' rally to make the step up division 3".
  6. 1 2 "rugby round-up".
  7. 1 2 3 "BBC SPORT - RUGBY UNION - Glasgow rugby merger plan".
  8. "Rugby Union Clubs Strathclyde - Rugby Union Club - Motherwell, Kilmarnock, Hamilton, Glasgow, Dumbarton, Cumbernauld, Airdrie".
  9. "GHA triple their efforts to stay in top flight with vibrant mix of new and old".
  10. "Glasgow are happy to take on all-comers".
  11. 1 2 "Oswald opts to quit Edinburgh chief role".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.