Oyonnax Rugby

Oyonnax
Full name Union Sportive Oyonnax Rugby
Founded 1909 (1909)
Location Oyonnax, France
Ground(s) Stade Charles-Mathon (Capacity: 11,400[1])
President Jean-Marc Manducher
Coach(es) Johann Authier
League(s) Rugby Pro D2
2017–18 Top 14, 13th (relegated via play-off)
1st kit
2nd kit
Official website
www.usorugby.com

Union sportive Oyonnax Rugby is a French rugby union club from Oyonnax [ɔ.jɔ.na] in the Ain département of the région Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, currently playing in the Top 14, elite 1st division of the country's professional rugby system, Top 14. They play at Stade Charles-Mathon (capacity 11,400[1]). They wear black and red.

History

They were founded in 1909 as Club Sportif Oyonnaxien and were renamed Union Sportive Oyonaxienne in 1940, as sports clubs were forced to unite by the Vichy régime. Oyonnax played in the regional leagues until 1967 when they joined the First Division (64 clubs). They were relegated to the lower divisions a few years later and bounced back to Group B of the First Division (the Second Division in fact) in 1988. Finally, in 2003 they reached the Fédérale 1 final and although they went down to Limoges (18-20), they moved on to the professional Pro D2. In the 2012/13 season, they won Pro D2 and were promoted to the top-flight Top 14. They were repromoted after 2016/17, having been relegated the previous season.

Honours

Current standings

The current table for the 2018–19 Rugby Pro D2 is:[2]

2018–19 Rugby Pro D2 Table
Pos Club Pl W D L PF PA PD TB LB Pts
1Mont-de-Marsan8512211150+612125
2Nevers8503199134+652224
3Carcassonne8503197142+551324
4Oyonnax8503221183+382224
5Brive8512201157+441023
6Soyaux Angoulême8503188157+311223
7Biarritz8413186151+351120
8Bayonne8413171159+121120
9Montauban8404161175–141118
10Béziers8404170210–401017
11Provence8305215231-162216
12Vannes8314153159-60216
13Colomiers8305160176-160214
14Aurillac8305148201-530214
15Bourg-en-Bresse8215137270-1330010
16Massy8107127190-63026
Legend:
Pos = Position, Pl = Played, W = Won, D = Drawn, L = Lost, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against, PD = Points Difference, TB = Try Bonus Points, LB = Losing Bonus Points, Pts = Points Total
Green background (rows 1 and 2) receive semi-final Promotion play-off places.
Blue background (rows 3 to 6) receive quarter-final Promotion play-off places.
Red background relegation to Fédérale 1.

Notes:
When two teams have the same points total, position is determined by head-to-head results before points difference.

Current squad

The Oyonnax squad for the 2017–18 Top 14 season is:[3][lower-alpha 1]

Note: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-WR nationality.

Player Position Union
Hika Elliot Hooker New Zealand New Zealand
Benjamin Gélédan Hooker France France
Quentin MacDonald Hooker New Zealand New Zealand
Kevin Buys Prop South Africa South Africa
Pietro Ceccarelli Prop Italy Italy
Vincent Debaty Prop France France
Irakli Mirtskhulava Prop Georgia (country) Georgia
Tommy Raynaud Prop France France
Hoani Tui Prop New Zealand New Zealand
Khatchik Vartanov Prop France France
Giorgi Vepkhvadze Prop Georgia (country) Georgia
Phoenix Battye Lock Australia Australia
Geoffrey Fabbri Lock France France
Christian Njewel Lock Cameroon Cameroon
Steven Sykes Lock South Africa South Africa
Manuel Leindekar Lock Uruguay Uruguay
Luc Barba Flanker France France
Curtis Browning Flanker Australia Australia
Maurie Faʻasavalu Flanker Samoa Samoa
Patrick Sobela Flanker France France
Bilil Taieb Flanker France France
Valentin Ursache Flanker Romania Romania
Rory Grice Number 8 New Zealand New Zealand
Viliami Maʻafu Number 8 Tonga Tonga
Player Position Union
Julien Audy Scrum-half France France
Jérémy Gondrand Scrum-half France France
James Hall Scrum-half South Africa South Africa
Ben Botica Fly-half New Zealand New Zealand
Anthony Fuertes Fly-half France France
Christopher Ruiz Fly-half France France
Roimata Hansell-Pune Centre New Zealand New Zealand
Matt Hopper Centre England England
Mitch Inman Centre Australia Australia
Vincent Lasmarrigues Centre France France
José Lima Centre Portugal Portugal
Maxime Veau Centre France France
Bjorn Basson [lower-alpha 1] Wing South Africa South Africa
Dug Codjo Wing France France
Tim Giresse Wing France France
Daniel Ikpefan Wing France France
Axel Müller Wing Argentina Argentina
Quentin Étienne Fullback France France
UJ Seuteni Fullback Australia Australia
Silvère Tian Fullback Ivory Coast Ivory Coast
  • Notes:
  1. 1 2 Bjorn Basson signed as a medical joker for Matt Hopper.[4]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Stade Charles Mathon" (in French). Oyonnax Rugby. Archived from the original on 8 January 2014. Retrieved 8 January 2014.
  2. "Classement PRO D2". Ligue Nationale de Rugby (in French). Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  3. "Les Oyomen". Oyonnax Rugby (in French). Archived from the original on 20 August 2017. Retrieved 20 August 2017.
  4. "Björn Basson rejoint l'US Oyonnax Rugby comme joker médical de Matthew Hopper" (Press release) (in French). USO Rugby. 1 December 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
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