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Rouen Normandie Rugby

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Rouen NR
Full nameRouen Normandie Rugby
Nickname(s)Les Lions (The Lions)
Founded2009; 15 years ago (2009)
LocationRouen, France
Ground(s)Stade Jean-Mermoz (Capacity: 3,000)
Coach(es)Richard Hill
League(s)Pro D2
2019–2015th
Official website
rouennormandierugby.fr

Rouen Normandie Rugby is a French rugby union club from Rouen, currently playing in the second level of the country's professional rugby system, Pro D2.

History

The team origins date back to 2009, when a group of rugby fanatics from the Normandy region wanted to build a team in the city of Rouen.[1] Named Stade Rouennais, their primary objective of reaching Fédérale 2 was achieved in 2013.

Seeking further progress, Stade Rouennais hired Richard Hill, former captain of the England team and finalist of the 1991 World Cup, as General Manager in 2013. Under his management the club stabilized itself in Fédérale 2 and then gained promotion to Fédérale 1 in 2014–15.

After this meteoric rise Normand entrepreneurs Jean-Louis Louvel and Eric Leroy invested in the club by becoming the presidents. The club was renamed Rouen Normandie Rugby. The goal was to professionalize the club and extend it to all of Normandy. Richard Hill committed to the club until 2023.

These changes were beneficial, since for the first time in the history of Normandy rugby, Richard Hill lead Rouen Normandy Rugby to become Champion of France of the highest amateur level in 2016–17.

During the 2018–19 Fédérale 1 season Hill led Rouen to victory in the Jean Pratt Trophy, which automatically promoted them to Pro D2.[2]

The team plays in red and black shirts and play their home matches at the 3,000-capacity Stade Jean-Mermoz in Rouen. There are plans to build a new stadium by 2023.[3]

Honours

Current standings

Template:2020–21 Rugby Pro D2 Table

Current squad

The Rouen squad for the 2020–21 season is:[4]

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

Player Position Union
Mathieu Bonnot Hooker France France
Fabien Dorey Hooker France France
Enzo Mondon Hooker France France
Jeremy Clamy Edroux Prop France France
Antoine Fournier Prop France France
Florent Guion Prop France France
Victor Leon Prop Moldova Moldova
Anthony Martin Prop France France
Anthony Perenise Prop Samoa Samoa
Phil Swainston Prop England England
Gambo Adamou Lock Cameroon Cameroon
Ollie Atkins Lock Scotland Scotland
Lucas Cazac Lock France France
Thomas Lainault Lock France France
Nemani Waka Lock New Zealand New Zealand
Jorick Dastugue Back row France France
Josefa Domolailai Back row Fiji Fiji
Rudy Gahetau Back row France France
Jonathan Giraud Back row France France
Valentino Mapapalangi Back row Tonga Tonga
William Takaï Back row Tonga Tonga
Thomas Toevalu Back row France France
Fabien Vincent Back row France France
Player Position Union
Florent Campeggia Scrum-half France France
Bastien Cazale-Debat Scrum-half France France
Yohan Domenech Scrum-half France France
Matty James Fly-half New Zealand New Zealand
Pete Lydon Fly-half Ireland Ireland
Jordan Michallet Fly-half France France
Shane O'Leary Fly-half Canada Canada
Josh Drauniniu Centre England England
Tamaz Mchedlidze Centre Georgia (country) Georgia
Malakai Radikedike Centre Fiji Fiji
Mosese Ratuvou Centre Fiji Fiji
Akuila Tabualevu Centre Fiji Fiji
Dean Adamson Wing England England
Bastien Fuster Wing Spain Spain
David Lemi Wing Samoa Samoa
Belgium Tuatagaloa Wing Samoa Samoa
Marika Vunibaka Wing Fiji Fiji
Kevin Milhorat Fullback France France
Antoine Renaud Fullback France France

See also

References

  1. ^ "Histoire". Rouen Normandie Rugby (in French). Retrieved 29 July 2019.
  2. ^ "Rouen Normandie Rugby sacré champion de France de Fédérale 1 au terme d'un match renversant". actu.fr (in French). Retrieved 29 July 2019.
  3. ^ "Un nouveau stade de rugby construit dans quatre ans au sud de Rouen ?". actu.fr (in French). Retrieved 29 July 2019.
  4. ^ "Le Groupe Pro" (in French). Retrieved 12 September 2019.