St Mary's College RFC

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

St. Mary's College
Full nameSt. Mary's College Rugby Football Club
UnionIRFU
Nickname(s)Mary's, Maro's, Blues, Blue Army
Founded1900; 124 years ago (1900)
RegionCounty Dublin
Ground(s)Templeville Road (Capacity: 4,000)
ChairmanBrendan Spring
PresidentBobby O Connor
Coach(es)Sean Cronin
Jamie Cornett
Marcus O'Driscoll
Captain(s)Ronan Watters
League(s)All-Ireland D1A
2022–236th.[1]
Team kit
Official website
www.stmaryscollegerfc.com

St Mary's College Rugby Football Club is a

AIB League for the first time under the captaincy of Trevor Brennan
.

The club was formerly sited at College Drive,

Holy Ghost Fathers sister school of St Mary's College.[2]

Honours

Notable players

Ireland

The following St Mary's players represented Ireland at full international level.

Caelan Doris

MEN:

1970 Sean Lynch (17) 1970 Denis J. Hickie (6) 1972 *John Moloney (27) 1972 *Tom Grace (25) 1974 *Shay Deering (8) 1977 Tom Feighery (2) 1978 Tony Ward (19) 1978 Terry Kennedy (14) 1979 *Ciaran Fitzgerald (26)** 1979 Rodney O’Donnell (5) 1981 Paul Dean (32) 1988 Vincent Cunningham (16) 1996 Victor Costello (39) 1997 Denis A. Hickie (62) 1997 Conor McGuinness (14) 1997 Kevin Nowlan (3) 1997 John McWeeney (1) 1997 Malcolm O’Kelly (92) 1998 Trevor Brennan (10) 2000 Peter McKenna (1) 2001 Emmet Byrne (9) 2002 Keith Gleeson (27) 2003 Mark McHugh (1) 2005 Kieran Lewis (3) 2007 Shane Jennings (13) 2009 Johnny Sexton (45) 2009 Kevin McLaughlin (8) 2010 Rhys Ruddock (3) 2011 Sean Cronin (35) 2013 Jack McGrath (10) 2013 James Bourke (0)

  • Had the distinction of captaining Ireland.
    • Captain of Triple Crown winning teams in 1982 and 1985

Ireland 7s

The following St Mary’s players have represented the Ireland national rugby sevens team:

British & Irish Lions

As well as representing Ireland, the following St Mary's players have also represented the British & Irish Lions.[3]

References

  1. ^ League Tables 2022–23 at irishrugby.ie
  2. ^ St Mary's College RFC Archived 2009-05-26 at the Wayback Machine - History of the Club
  3. ^ Ciaran Cronin (2007), The Ireland Rugby Miscellany

External links