Men’s 7’s Draw 2021

We are excited to be part of the upcoming Men’s 7’s competition starting Friday 5th February. See below for the draw and further information.

Here is the Men’s 7’s squad;

  • Campbell, Darcy
  • Dan, Michael
  • Dwyer, Sidney
  • Fisher, Josh
  • Fitzpatrick, Jackson
  • Freeman, Billy
  • Goodman, Ryan
  • Hardman, Jack
  • Mackay, Jack
  • Mansfield, Will
  • Menchin, Billy
  • Miller, Lachlan
  • Miller, Jack
  • Milton, Lachlan
  • Ryan, Oliver
  • Ryan, Rory
  • Sheridan, Oran
  • Sheridan, Conor
  • Swan, Lachlan

Put Friday 12th February in your diary to head to Gibbs Bros to support our Greens 7’s team.

For further information about the competition please refer to the Hunter Rugby manual here.

For the most up to date version of the full draw please click here.

 

 

2020 Pre-season Campaign – President’s Report

 

Line Out Billy Dunn Merewether CarltonThe Greens started our 2020 season campaign with a three way trial against Maitland and Tamworth at Marcellin Park on Saturday. The Greens fielded two teams with the Blacks and the Pirates one each.

Coach Johan Lourens was pleased with the first up hit out by the squad that was without several established players and outscored both Maitland and the Pirates in each of the six halves that were played. New recruit Nick Dobson backed up from rep duty the night before and was the cornerstone of the pack and it is clear that Bill Dunn and the other No.2’s pushing for top grade selection will wrap their arms around his powerful frame with a great deal of confidence at scrum time in the season ahead.

Johan’s message to the players at his first meeting with the playing group back in November was to “forget everything that you have learned about rugby” as he instituted a new style that sees the forwards encouraged to wrestle and offload when going into contact and the halves with a licence to run at every opportunity when they have vacant grass in front of them.

The Greens scored a couple of tries from the close passing and offloading style with Sam Rouse latching on to a number of ‘popped’ balls in a manner reminiscent of how Russell Fairfax used to feed off Arthur Beetson’s deft ball skills in the thirteen a side code in the mid ’70’s.

James Sneddon made several solid runs and bent the line every time he touched the ball and displayed some smarts with the football. One of his offloads to Josh Mills missed its mark by millimetres and a certain try went begging.

However, it was the first hit out of the year and no one was being critical, to the contrary, Coach Lourens wants to see more of the wrestling and more of the offloading in order to ask more questions of the opposing defensive line.

One of the new recruits was so impressed with Johan’s knowledge of the game he commented that he is ‘a professor of rugby’. Nicknames and MCRC go hand in hand – Johan just found his, or it found him ‘The Professor’ – someone just has to find the intestinal fortitude to acquaint him with his new moniker.

The day wasn’t without casualty, Ethan Fowles nose now has some lateral shape after it was broken by a stray high shot, goodbye to the boyish good looks, hello to some facial ‘character’ that is pretty much a right of passage for those that play in the single digit jumpers.

None of the players looked out of place in the games despite some of them playing out of position.  Although it is doubtful that Sam Spence and Tommy Fitzsimmons have any great desire to pursue their careers in the 2 and 3 jerseys respectively!

New recruits Eddie Asiata, Warren Parnell, Atino Viahu (just call him T) and Ryan Huckerko all made solid contributions in the backline – they’ll enjoy their time at MCRC.

It was good to see Ollie Crowe on the side of the scrum in the P1 trial and being hoisted high at line out – someone observed that it’s not often that you see ‘crow(e)’s soar like eagles, but fly high he did and with great effectiveness.

We will have one team in the NHRU gala day this Saturday followed by the Meet the Players function at the Green Room that will be low on formality and high on camaraderie and a good opportunity to meet Johan, coaches and players that will be turning out in Green in 2020.

by Stephen Reid,
Merewether Carlton President

 

Two Tales of One City

Billy Freeman and Jayden NorrisOrange in the Central West is the twelfth biggest city in NSW and the “snowiest” city in Australia. Watched over by the imposing Mount Canobolas it is renowned for its agriculture, wine making and gold mining. And it also exports very good rugby back-row forwards – much to the benefit of Merewether Carlton!

The town boasts two rugby clubs, Orange Emus and Orange City. Both participate in the Central West Rugby Union’s Blowes Clothing Cup First Grade competition that is contested and geographically bounded by Dubbo in the north, Bathurst in the east, Forbes to the west and Cowra down south.

The Emus cracked their egg and emerged in 1947 and have won fifteen first grade titles. City was born in 1973 and has raced to twelve major grade premierships. The clubs clashed in the 2015 First XV decider for Central West rugby supremacy where Emus put their younger sibling in its place 31 – 15, but not before little brother had bloodied their elder’s nose earlier in the day in notching an 18 – 16 victory in the second grade grand final. Those battles were so keenly fought that they were both mentioned in NSW Parliament.

Clearly there is an intense rugby rivalry in Banjo Paterson’s birthplace. Away from the footy field the clubs co-exist – that’s about as good as it gets. On the field the relationship belies Paterson’s famous prose about “a little harmless fun, a trifle overdone” – it’s tribal and bragging rights count for much and linger long in bush football.

In a region of just under 40,000 people you are either Emus or you are City, just as you are either Green or shades of blue in Newcastle.

“That’s how it is, you are either one or the other – there is no in between” according to Billy Freeman who played all of his juniors and a year of Colts and first grade at City. Freeman confessed that he too could have been an Emu however when his parents enquired about signing him up for junior rugby no one returned the phone call, so young Billy entered the Lions den at Pride Park.

Across the other side of town Jayden Norris plied his trade as a No.7 with Emus before joining MCRC this season. He started at the club as a junior however can’t recall why his parents decided on the Emus – but that’s where he started and that’s where he stayed.

Jayden and Bill agree that whilst there is a strong rugby rivalry it only really manifests itself when the club’s are opposed in combat. “Some of my best mates play for City however the place is too small to let rugby get in the way of those friendships” Jayden said. “Its not as if there are fights between the clubs when we go out, we all get on away from footy” Bill added.

How the pair arrived at the Greens is as disparate as the relationship between the clubs they played for back home. Billy came to Newcastle to study at University in 2015 and escaped the seahorse aquarium to link with MCRC in 2017.

Jayden on the other hand came completely ‘on spec’ after receiving a phone call last year from former ‘St. Stanis’ schoolmate and Greens back Joe Crawford who urged him to get to Newcastle and play for the Greens. He didn’t take too much convincing – 2019 and here he is.

So what’s it like when two loose forwards from the opposing sides of the Orange rugby demarcation are thrown together in a Greens jersey in Newcastle?

There were no dramas, they played against each other at Orange however neither one of them can recount any individual conflict. Such a pity as this would have been a much better story if there had been!

The transition to MCRC was probably easier for Jayden – after all Emus do play in green and white and he has no rugby history in Newcastle. He has become a permanent fixture at the back or on the side of the P2 scrum with higher honours beckoning.

On the other hand, Billy’s aggressive and relentless commitment at the breakdown quickly saw him become a Green Room favourite long before an ACL injury curtailed his 2019 season. How cruel sport can be. He’ll be back.

David Campese Coming To Townson

David Campese
David Campese was a rugby genius. His one-time coach Alan Jones once described him as the “Don Bradman of Australian rugby”.

Campo was one of the most influential figures in Australian rugby from his debut as a 19-year-old in 1982 until his final Test appearance 14 years later.

He was a star performer when the Jones-coached Wallabies magnificently claimed the Grand Slam in 1984, defeating England, Ireland, Wales and Scotland.

Two years later, he again triumphed in a three Test series in New Zealand when the Wallabies won the Bledisloe Cup on New Zealand soil for the first time in 37 years. He scored the final try in the third Test match on that tour at Auckland’s Eden Park – the last time Australia has tasted victory at that venue…33 years ago!

Campese’s final standout career milestone was in the 1991 World Cup when the Bob Dwyer-coached Wallabies lifted the William Webb Ellis trophy for the first time, defeating England in the final at Twickenham.

Queanbeyan-born Campese, who played his Sydney club rugby with the Randwick club, was voted the player of that tournament. Who will ever forget his magical pass that led to centre Tim Horan’s try in the qualifying semi-final against the All Blacks in Dublin. It came after Campo himself scored a slashing try to open the Australian account.

He is one of only a handful of players to compete in three World Cups – the inaugural event in 1987, 1991 and 1995.

David Ian Campese played 101 Tests for the Wallabies, 85 on the wing and 16 at fullback, and scored 64 tries.

After living in South Africa following his playing days, he now resides in the NSW Southern Highlands.

David Campese will be joining us for this year’s President’s Lunch at the new Green Room on Sunday 21st July 2019, 12pm – 4pm, tickets are $120, grab your tickets now.

Welcome to our Northern Hemisphere Players

Our International Visitors

You may notice a few unfamiliar accents around the Greens this year as we welcome four players from the Northern Hemisphere here to experience Southern Hemisphere Rugby and everything Newcastle has to offer.

We welcome (pictured left to right) Dave Whiting and Charlie Brown both props from England, Killian Sarre-Molines a versatile back rower from France, and Spencer Cooper a prop from Canada. All great guys and have settled straight into the greens way of life.

Merewether has been home for a few journeymen over the past few years which as created strong and life bonding friendships. It is something that the club sees as an important part of our rugby culture, creating pathways for our local players to travel abroad and providing great experience in our great suburb from players abroad (as well as adding strength to our playing roster).

It takes a whole community to ensure that these guys feel welcome and a lot of work goes into helping them find their feet with restricted visas and often as a gap year after studying. So if you see the boys around the green room buy them a beer and have a chat! If you think you can help out with providing employment opportunities, make a mean lasagne or have a spare car in the garage (seriously) then get in touch with the coaches or committee and we will make it happen. Let’s make sure these boys are all spruiking the green experience when they head back to their respective homes. Welcome boys and good luck for the season!

our sponsors


Social NewsNews and information

icon

Merewether Carlton Rugby Club

This message is only visible to admins.
Problem displaying Facebook posts. Backup cache in use.
Click to show error
Error: Error validating access token: The session has been invalidated because the user changed their password or Facebook has changed the session for security reasons. Type: OAuthException
icon

Merewether Carlton Highlights @carltonrugby

X