Top Ad
I DIG Radio
www.idigradio.com
Listen live to the best music from around the world!
I DIG Style
www.idigstyle.com
Learn about the latest fashion styles and more...

Leicester Tigers and Norfolk: Rugby union's unlikely long-distance alliance

Written by 
Published in Rugby
Wednesday, 30 August 2023 02:54

"In Norfolk, it's in our blood. We are Leicester Tigers through and through."

You don't hear that kind of sentiment, shared by Simon, a Tigers' fan who lives in Norfolk, very often. It's rare to find a community who, almost universally, support a team that play a three-hour drive and 110 miles away.

He has come along to a Leicester open training session at Gresham's School in Holt, joined by his wife and two daughters. They travel to see the team for every home game, and are not alone.

Hundreds more fans have come along to see their team train in this small town near the north Norfolk coast. One tells me the area is a "home from home for Leicester".

The county brings hundreds of supporters to each game, but has also produced some of Tigers' best players.

Freddie Steward and Ben Youngs are both from the county, came through the Leicester academy and are heading to the Rugby World Cup. Jack van Poortvliet, another Norfolk native, would have joined them but for an untimely injury.

Ben's brother Tom also became an England player and British and Irish Lion, and players like Harry Simmons, Calum Green and Charlie Clare have played key roles in Leicester's revival.

When did this unlikely alliance begin?

In the Premiership, each team has a so-called 'catchment area' to find talent and bring players through their academy.

Tigers recruit from Leicestershire and Rutland, Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire and Staffordshire - counties that are geographically close - and then, surprisingly, Norfolk.

The areas were largely decided when the game turned professional in the mid-1990s. Why Norfolk was paired with Leicester - more than 100 miles away on the A47 - nobody seems to know.

The county is closer to the home grounds of their Premiership rivals Northampton or Saracens, and very few other clubs are that far away from part of their catchment area.

Tigers' general manager Richard Wilkes says it creates a "huge logistical challenge" for the club, local schools, parents and players themselves, who have to regularly make the three-hour trip through their teens.

"We managed to organise a minibus, about six to eight [Tigers academy] players," recalls Van Poortvliet, who started at North Walsham Rugby Club when he was five and is now an England scrum-half.

"We'd be getting up at six in the morning and we would go to training. Then train until three in the afternoon and then get back at seven in the evening. Doing that three days a week was tough and draining, but we loved it."

'A hidden gem'

As Wilkes points out, "the juice is worth the squeeze", because so many good players seem to come from the area.

Nick Youngs - who introduces himself as "a farmer from Norfolk", is in fact a little more than that.

He played for Leicester and England in the 1980s, and is the father of Tigers, England and Lions brothers Ben and Tom, the latter now retired.

"Norfolk has always produced great rugby players. We are out on the lurch, and have been an untapped area. It's a bit of a hidden gem."

Many praise the club system in the area. Clubs like National League Two side North Walsham, Holt and Norwich - to name a few - have a long history of developing excellent players.

On the side of Holt Rugby Club is a mural of the most-capped Englishman, Ben Youngs. As the club's chairman Rob Hughes points out, many more players have come from here to play professionally, including current England full-back Steward and fellow Tigers Simmons and Clare.

"We are not frightened of competition here, with a structure that we are very happy to back them with," says Hughes.

Clare adds: "There's rivalries between all the clubs, and it's such a competitive area.

"The support's really good too, with a lot of people behind clubs like North Walsham, Holt and Norwich. It's a pleasure to go back to these places, the atmosphere and environment is always so great."

Wilkes also highlights the area's "really good schools - well resourced and well coached."

'Maybe it's the soil?'

Private schools like Gresham's, Langley and Norwich - again, to name a few - have superb facilities and dedicated sporting staff, designed to create the next superstar in many sports.

"We've got everything you need here now," says Ben Pienaar, who grew up in Norfolk before playing for Leicester for seven years, and now leads the rugby programme at Gresham's.

"We've worked hard on getting a new gym, we have great pitches, and the coaching staff put in all the effort to improve the rugby. Why wouldn't you want to send your kid here to improve?"

But many we spoke to mentioned the phrase "farmers' sons", as if this is such a rich area for rugby talent because of the genes, or as hooker Clare suggested: "maybe it's the soil?".

That is impossible to prove, of course, but might speak to other factors that create an environment conducive to building talent.

"The boys here perhaps have a different way of living," says James Knight, who is head of sport performance at Gresham's, leads the Tigers pathway in Norfolk and was previously director of rugby at North Walsham.

"Rugby is everything, and they don't have distractions in quite the same way. It's a rural area, and rugby is often a more rural game."

Wilkes also believes the area's relative remoteness has another benefit: "That long drive will build resilience. It teaches those lads what it means to succeed."

The partnership does not just extend one way, of course.

'Part of Norfolk culture'

Leicester Tigers has a renowned academy that has brought great players through for generations. Their resurgence under former head coach Steve Borthwick was, in no small part, due to the impact of recent graduates like Steward, Van Poortvliet, George Martin and Ollie Chessum.

The academy works hard to find talent across its catchment area to create rugby-loving children. They start with kids camps in the summer holidays before the serious stuff starts.

"I remember doing Tigers mini-camps in Norfolk from the age of six to 13 and I absolutely loved them," adds Van Poortvliet.

"It's a real credit to the academy. They teach you to have a real love for rugby and for the club."

"The Tigers are very good at community outreach," says Holt RFC chairman Hughes. "That's aspirational for lads to get involved with."

"They have got a good brand. They are nice people, and they help us when they can even though we are 100 miles away.

"Local success has bred this. The boys see them and think 'this is real, he's just like me, I can be like him'."

The steady stream of local players making the grade has also created a real bond between Leicester and Norfolk, and not just by shipping players west to the Tigers academy.

There is, as another fan said at the training session, "a part of Leicester in Norfolk". Such is the area's influence on Tigers that Hanro Liebenberg, the club's South African captain, now supports Norwich City.

"For years and years now people have come through, and it has become part of Norfolk culture", says Knight. "You don't support anyone else when you live in Norfolk."

Read 127 times

Soccer

Marta, Orlando Pride win 1st NWSL Championship

Marta, Orlando Pride win 1st NWSL Championship

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsKANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Barbra Banda's goal stood up as the winner to l...

Ipswich vs Man United: VAR stopped by fire alarm

Ipswich vs Man United: VAR stopped by fire alarm

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsVAR was temporarily suspended during Manchester United's clash at I...

Amorim era begins with fastest Utd goal of season

Amorim era begins with fastest Utd goal of season

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsRúben Amorim was made to wait just 81 seconds for the first goal of...

2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

'Phenomenal' Pippen Jr. shines in dad's ex-arena

'Phenomenal' Pippen Jr. shines in dad's ex-arena

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsScotty Pippen Jr. already had plenty of fond memories of watching h...

Ball's career-best 50 not enough as Hornets fall

Ball's career-best 50 not enough as Hornets fall

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsLaMelo Ball became the third-youngest player in NBA history, and th...

Baseball

Hays, Finnegan, Rodgers among new free agents

Hays, Finnegan, Rodgers among new free agents

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNEW YORK -- Outfielder Austin Hays and right-hander Kyle Finnegan -...

Judge giving Soto space amid free agency frenzy

Judge giving Soto space amid free agency frenzy

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNEW YORK -- Aaron Judge is one of the few people on Earth who can r...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

    Fédération Internationale de Football Association
  • NBA

    National Basketball Association
  • ATP

    Association of Tennis Professionals
  • MLB

    Major League Baseball
  • ITTF

    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

    Nactional Football Leagues
  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

About Us

I Dig® is a leading global brand that makes it more enjoyable to surf the internet, conduct transactions and access, share, and create information.  Today I Dig® attracts millions of users every month.r

 

Phone: (800) 737. 6040
Fax: (800) 825 5558
Website: www.idig.com
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Affiliated