Author Archives: Paul Clarke

Rhidian Jones

So sorry to learn of David’s passing. My thoughts go out to Ann and the family. David was a massive contributor to the Club, and to many other good causes such as the Scouts. He embodied personally the values which any version of the Big Society must embrace to be effective. Things will not happen unless someone takes a grip of them and makes them happen. Very often that someone was David.

For the club he will be remembered for launching the Colts, ably carried on by Bill Taylor, which set the foundation for where we are today, but that was only one of his many contributions. I remember him as a patient and indefatigable team secretary, and a captain from whom I took over after he broke his arm playing. That did not stop him playing a full part in “his team”, which played the best rugby I every experienced at Ealing. Unsurprisingly, as the team consisted of thirteen Kiwis, who shared two flats in Earls Court, David and I. We not only played together on the Saturday but frequently on the Sunday as well, either for the Hansom Cab PH in Earls Court, or, if David was short, for the Old Priorians. David was, as ever, at the centre of this. Our results were spectacular, not least because two of our Antipodean stars had recently played for clubs which went on to become the core of Super 14 sides today.

As team secretary David took some stick for keeping this team together, but his policy was born of the pragmatic view that if they could not play together they would be disinclined to play at all, and rules are made to be broken. At all events, David and I had a most enjoyable season and spent a lot of time together, which was thoroughly enjoyable for he was great company, as he continued to be when I met him at the Club last year. David being David organised an end of season dinner for that team which was particularly memorable because the player of the year who was to receive a presentation at the dinner had been arrested at a tube station on his way to the dinner on account of youthful exuberance following a leaving party at work earlier that evening. He used his one telephone call to ring David. I was then instructed by David to put my legal skills to work on the Custody Sergeant at the Police Station where he was being held. The Custody Sergeant was a rugby man and when he heard the circumstances he agreed that youthful exuberance was not an offence known to the law, and released the player who duly received his award. Impossible to achieve in today’s world of political correctness and form filling but that was rugby then, which tickled David pink. For David it was the thing which made the evening, and he even talked of it when we met last year.

Hail and Farewell, David, well done thou good and faithful servant.

Best
Rhidian

REPORT: Ruislip “Club” 86 – 12 Ealing Exiles

Exiles overwhelmed by strong Ruislip club side.

Stef McCabe reports.

Going back to Friday and looking at the 9 positive responses of those that wanted to play on Saturday, I wondered if the usual dozen or so others had become a little apathetic following the conclusion of our league campaign. Thankfully Mitch signed up at the last minute and was able to bring along a few mates to confirm our fixture.

It was a beautiful warm spring afternoon when I walked into the Ruislip club house to the inviting sight of Barry handing out the pre-match Guinness. Everything seemed to be in order for a great day, unfortunately soon after the Guinness is when the good ended.

We had to shuffle our forward pack around as we had only two regular front rowers, three second rowers and, unprecedentedly after weeks of several back rowers, only one turned up for this match! Well done to Tom for stepping up and moving from the second row into the front row – you had an absolute cracker of a game! We also recruited Neal from the backs to play on one flank whilst an opposition player was supplied for use on the other.

We won the toss and received the ball, we had a very good start, claiming it well and slowly making our way up into the opposition’s 22. We kept the pressure on but unfortunately after several minutes we could not capitalise. We ended up losing the ball which Ruislip punted down into our half and shortly afterwards claimed the first try of the match. Followed by a bunch more.

Quite a few stern words were given each time we were behind the posts, unfortunately it took another few more Ruislip tries before the words kicked in and we started to get our act together. We had some good runs to get us into the Ruislip end of the field, this was followed up by the forwards finally securing the ball at the rucks enabling the ball to be shipped to the backs who took us into opposition 22. From a well recycled ball I picked it up and seen McSweeny on my shoulder, I looked to ship it but with the opposition in his face I kept the ball in hand and managed to beat a couple of defenders and cross over to claim a try.

Ruislip quickly responded with more tries and unfortunately this continued throughout the second half. However we did catch a break when the opposition fumbled a backline move and one of Mitch’s mates swooped on it and darted 50 yards up the field for our second and final try.

Ruislip were a very good outfit with winning their league and gaining promotion. To add insult to our misery they loaded this team with players from higher parts of the club, it was quite an inhospitable affair which ended up being an extremely bad day out for the Exiles.

On another note it was Dave McSweeny’s birthday on Saturday. Alex organised a rather interesting looking curdled Guinness drink but luckily for Dave he took off without catching sight of it. Not so lucky for Mitch though who gallantly downed it after being nominated by his old man. Good effort Mitch!

Tries

  • Stef McCabe
  • One of the Joes

Cons:

  • Alex A

Players:
1 – Tom Tom
2 – Fabio
3 – Dave McSweeny
4 – Eff Lynch
5 – Anthony
6 – Ruislip Player  – Connor
7 – Neal Craig
8 – Julian
9 – Stef McCabe
10 – Mitch
11 – Alex Adide
12 – Scott
13 – Mitch’s mate Joe 
14 – Mike Salmon
15 – Mitch’s mate Joe too

Ealing Trailfinders remain on top

Our 1st XV remain two points clear at the top of National League 2 South after dispatching Worthing by seven tries to one resulting in a 45 – 10 victory at Vallis Way on Saturday, 

Full Match Report to follow

Mike Cudmore appointed General Manager and Director of Rugby

Ealing Trailfinders Rugby Club is delighted to announce that Mike Cudmore has been appointed General Manager and Director of Rugby.

Mike has led our coaching and rugby development efforts at Ealing since 2002 and has been our Director of Rugby since 2005.  Mike assumes his new role with immediate effect, and his responsibilities now include direct involvement in player development across all of our sections, commercial relationships and our schools and community programmes.  Mike brings with him a wealth of experience in these spheres from his earlier career with London Irish.

Mike Cudmore said, "It’s great to be able to help take our Club forward yet further.  There is much more we can do to develop the talent of young players within the club and build relationships with business helping spread rugby values and the excitement of the game to more people in the local community".  He added, "Ealing Trailfinders is already a great club and my job is to make it even better for everyone at Ealing.  I am looking forward to getting started!"

In the first weeks of the new role Mike will be continuing to focus on the remaining 1st XV league matches, with promotion still up for grabs there is still much to play for.  He will work to reinforce and further build the "One Club" ethos, and he will be reviewing all of our off-field support structures to ensure we have the right resources, in the right place, to deliver the services the Club members and partners need.

I know you will support his efforts and join me in congratulating Mike and wish him every success in the new role.

Mike Stiff – Chairman

Referee Coaching Evening 6 April @7.45pm

Dear All

The last coaching evening of the Ealing Referee Section this season will be at 7.45 pm on Wednesday 6th April – next week. We are delighted to welcome Simon Hardcastle, a senior London Society referee, who will focus initially on the scrum, which causes so many difficulties in the senior game and presents significant safety issues for youth players and challenges for us as referees.

We will then run a Q & A session allowing you an opportunity to seek guidance on refereeing issues which have arisen during the season.

For those who wish to do so, we can then retire the the Duke of Kent pub for a pint to celebrate a successful season.

Although this is slightly short notice, do please come along. Simon is very knowledgeable and we will all learn something useful. I would be delighted to see as many of you as possible.

Regards
 Charlie

REPORT GWR 17 – 0 Ealing Exiles

Exiles brave efforts in MMT Div 5 Semis obtained best result of the season v GWR, but not enough to secure a place in this years final.
Nick Greenhalgh reports. 

The fact that the Exiles reached the Semi finals of our MMT division deserves congratulations on its own. We only secured our place there through the win in our last league table fixture last weekend. The first half of the league season saw us loose 5 games and notch up 2 wins. We were well down the table. But then we started to improve and managed 5 wins to 2 losses in the second half of the league table fixtures and did a lot better against the teams we got thrashed by. e.g. Chiswick Chiefs beat us 63-7 in October yet we lost only 16-0 in February! In our third game versus GWR we held them to 17-0 and really ought to have got on the score sheet. However, GWR are playing well and consistent this season having lost only 1 league fixture this season. GWR skipper Paul informed me our match was the toughest of the season. Last week international ref Wayne Barnes said he’d seen some great rugby from us. So we may have lost but I’m proud of how we have done in the closing months of this season. We’ve ended on the MMT Div 5 season on a positive note as far as I am concerned. We won 7 games out of the 14 league table games, compared with last season’s 1 win from 10 games!

Back to the game …….

The league semis bring with them a higher level of rules. For once we were restricted to picking a max of 20 players including 5 front row. The Exiles are not used to having to invoke any form of selection, other than not allowing those who have not played and are not at playing level on the pitch. Some players turned up in the changing room oblivious to this and having not read my emails stating the starting line-up and restrictions. Others called in late on Friday or very early Sat morning. All making my job more and more complicated. So apologies to the few who did not get a game, and thanks to those who played out of position and not for a full game etc.. We were very backrow heavy. Big thanks to Ed Moores, T and Ciaran for doing time on the wing and Jareth for stepping upto prop after Ghassan took a well earned rest.

The game was fast and intense. Big hits coming in from both sides. Testament to this is Andy Madden’s cracked sternum! We started reasonably containing the GWR threat, and often making advances. However, we had discipline issues again and a ref who was not keen on rucking illegalities as such we gave away a lot of penalties. Some folk just seem to forget what a entering from the back foot is, or that they need to at least feign to roll away after the tackle ( Messrs Tom Tom, T, Fabio take note!). We went a try down probably mid way though the first half, and still felt in contention. However, we were not breaking through the GWR defences and in the rucks and loose play GWR’s sizeable mass difference was paying them big dividends. Several players heads were far from calm and this was also hurting the team performance. As skipper, and as I’ve stated many times we need to not get wound up by any of the oppositions actions. When this takes place we let ourselves down, we lose structure and skippers have to spend way too much time in discussions with the ref, as opposed to being able to concentrate on the game. Next season I’d appreciate it if this was cut out. So we entered half time with a yellow card as a certain hot headed centre pushed the ref’s patience too far.

On the restart we came out on all cylinders desperate to get on the score sheet. We had some good breaks, the half time stoppage giving us a bit more energy. However, yet again we couldn’t quite break through all the way to the try line. In defense we still kept them a bay though. Everyone was keeping the pressure up.

Probably the best Exiles play of the day was from Mike Salmon who indeed leapt like a salmon to take a high ball at speed under great pressure from a considerably larger GWR opposer. Both sides were gob smacked by this display! Special mention to Eff who also had a great game, putting in some great hits and making some hard yards, and pulling off the front of lineout ball thrown into the bread basket move, whose code name I will not divulge, for the second time of the season.

At the end of the match I think we lost partly due to discipline/temper issues, partly due to GWR being an uncompromising outfit, and partly due to not realising the ref was going to penalise all ruck misdemeanor. Poor Ciaran was yellow carded a little harshly IMO, in the last play of the game as he was wedged yet again at the bottom of a ruck with pretty much no ability to move away due to cracking GWR pressure, may be he shouldn’t have been smiling so much from down there in a "Chesteresque" manner. The previous week the ref was clearer in shouting ball lost black, or green, and in doing this the team that had lost would desist from getting the ball and play would flow more smoothly. I think a similar communication and attitude to the rucks would have made our game smoother. Suspect the end result would have been the same though, sadly!

Well done to GWR, you have had a cracking season, and we’ve enjoyed reducing our losses against you. Good luck in the final v Chiswick on April 9th! Lets hope their 1’s and 2’s are playing at the same time and you get a fair crack at them. If you lose, we look fwd to trying to reverse our result against you next season!

As per the starting paragraph! I’m proud to be an Exile, cracking season, let’s build on it next season and ideally be of a quality ready to move up a league. We are not there yet, but we are getting ever closer!  

Players and positions played:

  1. Steve Richards – 1
  2. Fabio Kransniqi – 2
  3. Ghassan Matta -3
  4. Anthony Lynch – 4
  5. Thomas Laishley – 5
  6. John Moore – 5
  7. Jareth Keenan – 6,3
  8. Gautam Tamang – 7, 11
  9. Alex Adide – 15
  10. Nick Greenhalgh – 8 – Skipper
  11. Stef McCabe – 9
  12. Mitch O’Callaghan – 10
  13. Scott O’Callaghan – 12
  14. Neal Craig – 13 + yellow card
  15. Andy Madden – 15, 13
  16. Mike Salmon – 14
  17. Ed Moores – 11 
  18. Ciaran Doyle – 14, 7 + yellow card
  19. Jonathan McKeogh – 6
  20. Chandra Sekar – bench (sorry we didn’t get you on!)

REPORT: Shelford 23 – 59 Ealing Trailfinders

Ealing returned from Davy Field with the important five league points in the bag after this impressive win at Shelford.

Phil Chesters continued his amazing season with with four more to his name, which sees him take his total for the season to 51, with five league games of the regular season remaining.

Ealing Director of Rugby Mike Cudmore said after the game “I was very pleased with our performance. We were very clinical in attack and came away with an important away win".

Ealing know from previous experience that playing Shelford on the home turf would be no walk in the park despite the side’s differing league form. Last season Shelford dented Ealing’s title aspirations with a 19-15 defeat, and one that was fresh in Ealing’s mind when they arrived on Saturday.

Shelford started the game well, moving the ball wide and testing the Ealing defence, but a trait that was to be repeated throughout a long afternoon for the Cambridgeshire side, saw them spill the ball as Ealing showed why they have the best defensive record in the league.Throughout the afternoon, Shelford pounded away at the Ealing line, only to be stopped in their tracks.

Ealing opened the scoring on six minutes, when turning a Shelford attack over, the ball was moved wide to find Phil Chesters who, beating the defence for pace, crossed for his first of a four try haul. Neil Hallett converted the first of his seven successful conversions of the day. Shelford’s error count continued to rise and as a result Ealing’s dangerous counter attacking style was bought to the fore. Further tries were added by Owen Bruynseels on 10 minutes and Phil Chesters again on 26 minutes both converted by Neil Hallett and Ealing extended their lead to 21-0 .

Shelford came back strongly and tries by wing Jay Williams and prop Matt Gregerson pulled the home side back into the game after 35 minutes, Ealing’s lead was cut back to 12-21, Tom Dann managing one conversion. The respite was short lived, as Ealing moved the ball through several phases of play, the impressive Pete Hodgkinson, fresh from England Counties duty the previous week, found some space and he sent Owen Bruynseels over for his second and Ealing’s fourth of the day. They went into half time with a healthy 28-12 lead, as Hallett converted again on the stroke of half time.

Skipper Ben Ward commented on his team’s first half display, “We were pleased with certain aspects of our game at half time, we were very clinical with the ball especially from turnover and had the bonus point secure. However we were not happy with our defence and the two tries we conceeded which let them back in the game. ”

Ealing began the second period as they had the first, on 45 minutes Phil Chesters got his ninth hatrick of the season to extend Ealing’s half time lead. In truth the Ealing backs possessed to much guile for their hosts, Joe Price cashed in on some fine approach work by the Ealing forwards on 50 minutes, Hallett adding the extras to take Ealing out to 40-12.

Chesters was on hand once again for his forth and Ealing’s seventh of the day as Ealing began to run Shelford ragged. Six minutes later the hosts got one back through second row Glen Remnant. Ealing’s debutant prop Lee Evans shortly afterwards was on the wrong end of referee Mr Halford patience and he received a yellow card which marred a fine day for the young prop against a decent Shelford pack.

Replacement Blair Morris made amends for Evans’s misdemeanour, on 69 minutes and with Hallett’s conversion pushing Ealing past 50 points .Scrum half Morgan Thompson topped a fine display with a well taken try on 76 minutes and despite the late try from home scrum half Charlie Barker, Ealing maintained their two point lead at the top of National 2 South this comprehensive 59-22 victory at Davy Field.

Other results in National 2 South saw Jersey maintain the pressure on Ealing with a hard fought 44-28 win against Clifton, whilst 3rd placed Richmond saw off a spirited Worthing side 22-36.

Ealing return to Vallis Way this coming weekend, to face a Worthing side, always a tough fixture, and more so after the South coast side have been on the back of successive league defeats to Richmond (22-36) and Jersey (10-37).

Looking ahead to the forthcoming Worthing fixture, Mike added “Worthing are a good side and are very organised. We will be working hard this week in training and preparing well for them. I will be looking forward to seeing our team performance standards improve this week in front of our home crowd”.

Ealing Trailfinders

15 – Neil Hallett, 14 – Owen Bruynseels, 13 – Pete Hodgkinson, 12 -, 11 Joe Price – Phil Chesters, 10 – Ben Ward (C), 9 – Morgan Thompson
8 – Anders Nilsson, 7 – Lee Starling, 6 – Karl Gibson, 5 – Matt Evans, 4 – Ben Griffiiths, 3 – Lee Evans, 2 – Jon Moyce, 1 – Rob Buchanan, 16 – Lewis Brown, 17 – Sungo Kuwana, 18 – Ryan Gregory, 19 – Blair Morris 20 – Ronald McLean-Dents Joe Price

REPORT London Welsh Vets 36 – 43 Ealing Exiles

Exiles finally took the lead in the last 90 seconds of play v London Welsh , winning the nail biter 43-36. This league position defining match was refereed by the Wayne Barnes, and the result gave us a place in the MMT Div 5 Play offs!

Proud skipper Nick Greenhalgh reports.

Undoubtabley the most built up match of the Exiles season. The mid table decider of the MMT Division 5 league. We needed a draw or a win to get enough league points in our last league table match to allow us to sneek ahead of Quintin to fourth position and so secure our place in the MMT play offs.

So suitably we had a ref to match the caliber of the game. Wayne Barnes, who when he is not officiating World Cup quarter final matches, likes to ref proper rugby. He had a cracking game himself. Boy did he like to let the game play and prefer good communication about potential infringements, as opposed to keeping out of it and endlessly blowing the whistle. I think there were only a handful of penalties, but a heap of absolutely knackered lads, and that was just ten minutes in.

With great anticipation and build up we arrived down in Richmond at the well cared for picturesque London Welsh strong hold. We arrived in great numbers. Perhaps too many! In the pack we had 2 men for every position. In the backs only a couple of spares. So several backrowers had to take the hit and stand out in the line with the backs. Some played so well there they may not make it back to the pack!

The headline and score give a picture of the Exiles looking probably in contention for long parts of this match. We weren’t! Within the first ten minutes we’d let in three tries! The Welsh number 8 was a youthful monster very hard to pin down, frequently breaking tackles and frequently bludgeoning on with several Exiles in his trail. Heads were dropping as we looked and felt like we were going to be on the wrong end of an whooping.

However, we started to realise if we worked fast, used the backs, and in particular had men in support we could make progress. The scrum and lineout options were not working too well, but in the loose we weren’t doing too badly and if we made a few yards and span it out we were making progress. I think Stef McCabe got our first try with what is becoming his trade mark scrum half dummy and dive move, feigning a pass and then cutting inside an over that sweet try line!

The pouring rain of Welsh tries began to dry up. The sun shone brighter and the Exiles started to see possible light at the end of the tunnel. We had another break after several phases working it through the forwards in a ruck and then breaking out left. Ed Moores making some hard yards on the wing, span it back to Stef who clocked up another 20 metres before spinning it out to Alex A to fininshg off a lovely well worked try.

Half time came and we had to make wholesale changes due to the Exiles generous if you turn up we’ll try and give you half a game philosophy. This undertaking did seem to give the Welsh a little more control of the scrum and lineout, however, in the loose we still held our own, and in general I think we had most of the possesion. Though typically the Welsh were more fruitful when they did get the ball. However, like a dog backed into a corner we weren’t going to give up easily.

The tackling was still not great, and way too often certain 2nd rowers were woefully lumbering around behind rucks in that sacred scrum half to fly half channel, essentially cutting off our entire backline from the next phase of rugby. But the support when unimpeded kept us alive. The backline kept on trying to breach that Welsh line, wave after wave of hits came in as Stef span the ball to Mitch at 10, and Mitch would ship it to his dad Scott at 12 who would try and blast the holes through the Welsh. The holes weren’t for blasting, but Scott was sucking in several defenders and not loosing possession giving us a great platform for the next phase. Scott did however breach through at one point and got himself on the score sheet.

From a penalty five yards out Stef knee knocked it to Jareth who was steaming in from the left. Wayne blew up and said "lets do it properly now", Stef span it right this time to me (Nick G) and I managed to smash into a heap of London Welsh defenders right smack between the posts, stretch out and touch down the ball! Thankfully Wayne was in a perfect position to see the try.

The game progressed to the closing stages I recall being down 10 points with 10 minutes to go thinking, we may get this victory after all. We were clawing our way back towards contention. Shortly after this Neal Craig broke through and showed that his taste for try scoring was not just a one match affair. Great support was bring us back into the game. Then we were 3 down. Finally with 90 seconds on the clock in what we thought was the last play of the game we yet again failed to cleanly catch the restart however, swiftly it was gathered and shipped out to our semi formed line, from here Mitch came into his own putting in an incredible run culminating in the match winning try.

The Exiles roared with delight! We’d for the fist time in the match got ahead, and we thought it was the last play too! However, Wayne informed us we had 30 seconds left on the clock. We could still throw the game away! Nightmare!

The next restart should have seen us just catch, hold for a while and hoof to touch. We didn’t have chance to do that though. The oppo tried a quick one kicking the ball for their backs to chase down in a suprise attempt to ambush the tired Exiles. This back fired big time for the Welsh, as "T" in his appearance on the left wing was awesome, firing through several tackles and making massive gains in territory. He couldn’t quite make it himself though and thankfully didn’t have to. Jareth was steaming up in support and managed to break over the line. The roar this time was of utter jubilation, what we’d been planning and hoping for for months had come together in the last seconds of the game. This victory sees us step over Quintin IIs in the MMT Div 5 final table into fourth, on the last day we could legally play this postponed match. As fourth we get to the play off and play the first team. So next weekend we are in the semi’s versus GWR playing an away match at home! I think this just means they have to pay for the meal tickets!

The sun was shining in Richmond, and the sun was shining on the Exiles! And so all was well in the world! We probably won due to keeping our heads up and the pressure on, especially in support.

Only downside was sadly Gautier took a big hit to the shoulder and badly damaged a ligament there. Hope that recovers well.

Big thanks to our great hosts and enjoyable oppoents London Welsh and our celebrity referree Wayne! May be see you in the final!

Exiles prepare yourself for next weekend. The last league match we need to win as promotion is not our number 1 goal. We are still liking the deep painful wounds of previous forays into the higher leagues. We do however want to show we ain’t that bad for a bunch of pre match half pint Guinness slurpers. Lets give GWR a good game and see if we can push on to the finals and then lose to a better team!

Tries:
Stef McCabe
Alex Adide
Nick Greenhalgh
Scott OCallaghan
Neal Craig
Mitch OCallaghan
Jareth Keanan

Cons:
Alex A (4?)

Players:

Steve Richards – 1
Dave MacSweeney – 2
Ash Spencer – 3
Gautier Henry – 3
John Moore – 4
Luke ?- 4
Thomas Laishley – 5
Anthony Chapman – 5
Fabio Krasniqi – 6,2
Jonathan McKeogh – 6
Jareth Keenan  – 7
Ciaran Doyle – 7
Julian Sweeney – 8,5
Nick Greenhalgh -7,8 – Skipper
Stef McCabe – 9
Mitch Ocallagan – 10
Gautam Tamang – 11
Paul Havel – 11
Scott Ocallaghan – 12
Neal Craig – 13
Dave Morgan – 13
Ed Moores – 14
Chandra Sekar – 14
Mark Davies  – 15
Alex Adide – 15

FPS London Update

FPS London Financial Planning are still offering 10% from any fees generated by Ealing Rugby Club members back to the club.

FPS London are an Ealing based Financial Planners, who currently sponsor the Under 13s, as well as attending a number of Ealing Trailfinders games and lunches. Read their latest news on the attached newsletter,

www.ealingrugby.co.uk/files/robmcevoy/fpsnewsletter.pdf

REPORT: Ealing 130 – 14 Hinckley

 

Ealing showed no mercy to Hinckley RFC when they arrived at Vallis Way for their first visit to the league leaders West London ground.

On a dry day, the first for many weeks Ealing clocked up 20 tries with centre Ronnie McLean- Dents and Phil Chesters bagging 4 and Owen Bruynseels scoring a hat trick of his own in an utterly ruthless display of running rugby against what was a limited Hinckley side

Ealing opened the scoring within the first minute when straight from the kick off, Owen Bruynseels found Pete Hodgkinson and the Ealing centre went over for the first of the afternoon. This coming week the Ealing centre, will be on Ealing Counties duties when the squad fly to Ireland to face Irish Clubs at Old Belvedere RFC in Dublin on Friday. The club wish him well on his travels.

The game was never in doubt from the first whistle as Ealing’s forwards running at a fragile Hinckley side from depth a rout was on the cards from that first try by Hodgkinson. Matt Evans and Anders Nilsson were making havoc in the wide spaces at Vallis Way and the scoreboard continued to roll over at a rate of knots, with tries from Neil Hallett ( 4 minutes) Chesters ( 6m 19 m) , Karl Gibson (13,37) McLean Dents ( 15) , Nilsson ( 26) , Morgan Thompson (35) and Matt Evans (40) as Ealing went into half time 62-14 ahead.

Being critical of a 48 point half time lead, Mike Cudmore said "We went in at half time with a healthy lead but were disappointed with some of our delivery areas. " , but added , " We addressed this in the second half and the bench also made a big impact"

Looking to give the bench a run out , Ealing rang the changes during the first period of the second half, Ben Griffiths replacing Blair Morris who had been outstanding all afternoon, Joe Price replaced Neil Hallett with Hodgkinson slipping into the full back shirt, Ryan Gregory came on for Jack Fishwick, whilst Matt Newman replaced Lewis Brown.

The changes added an extra impetus to Ealing as the tries continued to flow. Owen Bruynseels crossed for the first of the second half on 49 minutes, then the gates opened as the Ealing backs revelled in the time and space they had on the ball. Nine more tires were scored . Owen Bruynseels ( 49 minutes, 76 and 78) , Ronnie McLean Dents ( 51 & 56) Joe Price ( 56) , Pete Hodgkinson (62) and finally Phil Chesters (74 and 80 minutes).

Ealing will know that tougher fixture will be around the corner and stand between them and a league title chance. Jersey will play their game in hand this weekend when they visit Worthing. A good win will leave them only 2 points behind Ealing, and Mike Cudmore is aware the teams destiny is in their own hands. He said " Every game from now until the end of the season is a cup final. We all know what is required and as we have all season, we will go game by game. We will look to keep improving as a team and in doing so strive to produce the outcome we all want . "

One of Ealing’s 4 try hero’s Ronnie McLean Dents said after the game, "I thought the boys were pretty clinical throughout the game, great support and composure lead to us scoring some well finished tries.For the rest of the season we are taking each game as it comes and preparing the same like any other."

For photos see : http://www.ealingrugby.co.uk/index.php?option=com_simgallery&Itemid=188&func=viewalbum&aid=210. Our thanks to Loretta Thompson for these wonderful photos.

Ealing are having a weekend off this week, and return to league action on the 26th March with a visit to Shelford RFC

Ealing Trailfinders :
15 – Neil Hallett, 14 – Owen Bruynseels , 13 – Pete Hodgkinson , 12 – ,Ronald McLean-Dents 11 – Phil Chesters, 10 – Ben Ward (C) , 9 – Morgan Thompson
8 – Anders Nilsson, 7 – Karl Gibson , 6 – Blair Morris , 5 – Matt Evans , 4 – Jack Fishwick , 3 – Steve Neville, 2 – Jon Moyce , 1 – Lewis Brown , 16 – Matt Newman, 17 – Sungo Kuwana, 18 – Jack Fishwick, 19 – Ben Griffiths 20 – Joe Price