The 1993–94 National Division 1 (sponsored by Courage Brewery) was the seventh season of the top tier of the English rugby union league system, the Courage Clubs Championship, currently known as Premiership Rugby. Bath were the defending champions and the only new side was promoted team Newcastle.
At the end of the season Bath retained their league title once again, making it four in a row (and fifth overall), six points clear of runners up Leicester. Newcastle Gosforth and London Irish were relegated to the 1994–95 National Division 2.[2]
Structure
Restructuring at the end of the previous season meant that the division had been reduced from fourteen teams down to ten, but now for the first time each side played one another twice, in a round robin system, home and away, to make a total of eighteen matches for each team. The bottom two teams are relegated to National Division 2.
Participating teams
Locations of the 1993–94 Courage League National Division One teams
| Team
|
Stadium
|
Capacity
|
City/Area
|
Previous season
|
| Bath
|
Recreation Ground
|
8,300 (1,000 seats)[3]
|
Bath, Somerset
|
Champions
|
| Bristol
|
Memorial Stadium
|
8,500 (1,200 seats)[4]
|
Bristol, Avon
|
6th
|
| Gloucester
|
Kingsholm
|
12,000
|
Gloucester, Gloucestershire
|
5th
|
| Harlequins
|
The Stoop
|
9,000 (2,000 seats)[5]
|
Twickenham, London
|
8th
|
| Leicester
|
Welford Road
|
14,700 (9,200 seats)[6]
|
Leicester, Leicestershire
|
3rd
|
| London Irish
|
The Avenue
|
3,600 (600 seats)[7]
|
Sunbury-on-Thames, Surrey
|
7th
|
| Newcastle Gosforth
|
Kingston Park
|
6,600[8]
|
Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear
|
Promoted from National 2 (1st)
|
| Northampton
|
Franklin's Gardens
|
6,000 (2,000 seats)[9]
|
Northampton, Northamptonshire
|
4th
|
| Orrell
|
Edge Hall Road
|
5,300 (300 seats)[10]
|
Orrell, Greater Manchester
|
9th
|
| Wasps
|
Repton Avenue
|
3,200 (1,200 seats)[11][12]
|
Sudbury, London
|
2nd
|
Table
Source:
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Results
The Home Team is listed in the left column.
Source:
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.
Fixtures & Results
Round 1
Memorial Stadium Referee: David Matthews[13] |
| Harlequins | 30 – 15 | London Irish |
| | |
| Northampton | 19 – 10 | Leicester |
| | |
| Orrell | 42 – 12 | Newcastle Gosforth |
| | |
[14]
Round 2
Recreation Ground Referee: John Pearson[13] |
| London Irish | 0 – 16 | Bristol |
| | |
| Newcastle Gosforth | 12 – 12 | Gloucester |
| | |
[14]
Round 3
| Gloucester | 14 – 23 | Leicester |
| | |
| Northampton | 23 – 12 | London Irish |
| | |
Edge Hall Road Referee: Chris Rees[13] |
| Wasps | 38 – 21 | Newcastle Gosforth |
| | |
[14]
Round 4
Recreation Ground Attendance: 8,000[15] Referee: Brian Campsall[13] |
| Bristol | 22 – 31 | Northampton |
| | |
| Newcastle Gosforth | 3 – 22 | Harlequins |
| | |
[14]
Round 5
| Gloucester | 9 – 10 | London Irish |
| | |
| Harlequins | 15 – 7 | Northampton |
| | |
| Newcastle Gosforth | 13 – 22 | Leicester |
| | |
Repton Avenue Referee: Gordon Black[13] |
[14]
Round 6
| Bath | 46 – 3 | Newcastle Gosforth |
| | |
Recreation Ground Referee: John Burtenshaw[13] |
| Leicester | 3 – 10 | Harlequins |
| | |
- Postponed due to London Irish missing 3 players due to international callouts (Ireland v Romania).[16] Game rescheduled to 26 February 1994.
[14]
Round 7
| Gloucester | 19 – 14 | Northampton |
| | |
Welford Road Attendance: 14,000[13] Referee: Jim Pearson |
| Newcastle Gosforth | 9 – 13 | London Irish |
| | |
[14]
Round 8
| Bristol | 26 – 0 | Newcastle Gosforth |
| | |
The Stoop Referee: Stuart Piercy[13] |
| London Irish | 10 – 22 | Leicester |
| | |
[14]
Round 9
Recreation Ground Referee: Steve Lander[13] |
| Gloucester | 24 – 20 | Harlequins |
| | |
| Newcastle Gosforth | 8 – 28 | Northampton |
| | |
[14]
Round 10
Recreation Ground Referee: David Leslie[13] |
| Leicester | 36 – 9 | Northampton |
| | |
| London Irish | 7 – 33 | Harlequins |
| | |
| Newcastle Gosforth | P – P | Orrell |
| | |
- Postponed. Game rescheduled to 16 April 1994.
[14]
Round 11
- Postponed. Game rescheduled to 2 April 1994.
| Gloucester | 15 – 9 | Newcastle Gosforth |
| | |
Franklin's Gardens Referee: David Matthews[13] |
[14]
Round 12
Recreation Ground Referee: Ed Morrison[13] |
| Leicester | 28 – 8 | Gloucester |
| | |
| London Irish | 13 – 16 | Northampton |
| | |
| Newcastle Gosforth | 16 – 18 | Wasps |
| | |
[14]
Round 13
Kingsholm Attendance: 9,000[13] Referee: Jim Pearson[13] |
| Harlequins | 12 – 6 | Newcastle Gosforth |
| | |
| Northampton | 22 – 19 | Bristol |
| | |
[14]
Round 6 (rescheduled game)
- Game rescheduled from 13 November.
[14]
Round 14
Recreation Ground Attendance: 7,000[13] Referee: Geraint Davies[13] |
| Leicester | 66 – 5 | Newcastle Gosforth |
| | |
| London Irish | 12 – 15 | Gloucester |
| | |
| Northampton | 15 – 14 | Harlequins |
| | |
[14]
Round 15
| Harlequins | 13 – 25 | Leicester |
| | |
| Newcastle Gosforth | 5 – 29 | Bath |
| | |
Kingston Park Referee: Doug Chapman[13] |
- Newcastle Gosforth are relegated.[13]
[14]
Round 11 (rescheduled game)
| Bristol | 21 – 8 | London Irish |
| | |
- Game rescheduled from 15 January 1994. London Irish are relegated.[17]
[14]
Round 16
Recreation Ground Referee: David Leslie[13] |
- Postponed. Game rescheduled to 19 April 1994.
| London Irish | 17 – 19 | Newcastle Gosforth |
| | |
| Northampton | 19 – 3 | Gloucester |
| | |
[14]
Round 10 (rescheduled game)
| Newcastle Gosforth | 13 – 12 | Orrell |
| | |
- Game rescheduled from 8 January 1994.
[14]
Round 16 (rescheduled game)
- Game rescheduled from 9 April 1994.
[14]
Round 17
Recreation Ground Attendance: 8,000[13] Referee: Jim Pearson[13] |
| Leicester | 38 – 3 | London Irish |
| | |
| Newcastle Gosforth | 13 – 22 | Bristol |
| | |
[14]
Round 18
| Harlequins | 38 – 20 | Gloucester |
| | |
The Avenue Referee: Geraint Hughes[13] |
| Northampton | 43 – 23 | Newcastle Gosforth |
| | |
[14]
See also
References
- ^ a b Ross Young, ed. (1994). "Season by Season Leading Scorers". Courage Official Rugby Union Club Directory 1994–95. Taunton: Tony Williams Publications. p. 43.
- ^ "League Tables". London Irish. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
- ^ Tony Williams and Bill Mitchell, ed. (1990). "Bath F.C. (Ground Details)". Courage Official Rugby Union Club Directory 1990–91 (3rd ed.). Windsor: Burlington Publishing Co. Ltd. p. 40.
- ^ Tony Williams and Bill Mitchell, ed. (1990). "Bristol F.C. (Ground Details)". Courage Official Rugby Union Club Directory 1990–91 (3rd ed.). Windsor: Burlington Publishing Co. Ltd. p. 43.
- ^ Tony Williams and Bill Mitchell, ed. (1990). "Harlequins F.C. (Ground Details)". Courage Official Rugby Union Club Directory 1990–91 (3rd ed.). Windsor: Burlington Publishing Co. Ltd. p. 50.
- ^ Tony Williams and Bill Mitchell, ed. (1990). "Leicester F.C. (Ground Details)". Courage Official Rugby Union Club Directory 1990–91 (3rd ed.). Windsor: Burlington Publishing Co. Ltd. p. 54.
- ^ Tony Williams and Bill Mitchell, ed. (1990). "London Irish R.F.C. (Ground Details)". Courage Official Rugby Union Club Directory 1990–91 (3rd ed.). Windsor: Burlington Publishing Co. Ltd. p. 98.
- ^ "Rugby Union: Winger Inga has the power". Independent. 1 March 1999.
- ^ Tony Williams and Bill Mitchell, ed. (1990). "Northampton F.C. (Ground Details)". Courage Official Rugby Union Club Directory 1990–91 (3rd ed.). Windsor: Burlington Publishing Co. Ltd. p. 64.
- ^ Tony Williams and Bill Mitchell, ed. (1990). "Orrell R.U.F.C. (Ground Details)". Courage Official Rugby Union Club Directory 1990–91 (3rd ed.). Windsor: Burlington Publishing Co. Ltd. p. 70.
- ^ Tony Williams and Bill Mitchell, ed. (1990). "Wasps F.C. (Ground Details)". Courage Official Rugby Union Club Directory 1990–91 (3rd ed.). Windsor: Burlington Publishing Co. Ltd. p. 82.
- ^ "Dallaglio's turned into Nostradamus". The Rugby Paper. 21 May 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Peter Hall and Colin Gale. "1993 to 1994". Bath Rugby Heritage. Retrieved 31 December 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v "Fixtures / Results (September 11, 1993 to April 30, 1994)". Rugby Archives. Retrieved 31 December 2024.
- ^ Stuart Alexander (3 October 1993). "Rugby Union: Gloucester's burden". Independent.
- ^ "Bristol Football Club v Gloucester Program (pg 15)" (PDF). Bristol RFC. Retrieved 31 December 2024.
- ^ Stuart Alexander (3 April 1994). "Rugby Union: Irish exiled from First Division". Independent.
External links
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