Northern | US

Former Premiership winner Will Chudley to retire at end of season


Will Chudley of Worcester Warriors during the Gallagher Premiership Rugby match between London Irish and Worcester Warriors at Gtech Community Stadium on September 10, 2022 in London, England. (Photo by Tony Marshall/Getty Images)
Comments
Comment

Coventry scrum-half Will Chudley has announced that he will retire from rugby at the end of the season.

ADVERTISEMENT

The 36-year-old has spent the last season-and-a-half in the Championship having joined Coventry after his former club Worcester Warriors went into liquidation in 2022.

He has had a huge impact on the club since then, helping them to their best-ever finish last season, third, which they can improve on this season with the club currently sat in second place with three matches remaining.

Video Spacer

Sam Whitelock on the hurt of the 2023 RWC final

Sam Whitelock on the narrow loss to the Springboks. Watch the full interview on RugbyPass TV now.

Watch now

Video Spacer

Sam Whitelock on the hurt of the 2023 RWC final

Sam Whitelock on the narrow loss to the Springboks. Watch the full interview on RugbyPass TV now.

Watch now

Chudley has played for various clubs across England throughout his career, but spent the bulk of his time with Exeter Chiefs. He played almost 150 games for the Chiefs between 2012 and 2018, coming on from the bench in the 2017 Gallagher Premiership final win over Wasps. During that time, he also represented England against the Barbarians in 2015.

The scrum-half plans to become a full-time financial advisor in his post-rugby life, something he has done alongside playing for Coventry. He does hope to remain in rugby though.

Chudley started in Coventry’s recent 52-26 win over Nottingham, and will be pivotal as his side seek a strong end to the season, where they face fourth place Bedford Blues on Saturday, and third place Cornish Pirates in his final match.

“I’ve had such a great time here at Cov,” Chudley said after announcing his retirement. “Reuniting with Razor (Alex Rae) and Scays (James Scaysbrook) has been fantastic; they’re remarkable individuals and excellent coaches.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Coventry became my haven during a time of uncertainty and fear with Worcester and coming here has proven to be one of the best choices I’ve ever made.

“The team dynamic and the culture fostered by the coaches, Jon Sharp and Nick Johnston make this place truly special, and I am confident that this group will only get better.

“Without a doubt, I have loved every minute of my time as a Cov Dog.”

Coventry head coach Alex Rae added: “I’m gutted Will won’t be around next year but want to congratulate him on a fantastic career.

“First and foremost he’s a great person and role model for our young playing group.

“His performances on the pitch have made him the stand-out no.9 in this league; he has added so much.

ADVERTISEMENT

“We were pleased to be able to give Will two enjoyable years and it is great to see him go out with a smile on his face.

“He’ll always be welcome at the Butts and I hope we see plenty of him.”

Related

Get the RugbyPass App 📱

Follow the biggest matches with live scores, line-ups, news and analysis, all in the RugbyPass App.

Download Here
On Apple IOS, Android, and Tablet.
ADVERTISEMENT
Play Video
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Long Reads

Comments on RugbyPass

N
NoLongerARuck 1 hour ago
Nations Championship: 'The data shows the north has finally caught up with the south'

The Six Nations produced so many compelling games and so much of action packed moments that you can only conclude that its the best international comp out there at the moment except for a world cup. If Wales improve it will be even better especially given the strides Italy have made in recent times. The Rugby Championship is now taking a hiatus in a year it really should be building toward something better which is terrible considering the competition was so tight last year. The Nations Champs promises much but one gets the feeling that the 6 Nations teams will not be at their peak given its at the end of their long season. In terms of rugby quality and entertainment Id rather watch the 6 Nations over everything else other than a world cup right now. The North arguably offers more in terms of entertainment than the South at club level as well. The Prem, the Champs Cup, URC and Top 14 all feature plenty of scoring and different playing styles while Super Rugby seems to be the same thing game in game out. While the South tries to speed up the game artificially with new trials and law variations the North has shown you can do it with good refereeing which penalises cynical play harshly and encourages positive actions on the field. In terms of entertainment the North wins. In terms of winning? They are making strides but until they win another world cup or get a team to rank number 1 again for an extended time again they cant really say they are better than the South.

36 Go to comments
Close Panel
Close Panel

Edition & Time Zone

{{current.name}}
Set time zone automatically
{{selectedTimezoneTitle}} (auto)
Choose a different time zone
Close Panel

Editions

Close Panel

Change Time Zone

Close
ADVERTISEMENT
Copied to clipboard

Share Article close