Name: Seb Reynolds
Position: Wing / Centre
Total Tries: 78
First Try: Bournemouth x2 (a) – September 27, 2003.
Last Try: Exmouth (h) – January 28, 2012.
Most tries in a game: (4) – Maidenhead (March 13, 2010).
Most tries in a season: 13 in 2010/11.
Most tries against: Bournemouth – 6.
Summary:
Seb’s first tries for Rams came with a double in the 70-16 thrashing of hosts Bournemouth in September 2003, and he went onto make it four in five games by adding further efforts against Trowbridge (27-19) and Dorchester (13-16).
He started the 2004/05 campaign with an opening-day effort in the 31-14 reverse at North Dorset, going onto dot down against Bournemouth (14-17) and Wootton Bassett (8-23) before he ended the season in flying fashion with six tries in the last six games – starting at Bradford-on-Avon (18-20), continuing in the 29-7 victory against Trowbridge, bagging a brace at home to North Dorset (22-24) and ending with scores at Frome (22-17) and against Devizes (14-3).
Having topped the scoring charts with nine, Seb upped his output to double figures the following year as Rams won Southern Counties North.
He got the opener at Olney (34-17) as the visitors overturned a 10-0 half-time deficit, grabbing another the following week at home to Slough (55-10).
His third was against Bletchley (33-5), while he enjoyed a hot streak of five in four matches prior to Christmas with a score against Stow-on-the-Wold (8-7), and doubles at home to Amersham & Chiltern (45-0) and Chipping Norton (41-3).
Seb then bagged a brace in the thrilling 51-38 home win against Stow which kicked off 2006 to take him to 10 for the campaign.
Rams made it back-to-back titles with the South West Two East championship the following year, and Seb continued his fine form with 12 more tries.
He started with two at home to Henley Wanderers (39-15) and further tries versus Frome (29-17), Swindon (41-36) and Swanage & Wareham (39-21) made it five in four games to start the season.
Another four in three arrived a fortnight later at Cheltenham (33-15), against High Wycombe (33-19) and at Marlow (36-26), when he dotted down twice.
Seb started February 2007 with back-to-back tries against Windsor (15-27) and Bournemouth (26-20), and grabbed his 12th of the campaign at home to Frome (28-5).
After running in three scores in the 2007/08 season – Bracknell (27-32), Coney Hill (19-7) and Bracknell away (13-49) – he was back in double figures the year after.
He was on the scoresheet in the opening-day 42-15 success at home to Cleve, following up a fortnight later in the 55-7 win against Oxford Harlequins.
The next three times Seb crossed the whitewash he did so twice, against Clifton (24-40), Quins (30-19) and Chippenham (56-18), and by completing seasonal doubles against Cleve (39-23) and Clifton (32-29), he ended with 10 and topped the charts for the season, sitting on 48 for his career.
He scored in the second game of the 2009/10 campaign at Chippenham (41-24) and brought up his half century at home to Chinnor (23-20) the week after.
He bagged a brace at home to Bournemouth (42-21) a fortnight later and went onto cross the whitewash against Exmouth (34-23), Maidenhead (38-10), Chippenham (29-21) and Exmouth away (27-23) before a career-best four at home to Maids (62-8) again propelled him into finishing as top scorer with 12.
Seb’s best-ever try-scoring season came the next season as Rams finished fifth in National Three South West, at that stage their highest finish.
He went over at Bridgwater & Albion (25-30) in the second game and at home to Cheltenham (40-19) a week later, before losing efforts against Exmouth (15-19) and Newton Abbot (15-25).
After scoring at Cleve (42-15), Seb ended the season in brilliant fashion with eight tries in the last 10 games – Coney Hill (38-14), Abbot (36-40), Barnstaple (25-8), Old Patesians (56-15) where he crossed twice, Cheltenham (22-34), Weston-super-Mare (27-23) and Barnstaple at Old Bath Road (48-34).
Seb’s last season saw Rams go even higher, finishing third, and he contributed against Bridgwater & Albion (38-15), Amersham & Chiltern (56-5), Newbury (46-6), Newton Abbot (39-8) and Exmouth (22-26) to end with 78 league tries to his name.
Tries by season:
2003/04 (4) – Bournemouth x2 (a), Trowbridge (a), Dorchester (a).
04/05 (9) – North Dorset (a), Bournemouth (a), Wootton Bassett (h), Bradford-on-Avon (a), Trowbridge (h), North Dorset x2 (h), Frome (a), Devizes (h).
05/06 (10) – Olney (a), Slough (h), Bletchley (h), Stow-on-the-Wold (a), Amersham & Chiltern x2 (h), Chipping Norton x2 (h), Stow-on-the-Wold x2 (h).
06/07 (12) – Henley Wanderers x2 (h), Frome (a), Swindon (h), Swanage & Wareham (a), Cheltenham (a), High Wycombe (h), Marlow x2 (a), Windsor (a), Bournemouth (h), Frome (h).
07/08 (3) – Bracknell (h), Coney Hill (h), Bracknell (a).
08/09 (10) – Cleve (h), Oxford Harlequins (h), Clifton x2 (h), Oxford Harlequins x2 (a), Chippenham x2 (h), Cleve (a), Clifton (a).
09/10 (12) – Chippenham (a), Chinnor (h), Bournemouth x2 (h), Exmouth (h), Maidenhead (a), Chippenham (h), Exmouth (a), Maidenhead x4 (h).
10/11 (13) – Bridgwater & Albion (a), Cheltenham (h), Exmouth (h), Newton Abbot (h), Cleve (a), Coney Hill (h), Newton Abbot (a), Barnstaple (a), Old Patesians x2 (h), Cheltenham (a), Weston-super-Mare (a), Barnstaple (h).
11/12 (5) – Bridgwater & Albion (h), Amersham & Chiltern (h), Newbury (a), Newton Abbot (h), Exmouth (h).
The list:
5 - Andy Amor
6 - Craig Clements
7 - Jak Rossiter
8 - Joe Duffelen
9 - Ben Henderson
10 - Conor Corrigan
11 - James Baker
12 - Tom Vooght
13 - Jamie Guttridge
14 - Joao Costa
15 - Jevon Marsh
16 - Stevie Bryant
17 - Matt Reed
18 - Rob Castell
19 - Micky Bell
20 - Rodney Hutson
21 - Azza Hopkins
22 - Spike Chandler
23 - JJ Bell
24 - Olly Poole
25 - Olly Foxley
26 - Greg Illingworth
27 - Andy Fairweather
28 - Josh Smith
29 - Ollie Randall
30 - Greg Way