
The Vallis Way stadium has a capacity of 6,000 below the official requirement. Picture: Ealing Trailfinders
February 16, 2026
Supporters of Ealing Trailfinders have launched a high-profile campaign calling for their club to be promoted to the top tier of English rugby.
The are arguing that bureaucratic barriers are not only undermining sporting merit but also denying West London a major economic and cultural boost.
The campaign, branded “Don’t Let Hounslow Have All the Glory” and promoted under the hashtags #Champ2Prem and #LetEalingIN, has already gathered more than 1,500 signatures on a public petition. Fans have written to Ealing councillors and local MPs James Murray and Rupa Huq, urging political pressure on rugby’s governing bodies to rethink the rules that have repeatedly blocked the club’s path to the Premiership.
A petition in support of the campaign has already attracted over 1,600 signatures at the time of writing.
Their frustration comes amid remarkable on-field success for the team. Ealing Trailfinders have set a new second-tier league record with a 22-match unbeaten run and sit 20 points clear at the top of the table with months of the season still to play. It is the latest chapter in a period of dominance that has seen the club crowned champions three times in the past four seasons, turning what was once a modest West London side into the standout force of the Championship.
Yet despite that consistency, promotion has remained out of reach due to minimum standards set by the Rugby Football Union and the league organisers of Premiership Rugby. The most controversial requirement is a stadium capacity threshold of just over 10,000 seats, alongside planning permission for expansion within a defined timeframe. Ealing’s Trailfinders Sports Club currently holds around 6,000 spectators — a figure supporters say is already sufficient for top-flight rugby and could be increased sustainably if promotion were secured.
Campaign spokesman Adrian Mooney has described the situation as “red tape designed to keep teams out,” pointing out that the ground has already successfully hosted Premiership Cup fixtures and is home to Ealing’s women’s side in the elite domestic competition. With modern transport links via the Elizabeth Line and regular bus services from Ealing Broadway, fans argue the location is among the best-connected rugby venues in the country.
Beyond sporting principles, the campaign places heavy emphasis on economic impact. Supporters have drawn parallels with neighbouring Hounslow’s backing of Brentford FC and the move to the Gtech Community Stadium, which independent research showed generated well over £100 million in social and economic value in just a few years. They believe Premiership rugby in Ealing could deliver between £5 million and £10 million annually through matchday spending, hospitality, local suppliers and increased footfall for businesses across the borough.
With Ealing’s population now larger than Hounslow’s, campaigners argue it is anomalous that the borough has no top-tier professional sports team despite the Trailfinders being one of the most successful rugby clubs outside the Premiership era.
Financial stability is another cornerstone of the supporters’ case. While several Premiership clubs have collapsed in recent years amid rising costs and mounting debt, Ealing Trailfinders are unusual in operating without borrowing, backed by long-term investment and sponsorship. Fans point to recent industry reports warning that a majority of top-flight clubs remain financially fragile, and suggest that a sustainably run organisation like Ealing could strengthen the league rather than strain it.
There is also a wider strategic argument about rugby’s footprint in London and the South East. The collapses of London Irish in 2023 and Wasps RFC a year earlier left a significant vacuum in the capital and surrounding regions. Both clubs had deep community roots and attracted large crowds, and their disappearance has reduced elite rugby’s visibility in one of the sport’s traditional heartlands.
Supporters believe Ealing Trailfinders are uniquely positioned to fill that gap. The club runs one of London’s largest amateur sections, with thousands of members and hundreds of youth players, alongside a performance pathway in partnership with Brunel University. Its facilities, developed over two decades, host multiple sports and community activities, reinforcing its role as a local hub rather than a standalone professional outfit.
As for what the future might hold if the promotion deadlock continues, campaigners have begun floating more radical possibilities. One suggestion gaining quiet traction is that Ealing could explore entry into the United Rugby Championship, the cross-border competition involving teams from Ireland, Wales, Scotland, Italy and South Africa. While no formal talks have been confirmed, the idea reflects growing frustration with domestic structures that appear to reward infrastructure speculation over sporting success.
Others believe pressure may eventually force reform within the Premiership itself. League officials have previously discussed expansion beyond the current number of clubs to rebuild competitiveness and geographic reach following recent financial crises. If that happens, Ealing Trailfinders are widely seen as the most “ready-made” candidate — boasting strong crowds by Championship standards, proven performance, modern facilities and a stable balance sheet.
For now, the campaign is focused on mobilising public and political support to challenge what fans view as outdated criteria. “This is about integrity in sport and opportunity for our borough,” Mooney said. “We’ve proved ourselves year after year on the pitch. Ealing deserves the chance to compete at the top, and West London deserves elite rugby again.”
With record crowds turning up at Vallis Way and the petition continuing to grow, the debate over promotion is unlikely to fade.
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