The header shows our Junior playing fields set out for Sports Day; as ever, a welcoming place for all sports, summer or winter!
This week’s news that the Department for Education is scrapping the £320 million PE and Sport Premium in favour of a new “partnerships network” will, understandably, be met with some anxiety across the profession. No one can ever welcome a cut in funding, and school leaders are right to ask serious questions about how a scheme worth some 22 per cent less will reach every corner of the country, and whether the money will get to the frontline rather than a new layer of bureaucracy. Those are fair concerns, and I share them — not least because this cut lands on the same independent sector that has spent the past 18 months absorbing VAT on fees, a tax no other country in Europe sees fit to levy on education. I’m really disappointed that government policy currently treats independent schools as a convenient source of revenue one moment, and a partner to be quietly relied upon the next. There’s a glaring hypocrisy to tax a sector as a private luxury and lean on it as a public good in the same breath.
But strip away the funding arithmetic for a moment, and look at the principle behind the change: schools and their local sports clubs, working together, are to be placed back at the heart of how young people get active. As Principal Emeritus of Claires Court, I take honest pride and feel a flicker of vindication. It is a model we have been quietly building in Maidenhead for well over forty years, long before it had a policy name.
Our first formal partnership was with the Maidenhead and District Schools Sailing Association, back in 1978. Forty-eight years on, we remain proud partners of Maidenhead Sailing Club, and this week our sailing team is out at the National School Sailing Championships at Itchenor, competing against the very best schools and clubs in the country.
The partnership with Maidenhead Rowing Club began in 1984. We row from their clubhouse on the river, while through the winter months Maidenhead Juniors train back at the school, using our rowing gallery and fitness centre. That shared investment in facilities is paying off spectacularly just now: Claires Court has three crews qualified for Henley Royal Regatta, rowing’s greatest stage, this summer, joined at Henley by crews from Maidenhead Rowing Club itself. Two clubs, one stretch of river, one clubhouse, and both on the startline at Henley: what better advertisement for what shared training facilities can achieve?
Other partnerships have flourished in the same spirit. We work with both Maidenhead Rugby and Maidenhead Football clubs; in cricket, we partner with Boyne Hill and Maidenhead & Bray, and our Playing Fields at our Junior School at Ridgeway, now providing the home ground for Maidenhead Royals. Before long the Thicket will once again be alive with the 600 junior footballers of MUFC, back for their seasonal home at Claires Court, just as it is now for Maidenhead Nomads FC too.
The deepest and most enduring of all these partnerships is with Phoenix Rugby Club, forged in 1984 and now extending for a further thirty years, giving the Taplow community a genuine home for adults and children alike in both rugby and cricket.
I set all of this out not to claim any great foresight, but because it illustrates something the DfE’s new network will only succeed if it grasps: partnership cannot be conjured into being by a funding formula. It takes decades of trust, shared facilities, and people on both sides who keep turning up for each other, season after season, long after any grant has been spent. What Maidenhead has built with its schools and clubs is not a compliance exercise. It is a community habit, indeed for Claires Court “Maidenhead is our Campus”!
And it is a habit paying dividends right now. Alongside our sailors and our Henley crews, our tennis team has reached the last sixteen of the LTA finals in Nottingham, our cricketers are preparing for the school county cricket finals, and our First XV rugby squad are about to depart on their summer tour to South Africa, playing in Johannesburg, Pretoria and Cape Town. It is, by any measure, a remarkable few weeks for young sportspeople who train, more often than not, on pitches, courts and water shared with the wider Maidenhead community.
Claires Court does not just produce an opportunity to play; our pipeline produces more than school-age success. Old Claires Courtian Ellie Rayer recently celebrated her 150th cap for GB Hockey, a milestone built on exactly the same grounding in local, club-linked sport that today’s sailors, rowers and squads are drawing on now.
So as Whitehall works out the mechanics of its new network, my hope is simply that it looks to towns like ours and asks what has actually worked, rather than starting from scratch. Youth sport in Maidenhead is vibrant precisely because schools and clubs stopped seeing each other as separate worlds decades ago. Claires Court is proud to be at the heart of so much of it, as an enthusiastic and, we hope, dependable partner.
It won’t be long now until the Thicket is ringing again with the sound of football on the weekend. As a certain song has it: it’s coming home.

The Fawley quad 2026, on the water on the ‘Stretch of the Gods’ underneath Cliveden on the River Thames between Maidenhead Lock and Cookham upstream.




