Oxfordshire's top side Chinnor are the best represented in my team of the season.

South West 1 champions Chinnor have five in the starting XV, and are now at the same level as Henley.

The score next to each player is their average from the oxfordmail.co.uk numbers' game this season, but my selection is not based purely on this.

All players are judged against the level they play at.

It is obviously a subjective matter and no doubt many readers will want to take issue with me.

This is why the following have made the team.

BACK THREE

Chinnor full back Ben Hewitt missed the final weeks of the season after signing for Eastern Suburbs in Canberra, Australia.

But the 19-year-old had already done more than enough to earn his place with some elusive running and much-improved defence.

Tom Hall is selected on the wing, but impressed in a number of positions as part of Chipping Norton's free-scoring backline.

Hall always looked to be positive.

The other wing, Phil Huxford, only joined Chinnor in January, but made such an impact that he forced his way into my team.

Huxford has pace to burn and bagged a try-haul many would be happy with for a whole campaign.

CENTRES

John Rollason gets the nod over Wallingford's Henry Pooler for his consistency. A vital cog in Bicester's promotion team.

With Andy Henley only around for a few months, Beau Wilson emerged from his shadow as Oxford Harlequins' midfield playmaker.

A regular try-scorer, he never allowed defences to settle.

HALF BACKS

Fly half Adam Smith missed Chipping Norton's title clincher through injury, but was a major player for them all season. He showed a bit more creativity than Chinnor's James Cathcart.

Anthony Cope again showed why is the county's No 1 scrum half and benefited from playing behind a more solid pack.

Quins' captain was consistently sharper than his rivals.

FRONT ROW

Joe Winpenny (Chinnor) wins back his place at loose-head prop after some bull-dozing displays. Could go far if he stays disciplined.

There was no outstanding candidate at hooker, but Wallingford's Tom Hill gets the nod because of his better running game. He will need to shore up his basics if Wallingford are promoted.

Chinnor's Tom Whelan had been a super-sub in previous seasons, but took his chance at tight-head this campaign.

Whelan scrummaged better than his height suggests and revelled in the loose.

SECOND ROW

Bicester's Dan Spencer deserved a place in the team - it was just a case of where to select him. Whether at lock, flanker, No 8 or even in the backs, Spencer was always a menace to opponents and kicked the odd conversion!

Wallingford's Mike Turner joined from Grove and was a big catalyst up front. Many tried to stop him, most failed.

BACK ROW

This was the toughest area to select, but Phil Rowe was the obvious pick at blindside flanker.

Arguably Quins' player-of-the-season, he rarely let his workrate drop.

Chipping Norton's Matt Dawson scored a sackful of tries as a rampaging openside, giving his pack real cutting edge.

Zane Winslade alternated between No 7 and 8 for Chinnor, but gets the latter spot here for his intelligent link play and all-round skills.