Roger Gould (rugby)
Full name | Roger Gould | ||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 4 April 1957 | ||
Height | 193 cm | ||
Weight | 95 kg | ||
Rugby union career | |||
Playing career | |||
Position | Fullback | ||
National team(s) | |||
Years | Club / team | Caps | (points) |
1980-1987 | Australia | 25 | (86) |
Roger Gould was a fullback for both Queensland and the Wallabies. He first played for Queensland in 1978 and for Australia in 1980. His last match for Australia was in the 1987 World Cup.
Gould's career was significantly limited by injury.
Gould was elected to the Queensland Sport Hall of Fame in 2009[1] and added to the Queensland team of the century.[2]
Place in History
Former Australian winger David Campese in On a Wing and a Prayer wrote of Gould that:
“ | My best full-back would be Roger Gould. He was one of the greatest, a colossus who, although often bothered by injury, was a fantastic player when fit and firing on all cylinders. He was very big, could kick a ball like a mule and was totally safe and confident under the high ball. His physique along commanded respect and you could rely on Roger. Two other full-backs of recent times have, I suppose, generated certain comparisons. Serge Blanco and myself are, however, different players. Maybe both of us are more unpredictable than Roger ever was, but you couldn't rely on Serge and I under the high ball the way you could with Roger Gould. With Roger, you never had that feeling of uncertainty. And when he went forward into the line, it would normally take two or three defenders to stop and hold him so that in the meantime openings appeared elsewhere due to his intervention. This was a major factor in our success of the 1984 Grand Slam tour of the UK and Ireland.[3] | ” |
Campese further writes in Campo: Still Entertaining that:
“ | He was a great player, and I don't use the word loosely. He was also exceptionally helpful when I first came into the side.
Roger was a big bloke for a fullback, had the most massive calf muscles I have seen on any footballer, and could punt a ball into a different post code. But he was also an attacking weapon from fullback like we have probably not had since, until Chris Latham brought that same sense of involvement to the position. He timed his runs into the backline perfectly and, because of his size, caused panic in rival defences. His own defence was sure and safe. Gould really was the complete fullback package.[4] |
” |
Former Australian five-eighth Mark Ella writes in Path to Victory that:
“ | Not only is Roger Gould the biggest punter of a ball in world rugby, he's the best fullback I've ever seen. Roger is just dynamite. He's strong, safe and although he doesn't look that fast, his long, loping stride can be very deceptive when he gets steam up. Just having Roger there takes the pressure off you. He's a terrific defender, too. Because of his size, he crunches people.
If relied on Roger a lot. He could see if your angles to attack weren't right. Things like that. Whenever I played against Queensland, we tried to keep the ball away from him. You don't put up too many high kicks to him because he's so safe. Long balls are out. Roger simply sends them soaring back with interest deep into your half. He's cool, too. Roger has been around and knows exactly what's going on with his life. Nothing worries him. Things can be falling apart around us, but Roger stays as cool as ever. When the hassles occurred over his trip to South Africa, he stuck to his point of view. Nothing would change it.[5] |
” |
In Path to Victory Mark Ella compared Roger Gould to Serge Blanco by writing that:
“ | Because of his pace and readiness to have a go, Blanco is a better attacking player than Roger Gould. That's not to say I'd prefer to have him behind me. When everything's set up and looking good, Roger can split the defence, and as far as kicking and safety is concerned, he's in a class of his own. Choosing between Gould and Blanco is like deciding whether you want Rembrandt or Van Gogh to paint your house.[6] | ” |
Former Australian coach Alan Jones has called Gould the best player he ever coached. In Wallaby Gold: The History of Australian Test Rugby Jones is recorded as saying that, "...my best player, I think, was Roger Gould. If your defensive line is going to hold up, the opposition are going to roof it, and you've just got to have someone who's absolutely rock-solid. Gould was a flawless. He was a freak. He did did wonderful things."[7]
In Ella Alan Jones is documented as saying:
“ | There is not a player, in my opinion, since 1984 who approximates Mark Ella. The one player in my team - there are two - Lynagh did a phenomenal amount for us. But Roger Gould was also a freak. Mark was the creative freak in a way. Roger was the defensive (freak). For example, you are leading 10-9 in the Test and they've got the ball. We can organise ourselves to make the defence stand up, but what if they start roofing back? Who do you want there? Gould. Equally, you are down 10-9 and we've got a bit of football. Of all the players in the history of the game, who do you want? Ella.[8] | ” |
Former Australian flanker Simon Poidevin in For Love Not Money wrote of Gould that, 'I say emphatically here and now that Gould is the best fullback I’ve ever played with or against, and I’d never leave him out of any side for which he was available. As a fullback, he was without peer.'[9]
Former Australian dual-international Michael O'Connor in The Best of Both Worlds wrote of Gould that, 'The fact is, Roger Gould is the best fullback I’ve ever played with. He would take the bomb ninety-nine times out of one hundred and he wouldn’t just take it, he would hurt people while he was doing it. Usually, you feel confident about creaming a fullback taking a high ball, but if you tried it with Roger, you would end up with six studs in your face. He was so strong and aggressive. He put his foot up and he just couldn’t be moved.’[10]
In Path to Victory rugby writer Terry Smith describes Gould thus:
“ | Surely one of the greatest punt-kickers in all of rugby history, thundering Roger Gould's only weakness is an alarming proneness to injury. On successive tours of New Zealand and Argentina, he played only one and a half games. Fortunately Gould came through the 1984 British Isles tour with nothing worse than a broken nose. The Wallabies involved him in a vast amount of play, and he responded to be a Test hero. The Queenslander's ability to make his spiraling kicks hand in the air until the men arrive on the catcher was a feature of the tour. And when Michael Lynagh lost his kicking touch, Gould responded with five goals from seven straight-on toe-kick attempts to help sink Wales.
The essence of Roger Gould was seen in the decisive third Test against the All Blacks at Eden Park in 1982. Only ninety seconds after the kick-off, he scored an explosive try which he converted from the touchline. That day Gould accounted for fifteen of Australia's eighteen points to set an individual record for a Wallaby against New Zealand and a series record of thirty-four points. Earlier that year he swept in for two tries in the SCG Test against Scotland. After the 1982 Wallaby tour of the British Isles, Gould became a flamboyant boulevardier of world rugby, spending the summer months playing in Argentina or Italy. He danced in European discos, skied the Alps, sailed the Mediterranean and learned to speak Spanish and Italian. Roger would dazzle his Wallaby colleagues with a camel hair overcoat or a pair of chic Italian sunglasses. A veteran of Wallaby tours to New Zealand (twice), British Isles (twice), Argentina, France and Fiji, Gould can be refreshingly opinionated. When Prime Minister Bob Hawke condemned him for exercising his right as an individual to play in a Sevens tournament in South Africa, Roger hit back with suggestions how Mr Hawke could improve his government. Then he threatened to boycott the 1986 Wallaby tour of New Zealand if the rebel All Blacks were banned from playing against Australia.[11] |
” |
References
- ↑ "Queensland Sport Hall of Fame". Qsport.org.au. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
A big man with the thumping boot, he played all over the world in a career highlighted by the unbeaten Grand Slam Tour of England, Ireland, Wales and Scotland...
- ↑ "Queensland Team of the Century". Redsrugby.com.au. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
Roger Gould had speed and acceleration to complement his huge frame, making him a menace to opposition backlines when he joined the line on attack.
- ↑ Campese, David, with Peter Bills, On a Wing and a Prayer (London: Queen Anne, 1991), p 173-174. ISBN 0-356-17958-3.
- ↑ Campese, David, Campo: Still Entertaining (Bronte: Flick Pass Productions, 2003), p. 208. ISBN 978-0975113004.
- ↑ Terry Cooper compiled by Peter A. Murray, Victorious Wallabies: U.K. Your 1984 (East Sussex: Waterloo Press, 1985), p. 134.
- ↑ Terry Cooper compiled by Peter A. Murray, Victorious Wallabies: U.K. Your 1984 (East Sussex: Waterloo Press, 1985), p. 61.
- ↑ Jenkins, Peter, Wallaby Gold: The History of Australian Test Rugby (Milsons Point: Random House, 2003), p. 290. ISBN 0-091-83928-9
- ↑ Harris, Bret & Ella, Mark, Ella (North Sydney: Random House, 2007), p. 92. ISBN 978-1-74166-691-5.
- ↑ Poidevin, Simon, as told to Jim Webster For Love Not Money (Sydney: ABC Books, 1992), p. 63. ISBN 0-7333-0148-7.
- ↑ Harris, Bret, Michael O'Connor: The Best of Both Worlds (Chippendale: Pan Macmillan, 1991), p. 84. ISBN 0-7251-0704-9.
- ↑ Terry Cooper compiled by Peter A. Murray, Victorious Wallabies: U.K. Your 1984 (East Sussex: Waterloo Press, 1985), p 133-134.