Joé Anduran

Joé Anduran
Birth name Marie Jean-Baptiste Joseph Anduran
Date of birth (1882-04-24)24 April 1882
Place of birth Bayonne, France
Date of death 2 October 1914(1914-10-02) (aged 32)
Place of death Bois-Bernard,[1] France
Height 174 cm (5 ft 9 in)
Weight 75 kg (11 st 11 lb)
Rugby union career
Position(s) Hooker
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1910  France 1 (0)

Marie Jean-Baptiste Joseph Anduran, better known as Joé Anduran or Joe Anduran, was a French rugby union player. He was born on 24 April 1882 in Bayonne, and died at Bois-Bernard in the Pas-de-Calais on 2 October 1914, during the First World War.

He was 1.74 m tall and weighed 75 kg.[1] He usually played hooker, with SCUF (Sporting club universitaire de France); after 1908 he served as section secretary, he won the Paris Championship as captain of their second team in 1912, and in 1913 he was in the first team that lost in the final of the national championship.[2]

A soldier with the French infantry, he was killed in 1914, the first year of World War I, leaving behind two children, Jacqueline, who was six years old and Jean, who was five months old.

France was admitted into the Five Nations Championship for the first time in 1910.

The French side had only 14 players when the players got together the day before the match at the Gare Saint-Lazare. The team manager, Charles Brennus, engaged the Parisian player Anduran on short notice to fill out the team, enabling them to play their first match in the tournament with a complete squad.[3] He was relatively easy to find, because he was an art dealer and was opening a show that day.[2]

Career

Club

  • SCUF

International

Highlights

Notes

  • Godwin, Terry Complete Who's Who of International Rugby (Cassell, 1987, ISBN 0-7137-1838-2)
  1. 1 2 Joseph Anduran player profile Scrum.com
  2. 1 2 Joe Anduran Archived 2010-03-24 at the Wayback Machine. at the SCUF history website.
  3. Joe Anduran : international contre un… Corot Archived 2008-12-25 at the Wayback Machine., at rugby-nomades.qc.ca
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