Roger Gould (rugby)

Roger Gould
Birth name Roger Gould
Date of birth (1957-04-04) 4 April 1957
Height 193 cm (6 ft 4 in)
Weight 95 kg (209 lb)
Rugby union career
Position(s) Fullback
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1980-1987 Australia 25 (86)

Roger Gould (born 4 April 1957) is a former rugby union football player, having played fullback for both the Australian Wallabies and the Queensland Reds. 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 limited by injury.

In 2009 Gould was elected to the Queensland Sport Hall of Fame[1] and added to the Queensland team of the century.[2]

Rugby career

Former Australian winger David Campese in On a Wing and a Prayer wrote of Gould that:

Campese further writes in Campo: Still Entertaining that:

Former Australian five-eighth Mark Ella writes in Path to Victory that:

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."[6]

In Ella: The Definitive Biography Alan Jones is documented as saying:

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.'[8]

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.’[9]

In Path to Victory rugby writer Terry Smith describes Gould thus:

References

  1. "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...
  2. "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.
  3. Campese & Bills 1991, p. 173-174.
  4. Campese 2003, p. 208.
  5. Ella & Smith 1987, p. 134.
  6. Jenkins 2003, p. 290.
  7. Harris & Ella 2007, p. 92.
  8. Poidevin & Webster 1992, p. 63.
  9. Harris, Bret, Michael O'Connor: The Best of Both Worlds (Chippendale: Pan Macmillan, 1991), p. 84. ISBN 0-7251-0704-9.
  10. Ella & Smith 1987, p. 133-134.

Bibliography

  • Campese, David; Bills, Peter (1991). On a Wing and a Prayer. Queen Anne Press. ISBN 0-356-17958-3.
  • Campese, David (2003). Campo: Still Entertaining. Flick Pass Productions. ISBN 978-0975113004.
  • Ella, Mark; Smith, Terry (1987). Path to Victory: Wallaby Power in the 1980s. ABC Enterprises. ISBN 0 642 52766 0.
  • Harris, Bret; Ella, Mark (2007). Ella: The Definitive Biography. Random House Australia. ISBN 978 1 74166 691 5.
  • Jenkins, Peter (2003). Wallaby Gold: The History of Australian Test Rugby. Random House Australia. ISBN 0 091 83928 9.
  • Poidevin, Simon; Webster, Jim (1992). For Love Not Money. ABC Books. ISBN 0 7333 0148 7.
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