Steve Renouf

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Steve Renouf
Personal information
Date of birth June 8, 1970
Place of birth Murgon, Australia
Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Nickname The Pearl
The Prince of Centres
Bucko
Position Centre
Professional clubs*
1988-1999
2000-2001
Brisbane Broncos
Wigan Warriors
212 (169)
National team
1992-1998 Australia 9 (10)

* Professional club appearances and (tries)
counted for the domestic league only.

Steve Renouf (born June 8, 1970) is an Australian rugby league player of Aboriginal heritage, known generally as one of the best centres in the history of the game. He holds numerous records for the Brisbane Broncos club and is considered one of the great players to play for the club. After spending eleven years at the club, Renouf left the club to play for the Wigan Warriors in the English Super League where he played two seasons before retiring from the top level of rugby league competition.

Contents

[edit] Playing career

[edit] Brisbane Broncos

On the 23 April 1994 Renouf broke the club record for scoring the most tries in an away fixture against the Balmain Tigers by scoring four tries in the game against them at the Optus Oval. Also in 1994, Renouf scored the most tries in a season in the clubs history, scoring 26 tries. He also holds the equal club record of four tries in a home fixture. He has achieved this feat four times, the only other man in the clubs history to achieve four tries in a home fixture is Karmichael Hunt, who has achieved this feat once back in 2004. Renouf has scored four tries on the following occasions:

In 1997, Renouf scored 27 tries; the most tries in a season for the Broncos, surpassing his previous recorded of 26 in a season. Those 27 tries, included a hat-trick against the Cronulla Sharks in the 1997 Super League grand final on the 20 September at ANZ Stadium in Brisbane's 26-8 victory.

He is the all-time leading try scorer for the Brisbane Broncos, amassing a total of 169 tries

[edit] Wigan Warriors

His Wigan Warriors debut came in round four of the Challenge Cup against Whitehaven at Central Park. Renouf scored two tries on debut in his sides mammoth 98-4 victory.

His final game for the Wigan Warriors and indeed his last game at the highest level was the 2001 Super League grand final. His side lost to the Bradford Bulls by 37-6 on the 13 October at Old Trafford in Manchester.

Upon his time at Wigan Warriors, Renouf quoted "The two years at Wigan were absolutely brilliant. I would have liked to stay but they didn’t want to retain me"[1]

[edit] Life outside of rugby league

At the age of 23, six years after signing with the Brisbane Broncos, Steve Renouf was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. Renouf remembers that he "had been losing weight quite rapidly, [and] was always going to the toilet and though it was the start of pre-season, [he] had no energy, [he] couldn’t lift anything in the gym".[2] He decided to go to the doctor and found out that he had the disease. According to Steve "diabetes is not all doom and gloom, you can live with it."[2] His advice to young people who have diabetes is "Never think that it can stop you from achieving your goals. Just look after it, and you can achieve anything. I looked after it...I knew I had to if I wanted to keep playing football."[2]

Outside of rugby league, Steve Renouf has an apprenticeship as an electrician and has also worked in the industry of sales and marketing.[3] Steve is married and has five children, four sons and one daughter. Steve Renouf is currently working for the Get Active Queensland Schools Program which promotes physical activity amongst children.[2]

In February 2006, a biography of Steve Renouf was released entitled "The Pearl: Steve Renouf's Story". The book details his career as a rugby league player. But it also entails his early life including his family heritage, his childhood in the Queensland town of Murgon but also about how he had to overcome prejudices from people around him as an aboriginal.

[edit] Quotations

"Getting him to training was a defining moment, then getting him to finish was another. We named the hill after him because he spent so much time sitting on it." (Wayne Bennett, Brisbane Broncos coach)[4]

[edit] Sources

  1. ^ "Wigan Warriors - Steve Renouf" profile, URL retrieved 11th July 2006.
  2. ^ a b c d "Steve Renouf redefines victory" article, URL retrieved 11th July 2006.
  3. ^ "Role Models - Steve Renouf" article, URL retrieved 11th July 2006.
  4. ^ "The Pearl: the story of Steve Renouf" article, URL retrieved 11th July 2006.