Andy Robinson
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Andy Robinson | |||
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England "First Team" training session. | |||
Full name | Andrew Robinson | ||
Date of birth | 3 April, 1964 | ||
Place of birth | Taunton, Somerset | ||
Height | 1.75M (5ft 9in) m | ||
Weight | 88Kg (194lb) kg | ||
Rugby union career | |||
Position | Flanker | ||
National team(s) | Caps | (points) | |
1988-1995 | England (Elite) | 8 | (4) |
correct as of 22 Oct 06. | |||
Teams coached | |||
1997-(98-00) 2004-2006 |
Bath Rugby England (Elite) |
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correct as of 29 Nov 06. | |||
Other Information |
Andy Robinson (born 3 April 1964 in Taunton, Somerset) is a former English rugby union footballer who played openside flanker for Bath and England. He was head coach of England from October 2004 until his resignation on 29 November 2006 [1].
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Robinson made his England debut against Australia on 12 June 1988, and gained eight caps before playing his last match on 18 November 1995 against South Africa.
Robinson was quite small for a back row forward, being only 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m), and weighing 194 lb (88 kg), and his career may have suffered from being "too small". Other small opensides, most notably Neil Back suffered from the same problem. (Back later went on to win 66 caps, showing the idea to be wrong.)
Whilst playing rugby for Bath, Robinson taught Mathematics, Physical Education and Rugby at King Edward's School, Bath and later Colston's Collegiate School, Bristol, where he and Alan Martinovic masterminded the school's Daily Mail Cup wins in 1995 and 1996. 'Robbo' then left to play professionally with Bath.
Robinson later went into coaching, and coached Bath before being sacked. He was later appointed forwards coach for the England side, deputy to Clive Woodward. When Woodward resigned from the role of England coach in September 2004, Robinson was named as acting coach before being confirmed in the position.
[edit] Career as England Head Coach
Robinson won just nine of his twenty two matches in charge after replacing World Cup-winning Sir Clive Woodward in 2004. In November 2006, it was confirmed that Robinson would remain Head Coach with the position reviewed after the two tests against South Africa. Defeat in the second test [2] increased demands from supporters that he should be replaced. The following Monday, November 27th 2006, the BBC reported that Robinson was to resign or face the sack.[3]. On November 29 his resignation as head coach was announced, with Robinson blaming his lack of support from the RFU [4].
[edit] Career record
International
Career Record (as England "first fifteen" player): Played 8, Won 4, Drawn 1, lost 3[1]
International (as England Head Coach)
Career Record: Games Coached 22 (November 2004 — November 2006)
Won: 9 Lost: 13 Drawn: 0
Biggest Win (all): Canada 70-0 (November 2004)
Biggest Loss (all): Australia 34-3 (June 2006)
Biggest Loss (home): All Blacks 20-41, at Twickenham on 5th November 2006.
[edit] External links
[edit] References
Preceded by Clive Woodward |
English national rugby coach 2004-2006 |
Succeeded by Brian Ashton |
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Federation: | Rugby Football Union |
National team: | England • England Saxons • England Sevens • British and Irish Lions |
International Competitions: | Rugby World Cup • Six Nations Championship • Heineken Cup • European Challenge Cup • European Shield • Churchill Cup • Rugby World Cup Sevens • IRB Sevens World Series • London Sevens |
Domestic Competitions: | Guinness Premiership • EDF Energy Cup • National Division One • National Division Two • National Division Three North • National Division Three South |
Guinness Premiership teams: | Bath • Bristol • Gloucester • Harlequins • Leicester Tigers • London Irish • Newcastle Falcons • Northampton Saints • Sale Sharks • Saracens • London Wasps • Worcester Warriors |
National Division One teams: | Bedford • Cornish Pirates • Coventry • Doncaster • Exeter Chiefs • Leeds Tykes • London Welsh • Moseley • Newbury • Nottingham • Otley • Pertemps Bees • Plymouth Albion • Rotherham • Sedgley Park • Waterloo |