Keith Wood
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Keith Wood | |||
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Personal information | |||
Full name | Keith Gerard Mallinson Wood | ||
Date of birth | January 27, 1972 | ||
Place of birth | Killaloe, Co. Clare, Ireland | ||
Height | 1.82 m (5 ft 111⁄2 in) | ||
Weight | 16 st 10 lbs (106 kg) | ||
Nickname | The Raging Potato, Uncle Fester | ||
Notable relative(s) | Gordon Wood (father) | ||
Rugby union career | |||
Playing career | |||
Position | Hooker | ||
Clubs | Caps | (points) | |
2000-2003 1999-2000 1995-1999 1992-1994 |
Harlequins Munster Rugby Harlequins Garryowen |
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Provincial/State sides | |||
1999-2000 | Munster | ||
National team(s) | Caps | (points) | |
1994-2003 1997, 2001 |
Ireland British & Irish Lions |
58 5 |
(75) (0) |
Keith Gerard Mallinson Wood (born 27 January 1972, Killaloe, County Clare) is a former international rugby union footballer who played hooker for Ireland, the Lions, Garryowen, Harlequins and Munster.
He was nicknamed 'The Raging Potato' because of his bald head. He was also known as 'Uncle Fester' due to his resemblance to a character in The Addams Family. His father, Gordon Wood, played prop 29 times for Ireland.
He started his career with Garryowen who he helped to All Ireland titles in 1992 and 1994 before moving to Harlequins. He returned to play with Munster Rugby in the 1999-2000 season and played in the European Rugby Cup final that Munster Rugby lost to Northampton Saints 9-8 in Twickenham Stadium before returning to Harlequins. Wood made his international debut in 1994 against Australia. He was capped 58 times for Ireland and five times for the Lions. Renowned for playing with his heart on his sleeve, Wood always put his body on the line with trademark charging runs at the defence, or bullish tackles. Never the most accurate player in the set piece his real strength was in leadership and open play where he dominated the world XV's hooker spot.
He played on the 1997 and 2001 Lions tours, and was the inaugural winner of the IRB World Player of the Year award in 2001. He played a major part in the Lions' 2-1 series victory over the Springboks in 1997. Wood captained Ireland. He was followed as Ireland captain by Brian O'Driscoll. Wood retired from playing after the 2003 Rugby World Cup.
In 2005 Wood was inducted into the Rugby Hall of fame.
He currently holds a world record of 15 full international test tries scored by a hooker, previously held by Sean Fitzpatrick (12) of the New Zealand All Blacks.
Wood used to play hurling, and was a member of the Clare GAA side that played in the inaugural Nenagh Co-op hurling tournament in 1988.
He scored 4 tries in one game in the 1999 World Cup, in the pool stage against the USA. Ireland were later eliminated from the tournament when they lost in a nail-biting encounter to Argentina in the quarter-final play-off.
Wood is now an entrepreneur, helping cash-rich time-poor[1] executives to combine golf with property investment[2]. In addition he now works for the BBC and the Daily Telegraph as a freelance journalist.
[edit] References
- ^ Definition
- ^ Daily Telegraph Thursday 26th July 2007 ( issue Number 47,320) Jobs Section page A3 Forging a life beyond the front row Interview with Martin Baker
[edit] External links
Awards | ||
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New title | IRB International Player of the Year 2001 |
Succeeded by Fabien Galthié |
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