Grant Fox

Grant Fox
Full name Grant James Fox
Date of birth 16 June 1962 (1962-06-16) (age 49)
Place of birth New Plymouth, New Zealand
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)[1]
Weight 72 kg (11 st 5 lb)[1]
School Auckland Grammar
University University of Auckland
Rugby union career
Playing career
Position First five-eighth (retired)
New Zealand No. 857
Provincial/State sides
Years Club / team Caps (points)
1982–1993 Auckland 189 (2746)
correct as of 16 September 2006.
National team(s)
Years Club / team Caps (points)
1985–1993 New Zealand 46 (645)
correct as of 19 Sept 2006.
Coaching career
Years Club / team
1999–2003 Auckland
Blues
Rugby union career

Grant James Fox (born 6 June 1962) is a former rugby union player from New Zealand. He was born in New Plymouth. He attended Auckland Grammar school.

During his time with the All Blacks from 1985 to 1993, he wore the number 10 jersey (first five-eighth or fly-half), and was the main goalkicker for the All Blacks. He amassed 645 points from 46 All Black Test Matches (1 try, 118 conversions, 128 penalties, 7 drop goals). He is considered a true pioneer of the modern art of goal kicking, in particular the technicalities of leaning the ball forward, which has been adopted by world class kickers since; many believe he is one of the greatest first five eights in All Black history.[1] Even though he was not a great runner with the ball in hand. Despite his relatively short height, he made-up for this with fantastic distribution skills reinforced by his long-term colleague John Kirwan's then-world-record career statistics playing outside him for Auckland and the All Blacks. His inability to score tries was often a joking point in the team – his cause not helped by an overruled attempt against Ireland in 1989 (due to a prior technical infringement by a teammate).[1]
The highlight of Fox's career was winning the inaugural Rugby World Cup with New Zealand in 1987; a victory based in part on his accurate kicking.

Fox remained an integral part of his Auckland club, involved at a coaching level and sharing in their success in the 1999 and 2002–2003 NPC seasons. Fox is now a commentator on Sky Sports, NBC Sports and in the EA Sports rugby union series.

Fox did color commentary on the Rugby World Cup on ABC with Howard Cosell in 1995, Al Michaels in 1999 and 2003 and Mike Tirico in 2007.

References

External links