Mark Chisholm

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mark Chisholm
Date of birth (1981-09-18) 18 September 1981
Place of birth Gladstone, Queensland, Australia
Height 1.97 m (6 ft 6 in)
Weight 115 kg (18 st 2 lb)
School Gregory Terrace
Rugby union career
Playing career
Position Forward
Professional / senior clubs
Years Club / team Caps (points)
2011– Aviron Bayonnais
Super Rugby
Years Club / team Caps (points)
2003–11 Brumbies 102 (85)
National team(s)
Years Club / team Caps (points)
2004–11 Australia 58 (30)

Mark Chisholm (born 18 September 1981) is an Australian rugby union footballer. He currently plays for Aviron Bayonnais in the Top 14 after signing from the Brumbies in the international Super Rugby competition in 2011. He usually plays as a Second-Row but can also cover Blindside Flanker.

Career

Chisholm represented Australia's under-19 side in 2000 as well as being named QRU Colt of the season. He also played for the under-21 side in 2001 and 2002. He spent the 2002 Super 12 season with the Queensland Reds as a product of the Energex Reds College. The following season he moved to the Brumbies and made his Super 12 debut for the side that season in a game against the Cats in Johannesburg as a replacement, he went on to play in six more matches that season.

Chisholm was a pillar of the CA Brumbies’ starting XV, having held down a run-on lock position for six years. The athletic 115-kilo second rower managed just seven matches for the CA Brumbies in the 2009 Super 14 season before a broken wrist, suffered against the Cheetahs in Bloemfontein, prematurely ended the veteran lock’s season. While the setback saw him overlooked for the Wallabies domestic Tests, Chisholm returned to the international fold during the 2009 Tri Nations Series, again establishing himself in the Australian starting XV. His role as an incumbent lock for the Wallabies also booked him a place on the Wallabies’ Grand Slam northern hemisphere tour – the fifth Spring Tour of his career. His strong lineout winning ability, aggressive physicality, barnstorming running and frequent try-scoring has formed the cornerstone of his success throughout his career. The powerful tight forward was a consistent performer for the CA Brumbies since his boom debut season in the 2004 Super 12 season that featured six tries in a Super 12 championship-winning year. In addition to his Super 12 title, Chisholm was named the CA Brumbies’ ‘Best Forward’ and runner-up to George Smith in the Brett Robinson Award in 2007, and is currently the club’s second most-capped lock behind David Giffin (80 caps). It was announced in May 2011 that Chisholm had signed with French club Bayonne on a 2 year deal.[1]

Chisholm has also been a key figure in Wallaby selections since making his Test debut – replacing Nathan Sharpe – on the 2004 Spring Tour and passed 50 Tests in 2010. The following season he made his debut for the Wallabies in a test against Scotland in Edinburgh and was subsequently named in the 22 against France the following week and went on to start at lock for Australia A against the French Barbarians in Paris. In 2005 he started at lock in six of the 12 tests he played in. He also scored tries in the tests against Samoa and Italy. He was named in the Wallabies 2007 Rugby World Cup squad. He is the 32nd Australian player to play in a half century of Tests, and just the fourth lock. He finished the 2010 Super 14 season just 12 matches short of a century of matches in that competition. He was ruled out of competing in the 2011 Rugby World Cup due to rupturing his anterior cruciate ligament in a Super Rugby match for the Brumbies in June 2011.[2]

At 6 ft 6 inches and weighing 246 lb, he is one of the largest players in current Australian rugby. He was also described by body building flanker, David Pocock as the wallaby with the largest biceps.

Personal History

Mark was born to parents James and Laurel Chisholm on 18 September 1981 in Gladstone, Queensland. In 1998 he graduated from Gregory Terrace in Brisbane.

In December 2004 he married his childhood sweetheart, Lauren Campbell with the blessing of her father, former Wallaby second row Bill Campbell, at All Hallows in Brisbane. They have 5 children together, Zachary, Xander, Allegra, Tobias & Olivier.

References

1. Rugby online. http://www.rugby.com.au

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.