Daniel Carroll (rugby union)
1908 Wallaby | |||
Full name | Daniel Brendon Carroll[1][2] | ||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | [1] | 17 November 1888||
Place of birth | Melbourne, Victoria [1] | ||
Date of death | 5 August 1956 67) [1] | (aged||
Place of death | New Orleans, Louisiana [1] | ||
School | St Aloysius Sydney | ||
University | Sydney University | ||
Occupation(s) | Geologist, Oil industry | ||
Rugby union career | |||
Playing career | |||
Position | centre,[1] fly-half [1] Winger, Scrum-half | ||
Amateur clubs | |||
Years | Club / team | ||
St George Rugby Union | |||
Provincial/State sides | |||
Years | Club / team | Caps | (points) |
New South Wales | |||
National team(s) | |||
Years | Club / team | Caps | (points) |
1908-12 1913-20 |
Wallabies USA |
2 3 |
(3) (0) |
Coaching career | |||
Years | Club / team | ||
1920 & 1924 | USA | ||
Rugby union career |
Daniel Brendon Carroll DSC (17 November 1892 – 5 August 1956) was an Australian national representative rugby union player. He was a dual Olympic gold medalist winning in rugby at the 1908 Summer Olympics for Australia and also winning gold for the United States at the 1920 Summer Olympics. He later coached the gold-medal winning USA Rugby team at the 1924 Summer Olympics. He is erroneously referred to in some records as the youngest ever Australian representative rugby player due to a birthdate error in the Olympic records database. He served in the American Army as a Lieutenant in World War I and lived out his life in the USA working in the mining/petroleum industries.
Schooling and early rugby
Carroll was born at Flemington, Victoria. His family relocated to Sydney during his early childhood and he was educated at St Aloysius' College (Sydney) playing rugby in the school's first XV and then at Sydney University where he studied dentistry. His club rugby was played with St George in southern Sydney. He was a winger at that time and in that position made his Australian representatives appearances. Later in his career he played at fly-half.
Australian rugby representative
He was selected in Australia's inaugural national rugby team to tour the northern hemisphere - Dr Paddy Moran's first Wallabies for the 1908-09 Australia rugby union tour of the British Isles and France. He was the youngest member of the tour squad at 20 years. Carroll played in the first Test of the tour, the 6-9 loss to Wales at Cardiff Arms Park which was the first rugby Test played by an Australian team on British soil.
At the time the rugby tournament for the London Olympics game may not have appeared to be of great significance. Australia had already beaten Cornwall, the British county champions early in the tour and Scotland, Ireland and France had all turned down the Rugby Football Union's invitation to participate in the Olympic bouts. Neither the tour captain Moran, nor the vice-captain Fred Wood played, so Chris McKivat led the Wallabies to an easy 32-3 victory and to Olympic glory, with each Wallaby in that match thereafter an Olympic gold medalist. Carroll scored two tries in the match.[3]
At the tour's end McKivat would lead fourteen of the Wallabies into the professional ranks with the fledgling rugby league code in Sydney, but Carroll stayed loyal to the amateur game and was rewarded in 1912 when he was again selected in the Wallabies squad for the 1912 Australia rugby union tour of Canada and the USA. . The tour was a disappointment with the squad billeted out in college fraternity houses where the hospitality played havoc with team discipline and as result the team lost against two California University sides and three Canadian provincial sides. They rose to the occasion for the sole Test of the tour - the November 1912 clash against the United States at Berkeley, won 12-8. Carroll played at fly-half in that match and scored a try. Carroll thus made two Test career appearances for Australia.
American rugby and war service
Carroll stayed on in America after the 1912 tour. He played for All-America against the All Blacks in 1913, a Test won by NZ 51-3. He served in the American Army as a Lieutenant in World War I and won a Distinguished Service Cross.[4]
He completed a degree in geology at Stanford University in 1920 and was coaching rugby at the university when he was selected as the playing coach of the USA side selected for the 1920 Summer Olympics. He won a gold medal at Antwerp in that team playing at fly-half.[5] He made three rugby union Test career appearances for the United States between 1913 and 1920.
Zavos quotes an article from a local Stanford paper of 1935 which reports that Carroll played four years of rugby at Stanford and one year of American football. He won his letter in rugby in 1913, 1914 and 1915. He played his last game of rugby in 1921 when a pick-up team visited British Columbia.[6]
Post playing
After Stanford, Carroll furthered his education at Oxford and the Royal School of Mines in England. In 1921 he took up an appointment with Standard Oil and remained with the company until his retirement.[7]
Carroll married Helen Warden from Great Falls, Montana in 1927 and had one son Daniel - who is deceased. Helen died in 1941 and Carroll died in New Orleans in 1956.[8]
Olympic medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's Rugby union | ||
Competitor for Australasia | ||
Gold | 1908 London | Team competition |
Competitor for the United States | ||
Gold | 1920 Antwerp | Team competition |
Youngest rugby representative ?
Zavos refers to the birthdate dispute referencing a 1992 Irish newspaper article by David Guiney which quotes the research of Dr Bill Mallon, an American Olympic historian who cites the Olympic database that Carroll was born on 17 February 1892. Guiney asserts that Carroll at 16 years and 286 days was therefore the youngest man to be capped for Australia and the youngest ever to win an international cap. Zavos however disputes this and refers to a birth certificate held in the Australian Rugby Union archives which gives Carroll's true birthdate as 17 November 1887 at Flemington, Victoria.
References
Bibliography
- Zavos, Spiro (2000) Golden Wallabies Penguin Sydney
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 "Scrum.com player profile of Danny Carroll". Scrum.com. Retrieved 12 July 2010.
- ↑ Carroll at Olympic database
- ↑ Carroll at the Austn AOC site
- ↑ Rugby's Greatest Olympian by Spiro Zavos
- ↑ Carroll at the Aust AOC site
- ↑ Zavos p123
- ↑ Carroll at Sports Reference article
- ↑ Roar - Zavros article
External links
- Olympic Profile
- Rugby's Greatest Olympian
- Daniel Carroll at StatsGuru
- Carroll at the Aust AOC site
- Carroll at Sports Reference