Earl Rose (rugby union player)

Earl Rose
Personal information
Full name Earl Enver Rose
Born (1984-01-12) 12 January 1984
Strand, Cape Town, South Africa
Height 1.79 m (5 ft 10 in)
Weight 80 kg (12 st 8 lb)
School(s) attended Strand High School
Relatives Jody Rose
Club information
Playing position Fullback / Fly-half
Youth career
2002–03 Western Province
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Pts)
2004–05 Western Province 10 (43)
2006–10 Cats / Lions (Super Rugby) 49 (178)
2006–10 Golden Lions 54 (342)
2011 Stormers (Super Rugby) 2 (2)
2011 Griquas 19 (74)
Representative team(s)
2003 South Africa (sevens) ?? (??)
2003 South Africa (U19) ?? (??)
2004–05 South Africa (U21) ?? (??)
2008–09 South Africa 0 (0)

* Senior club appearances and points correct as of 12:03, 25 January 2012 (UTC).
† Appearances (Points).

‡ Representative team caps and points correct as of 12:03, 25 January 2012 (UTC).

Earl Rose (born 12 January 1984, Strand, Cape Town) is a South African rugby union player who, although keen on fly-half, features primarily at fullback. He first came to prominence with the surprising inclusion in Springbok coach Peter de Villiers's 42-man training squad in 2008. He played for the Golden Lions in the Currie Cup until 2009 and turned out for the Lions in the 2010 Super 14 season. In 2011 he was drafted into the Stormers team on tour in Australasia. Earl has since moved back to the strand where he helped his local club Sirlowrians gain promotion to the top tier of club rugby in the Western Cape. His excellent form was rewarded by His selection for Western Province sevens team in 2014.

Career overview

In 1999, Rose was selected for the Western Province Under-Fifteen Merit Team, an accolade followed up two years later with his inclusion in the Under-Sixteen WP Academy. He played in Hoërskool Strand's First XV from 2000 to 2002, in which year he also made the WP Under-Eighteen Craven Week, the WP Under-Nineteen squad, the SA Schools team for matches against France and Wales, and the South African Under-Nineteen training squad. 2003 brought the IRB Sevens World Series in New Zealand and Brisbane, Australia, and the SA Under-Nineteen FIRA-AER World Championship. He was included in the Western Province Under-Twenty squad in 2004 and, three seasons later, the Lions Super 14 outfit. There followed De Villiers's training squad.

He was also selected as the only flyhalf for the Springbok tour of the UK in 2008, a move that has aroused further controversy, the South African Press Association describing it as a "shock".[1] In retrospect, respected sports columnist Luke Alfred dubbed the decision "short-sighted", arguing that his place ought to have gone to Morné Steyn.

A disappointing 2010 Super 14 campaign led to Rose being dropped by the Lions starting 15. He played in the Vodacom Cup during 2011 for the Griquas and once the competition concluded he was offered a short term contract to play for the Stormers in Super Rugby.

However, Griquas didn't extend his contract for the 2012 season and Rose joined the Eastern Province Kings on a trial.[2]

Personal life

Rose was educated at Rusthof Primary School and Hoërskool Strand, and is currently 1.80 metres tall and 77 kilograms in weight.[3] He told SA Sports Illustrated, however, that he was looking to bulk up in a bid to stake his claim on the Lions' fly-half position.

Rose counts among his hobbies reading and listening to music, of which his favourite genre is R&B. His all-time favourite player is Jason Robinson, but he also holds Chester Williams in lofty regard, having read his autobiography and been coached by him in the SA Sevens side. The one person whom he most admires, however, is his father Enver, who "helped us [he and his brother Jody, who is also a professional rugby player] through many tough times. I was fairly young when we moved to the Lions. My parents were very supportive and encouraged us to believe in God and leave everything up to Him."[4]

References

Notes

  1. SAPA 2008.
  2. "Earl Rose set for Kings debut". sport24.co.za. 24 January 2012. Retrieved 2012-01-25.
  3. Players: Earl Rose 2008.
  4. Quoted in Carstens 2008, p. 110.

External links

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