Karl Mullen
Dr Karl Daniel Mullen (26 November 1926 – 27 April 2009[1]) was an Irish Rugby Union player and consultant gynaecologist who captained the Irish rugby team and captained the British Lions on their 1950 tour to Australia and New Zealand.
Mullen was born in Courtown Harbour, Co. Wexford and educated at Belvedere College, Dublin and The Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. He played youth rugby with New Ross RFC. He played as hooker, winning 25 caps[2] for Ireland during the 1940s and 1950s. He captained the Irish team to their first Grand Slam in the 1948 Five Nations Championship and was one of eight players from that team who lived to see the country's next Grand Slam in 2009.[1]
He was also selected to captain the 1950 Lions Tour to Australia and New Zealand, during which the Lions lost the Test series against the All Blacks 3-0, with one game drawn, but won the test series against Australia 2-0.[3] He played four tests for the Lions on that tour; two against New Zealand and two against Australia. He missed the third and fourth tests against New Zealand through injury.
References
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| To 1900 |
- Feb 1875: G.H. Stack
- Dec 1875: R.J. Bell
- Feb 1877: R. Galbraith
- Feb 1877: W.H. Wilson
- Mar 1878: R.B. Walkington
- 1879: W.C. Neville
- 1880: H.C. Kelly
- 1881-Jan 1882: A.J. Forrest
- Feb 1882: J.W. Taylor
- 1883: G. Scriven
- Feb 1884: J.A. McDonald
- Mar 1884: D.F. Moore
- Feb 1885: W.G. Rutherford
- Mar 1885: A.J. Forrest
- Feb 1886: M. Johnston
- Feb 1886: J.P. Ross
- 1887: R.G. Warren
- Feb–Mar 1888: H.J. Neill
- Dec 1888–90: R.G. Warren
- Feb–Mar 1891: Dolway Walkington
- Mar 1891: R. Stevenson
- 1892: Victor Le Fanu
- 1893: S. Lee
- 1894: E.G. Forrest
- Feb 1895: J.H. O'Conor
- Mar 1895: C.V. Rooke
- Mar 1895: E.G. Forrest
- 1896: S. Lee
- 1897: E.G. Forrest
- Feb 1898: S. Lee
- Feb 1898: G.G. Allen
- Mar 1898: W. Gardiner
- 1899–1900: Louis Magee
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| To the First World War |
- 1901: Louis Magee
- Feb 1902: J. Fulton
- Mar 1902: Louis Magee
- 1903–Feb 1904: Harry Corley
- Mar 1904–06: C.E. Allen
- Feb 1906: Alfred Tedford
- Feb 1906–07: C.E. Allen
- Feb 1908: Harry Thrift
- Feb–Mar 1908: James Parke
- Feb 1909: Fred Gardiner
- Mar 1909: George Hamlet
- Mar 1909: Fred Gardiner
- Feb 1910: George Hamlet
- Mar 1910: Tom Smyth
- Mar 1910–11: George Hamlet
- Jan 1912: Dickie Lloyd
- Feb 1912: Alexander Foster
- Feb 1912–Feb 1914: Dickie Lloyd
- Feb–Mar 1914: Alexander Foster
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| To the Second World War | |
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| To the Professional Era | |
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| To the Present Day | |
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| To 1910 | |
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| To present | |
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| Notes |
Note 1: Robert Seddon died on tour after a boating accident, Andrew Stoddart, became captain for the remainder of the tour.
Note 2: Matthew Mullineux decided that after losing the first test that he should withdraw from further test matches, handing on field captaincy to Frank Stout, but remained tour captain.
Note 3: David Bedell-Sivright was injured during the first test. Teddy Morgan took over captaincy on the field but Bedell-Sivright remained tour captain.
Note 4: The team that John Raphael captained was not selected by the four Home Nations governing body, but had been organised by Oxford University and billed as the English Rugby Union team. However, it was denoted as the Combined British team by its Argentine hosts because it also included three Scots.
Note 5: Jack Jones captained the first test only, but Tommy Smyth remained the tour captain.
Note 6: Michael Owen captained the Lions in the first tour game, the test vs. Argentina in Cardiff. Brian O'Driscoll was injured at the beginning of the first test. Martin Corry and Gareth Thomas took over captaincy on the field but O'Driscoll remained tour captain.
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