Arch Crippin

Arch Crippin
Personal information
Full name Archibald James Crippen
Born 22 March 1916 [1]
Forbes, New South Wales
Died 30 March 2008
Forster, New South Wales
Playing information
Position Wing

Club
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1936–39 North Sydney 15 12 2 0 40
Representative
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1936 New South Wales 1 2 0 0 6
1936 Australia 3 1 0 0 3

Arch Crippin (1916–2008) was an Australian rugby league footballer of the 1930s. A New South Wales interstate and Australian international representative winger, he played his whole club career with the North Sydney Bears.

Early life and club career

Originally from Forbes, New South Wales, Crippin moved to Sydney where he attended St. Joseph's College, Hunters Hill for his last two years of school. He was a talented sportsman representing for Combined GPS in cricket, rugby union and athletics.[2] He joined North Sydney Bears in 1936 and played three seasons with them. Such was his talent, he was selected for representative teams in his first year in first grade, although shoulder injuries had virtually ended his career in 1937. He missed the entire 1938 season with injury and made a brief return in 1939, before retiring.[3]

Representative honours

Crippin on debut for Australia 1936(l)

Crippin was selected in the Kangaroos side to play Great Britain in 1936. He played in all three Tests on the wing outside captain Dave Brown. He marked his arrival with a brilliant 60m try in the second Test but bad-luck struck in the dying stages of the third when an England kick-through bounced back over his head and into the arms of Barney Hudson who scored the series-winning try.[2]

He was selected to play for the 1937-38 Kangaroos but a shoulder dislocation that would sideline a modern-day player for a matter of weeks forced him into early retirement. He is listed on the Australian Players Register as Kangaroo No. 204.[4]

Crippin(r) on debut with Jack Beaton(l)

War service and later life

Crippin served in the 35th Battalion a militia unit, in New Guinea during World War II.

Living to the age of 92, Crippin held the mantle as Australia's oldest living Test player for many years prior to his death. He was honoured in 2006 to present the Australian team with their jumpers before the Anzac Test against New Zealand.[5] He had sixteen great-grandchildren at the time of his death.

References

Sources

Footnotes

On-line references

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