Charles Reid (rugby union)
Charles Reid, nicknamed Hippo, was a Scottish international rugby player.[1] He was capped twenty times for Scotland between 1881-88.[1] Reid vies with Ninian Finlay for the title of the youngest player ever to be capped for Scotland - he was seventeen years and thirty six days old when he was capped against Ireland on 19 February 1881; however, Reid had lived through an extra leap year day, when he was capped in 1881, so Finlay generally gets that title.[2] He played at second row/lock.[3]
Reid attended Edinburgh Academy, which he was attending when capped.[2] On his second cap, against England, he actually played against Frank Wright who was also seventeen at the time, but was a boarder from Manchester.[4] He later played for Edinburgh Academicals RFC.[1]
As Allan Massie says,
- "Charles Reid's physique would never have appeared inadequate for any forward position; he was bigger than Ireland's Tom Reid who was the biggest and heaviest forward the British Lions took to South Africa in 1955, and more or less the same height and weight as the great Willie John McBride."[5]
Reid was 15 to 16 stone in weight, and 6 ft 3in.[6] The first historian of Scottish rugby, R.J. Phillips says that Reid "carried no superfluous weight and was as active as a well-trained ten-stone man",[6] but that also, from his viewpoint in the 1920s, he was "Scotland's greatest forward."[7]
He played alongside some of the greats of the era including Ninian Finlay, Andrew Don Wauchope and Bill Maclagan.[8] He was said to be a proficient tackler, excellent at dribbling and Scotland only lost four times in his twenty one caps.[2] He captained Scotland in 1887 to their first Home Championship win, and also won scored tries.[2]
He maintained an interest in rugby long after retiring from the game, and after the positional changes in the early 1890s, he wrote boldly:
- "Give me a forward team like we had in Manchester in 1882, and I don't care how many threequarter backs you have; we could go through them. We dribbled very close, and backed up the other so well that they could not get away, and they had fliers like Bolton against us. Dribbling and tackling are the characteristics of the Scottish forwards, and on them we depend to win."[9]
However, Massie disagrees with this statement, and says that over-dependence on aggressive forward play such as that supported by Reid led to European sides being beaten thoroughly by New Zealand and South Africa when they toured.[10]
Personal life
In the match against England in 1881, he played against his classmate Frank Wright at Raeburn Place.[8] At the end of the match, both of the boys were carried on the shoulders of their fans back to the school.[3]
He was the brother of James Reid, who was capped five times for Scotland from 1871-75,[1] including the very first rugby international.[11]
He was a doctor by profession, and later ended up living in Selkirk.[12]
Nickname
His nickname "Hippo" does not refer to his being like a hippopotamus, but the fact that he didn't know the word for a horse, when asked once in an Ancient Greek class at the Edinburgh Academy.[8]
References
- Bath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007 ISBN 1-905326-24-6)
- Massie, Allan A Portrait of Scottish Rugby (Polygon, Edinburgh; ISBN 0-904919-84-6)
- 1 2 3 4 Bath, p37
- 1 2 3 4 Bath, p65
- 1 2 Bath, p137
- ↑ Bath, p99
- ↑ Massie, p9
- 1 2 Massie, p7
- ↑ Massie, p8
- 1 2 3 Bath, p101
- ↑ Quoted in Massie, p10
- ↑ Massie, p11
- ↑ Massie, p6
- ↑ Massie, p13