Johnny Raper
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Personal information | ||
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Full name | Johnny Raper | |
Date of birth | April 12, 1939 | |
Place of birth | Revesby, New South Wales, Australia | |
Nickname(s) | Chook | |
Youth clubs | ||
Years | Club | |
Camperdown Dragons | ||
Youth representative teams | ||
1958 | New South Wales Colts | |
Senior clubs* | ||
Years | Club | Apps (points) |
1957 - 1958 1959 - 1969 1970-1972 1973-74 |
Newtown St George Wests Newcastle Kurri Kurri |
37 (30) 185 (149) |
Representative teams | ||
1959 - 1970 1959 - 1968 |
New South Wales Australia |
24 (15) 33 (27) |
Professional clubs coached | ||
1969 1970-1972 1973-74 1975-1976 1978 |
St. George Dragons Wests Newcastle Kurri Kurri Cronulla Sharks Newtown Jets |
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* Professional club appearances and points |
Johnny Raper MBE (born 12 April 1939 in Sydney, New South Wales) is an Australian former rugby league player. He was a lock forward for the Australia national team. He had a record 33 test caps between 1959 and 1968 and played in 6 World Cup games between 1960 to 1968. He captained Australia on 8 occasions in 1967-68.
Contents |
[edit] Early life and childhood
Born in Revesby, in south-western Sydney into a working class family of nine boys, he played junior football for the Camperdown Dragons before representing Newtown's President's Cup side in 1956. He made his first grade debut for Newtown in 1957. Raper represented New South Wales Colts as a lock against Great Britain in 1958. Having agreed terms to leave Newtown to join the reigning premiers St George Raper sat out most of the 1958 season to comply with residential criteria.
[edit] Playing career
[edit] St George Dragons
Raper joined St George as a lock forward and it was in this position that he became an international rugby league star. His legendary cover defence and ball skills had him be acknowledged during his playing career as the best lock forward the world had ever seen. He played in eight Grand Final wins with St George between 1959 to 1966.
Raper attributed his success to a training discipline and fitness fanaticism that was ahead of its time. While St George's early adoption of circuit training in the late 50s was a major contributing factor in their 11 year premiership run, Raper's own commitment to additional running and weights every day and often alone, enabled him to achieve a personal goal of being the fittest player in the fittest team in the competition.
Raper's last season with St George was in 1969 as captain-coach.
[edit] Country twilight
He played three seasons with the Western Suburbs Rosellas in the Newcastle competition from 1970-1972 and finished his playing career with Kurri Kurri in 1973-1974.
[edit] Representative career
In 1959-60 he made the first of three Kangaroo tours, scoring a try on debut in the 3rd Test loss vs Great Britain at Wigan. For the next ten years he was rarely, except for injury, out of the Australian Test team.
Raper's performance in the 2nd test of the 1963 tour at Swinton which saw the Kangaroos register the biggest win in Anglo-Australian test history and become the first Australian touring team in 50 years to win the Ashes was pivotal. In the 50-12 victory, Raper had a hand in the first seven tries scored in an opening 25-minute routing and he gave the final pass in four of them.
In his 3rd Kangaroo tour of 1967-68 Raper suffered a cheekbone fracture in the opening 16-11 Test loss causing him to miss the 2nd Test won by Australia to keep the series alive. Captain-coach Reg Gasnier had broken a leg in the 1st Test so Raper upon his return to fitness was deputised and earned the ultimate Australian rugby league honour in captaining his country in the 11-3 win over Great Britain played in icy conditions on a frozen ground in Swinton on 21 October 1967. This test was the first time the Australians had beaten the English on English soil in many years.
Raper went on to captain Australia in the 1st and 3rd Tests against France in 1967-68 (Queenslander Peter "Pedro" Gallagher was the captain for the 2nd test when Raper was injured.} For the 1968 World Cup Raper captained Australia in their four games undefeated games of the tournament including the 20-2 victory against France in the final at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
[edit] Career playing statistics
[edit] Point scoring summary
Games | Tries | Goals | F/G | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|
223 | 57 | 4 | - | 179 |
[edit] Matches played
Team | Matches | Years |
---|---|---|
Newtown | 37 | 1957 - 1958 |
St. George Dragons | 186 | 1959 - 1969 |
New South Wales | 31 | 1959 - 1970 |
Australia (Tests & World Cup) | 39 | 1959 - 1968 |
[edit] Life after football
He returned to Sydney as coach of the Cronulla Sharks in 1975-76 commencing an association with that club later carried on by his sons Stuart Raper and Aaron Raper. Midway through the 1978 season he took over as coach of the Newtown Jets in a caretaker capacity after the resignation of Paul Broughton.
Raper's brothers Ron, Maurie, Michael, Peter and Gerard played for a variety of Sydney clubs.
In retirement Raper for a time played a larger-than-life celebrity role making a record, appearing in commercials for a tyre company and the Liberal party and as an in-demand speaker and guest on radio and TV talk shows. Much higher honours were to follow: an award of a Member of the British Empire; selection in 1985 as one of the initial four post-war “Immortals” of the Australian game with Churchill, Gasnier and Fulton; appointment in 1988 as an Australian Test selector and representative of the New South Wales Rugby League.
Always regarded as a larrikin in his playing days, Raper now is undoubtedly seen as one of Rugby League's most ardent ambassadors and senior statesmen.
In 2000, his portrait was entered into the Archibald Prize.
[edit] Accolades
In February 2008, Raper was named in the list of Australia's 100 Greatest Players (1908-2007) which was commissioned by the NRL and ARL to celebrate the code's centenary year in Australia.[1][2] Raper went on to be named as lock in Australian rugby league's Team of the Century. Announced on 17 April 2008, the team is the panel's majority choice for each of the thirteen starting positions and four interchange players.[3][4]
[edit] Sources
- Whiticker, Alan (2004) Captaining the Kangaroos, New Holland, Sydney
- Writer, Larry (1995) Never Before, Never Again, Pan MacMillan, Sydney
[edit] External links
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Peter Cassidy. "Controversy reigns as NRL releases top 100 players", Macquarie National News, 2008-02-23. Retrieved on 2008-02-23.
- ^ Centenary of Rugby League - The Players. NRL & ARL (2008-02-23). Retrieved on 2008-02-23.
- ^ Todd Balym. "Johns, Meninga among Immortals", Fox Sports Australia, 2008-04-17. Retrieved on 2008-04-17.
- ^ Team of the Century Announced. NRL & ARL (2008-04-17). Retrieved on 2008-04-17.
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by Norm Provan 1968 |
Coach St George Dragons 1969 |
Succeeded by Jack Gibson 1970–1971 |
Preceded by Tommy Bishop 1973-74 |
Coach Cronulla Sharks 1975-1976 |
Succeeded by Ted Glossop 1977 |
Preceded by Paul Broughton 1977 |
Coach Newtown Jets 1978 |
Succeeded by Warren Ryan 1979 |
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Persondata | |
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NAME | Raper, Johnny |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Australian rugby league player |
DATE OF BIRTH | 12 April 1939 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Sydney, New South Wales, Australia |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |