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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Duncan Hodge
Birth nameDuncan William Hodge
Date of birth (1974-08-18) 18 August 1974 (age 49)
Place of birthDumfries, Scotland
Height6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight14 st 0 lb (89 kg)
SchoolMerchiston Castle School
Rugby union career
Position(s) Fly-half
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
Watsonians ()
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
2005–2007
2003–2005
1996–2003
Edinburgh
Leeds Tykes
Edinburgh
?
18
 ?
(?)
(115)
(?)
Correct as of 2012-12-14
International career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1997–2002 Scotland 26 (123)
Correct as of 2012-12-14
Coaching career
Years Team
2012–2015
2015–2021
2021
Scotland
Edinburgh
Fiji

Duncan Hodge (born 18 August 1974) is a Scottish former internationalist rugby union player. He gained 26 full caps for Scotland.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Champions Cup Top 10 | Hodgey's Howitzer! [#2]
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  • Match-day interview: Asst. Coach Duncan Hodge talks about attacking freedom.

Transcription

Playing career

Hodge was born in Dumfries, Scotland[1] and educated at Merchiston Castle School in Edinburgh. He went on to represent Durham as a student, competing in the same team as Will Greenwood and Tim Stimpson.[2]

As a 19-year-old he was given the choice of touring Zimbabwe and South Africa with Scotland's National Cricket team, or playing under-21 national rugby and completing his university exams.. The latter was the only realistic choice for somebody who has already decided that he wanted to focus on a full-time career in sport.[3]

He played for Watsonians until the creation of the Scottish Pro sides when he was contracted to play for Edinburgh Rugby.

He played for Edinburgh Gunners twice sandwiched around a two-year spell with Leeds Tykes. His second season in Leeds was ruined by injury.[4][5] where he only managed one league appearance that year.

International honours

Hodge won his first full cap as a replacement for Craig Chalmers against France in Paris in 1997, having already booked a place in Scottish rugby lore when his drop goal in the dying seconds secured Scotland A's victory over the 1994 Springboks. He has made 13 appearances for Scotland A, captaining them to their 40–35 win over Argentina in November 2001.

Hodge in total won 26 caps playing at fly-half for the Scottish rugby union side between 1997 and 2002. As well as his games in Europe he played for Scotland in tours in Australia (1998), New Zealand (2000), and North America (2002). It was on the North American tour when he played in his last full internationals against Canada in Vancouver and USA in San Francisco. He also made two appearances in the 1999 World Cup.[1] He scored 123 points for the national side from six tries, 15 conversions, 20 penalties and one drop goal.

His finest moment was when he converted his own try and kicked four penalties to score all the points for Scotland in the 2000 Calcutta Cup 19–13 win against England.[3] This was in the inaugural season of the Six Nations at Murrayfield, and the first victory for Scotland against England since 1990 prevented England from completing a 6 Nations Championship Grand Slam and Scotland from finishing bottom of the table.

Coaching

Duncan Hodge travelled to the 2011 Rugby World Cup in New Zealand as Scotland's kicking coach,[6] and during the 2015 Rugby World Cup he acted as attack coach. After the World Cup, he joined Edinburgh Rugby.

References

  1. ^ a b Duncan Hodge on Sporting Heroes
  2. ^ Greenwood, Will (2006). "Step back in time raises fears for players of future". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved 21 October 2018.
  3. ^ a b Duncan Hodge on Cricket Scotland
  4. ^ "Tykes Hodge Heads Home". Archived from the original on 27 September 2012. Retrieved 21 November 2010.
  5. ^ "Guinness Six Nations Rugby News".
  6. ^ "Rugby World Cup 2011: Duncan Hodge blames wind not ball for misses as Paterson is set to return" The Scotsman 21 Sep 2011

External links

This page was last edited on 15 March 2024, at 21:10
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