Andy Vilk

Andy Vilk
Personal information
Full name Andrew Vilk
Date of birth (1981-06-11) 11 June 1981
Place of birth Hammersmith, London, England
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Weight 15 st 5 lb (98 kg)
School The Oratory School
University Loughborough University
Club information
Position Centre/ Wing
Current club Calvisano
Senior clubs*
YearsClubApps (points)
2000 2003
2003 2006
2006 2008
2008 2011
2011 2012
2012
Loughborough
Northampton
Sale Sharks
Treviso
Rugby Lions
Calvisano

21 (5)
5 (5)
52
21 (50)
0 (0)
Sevens National teams
England
* Professional club appearances and points
counted for domestic first grade only.

Andrew Vilk (born 11 June 1981 in Hammersmith) is a rugby union footballer who plays at centre for Calvisano. He plays in the forwards for England Sevens and is a strong and powerful runner.

From Hammersmith, his parents moved to Goring-On-Thames when he was very young. He was educated at The Oratory School, near Reading, where he played both rugby and soccer until he was 17. At 18 he spent a year in New Zealand aiding the Physical Education department at Tauranga Boys' College and mentoring children with learning difficulties, primarily helping develop reading skills. He returned to take a Geography degree at Loughborough University and came under the gaze of mentor Alan Buzza.

For the 2003/04 season, Andy joined Northampton Saints Senior Academy from Loughborough University, when he was the leading try scorer in the Northern Conference of the Zurich A League. He also made his first team debut against Rotherham that season. In 2006 he transferred to Sale Sharks.

In February 2005, Andy made his England Sevens debut in Wellington and was a member of the winning side at the 2006 Hong Kong Sevens, he also won a Commonwealth medal (silver) at Melbourne. He has also been a member of winning sides at tournaments in Dubai, Los Angeles and Wellington in the IRB World Sevens Series. He has played 32 tournaments for England (26 consecutive): 30 IRB World Sevens Series Tournaments, 1 Commonwealth Games and the Rugby Sevens World Cup in Dubai 2009.

Andy was the captain of the England Sevens team in the 2007-2008 world series, and beat New Zealand for the first time in four years in the London leg of the 7's series. The following week the England side reached the final of the Edinburgh leg of the 7's series.

He joined Benetton Rugby Treviso from Sale Sharks in 2008. With Benetton Treviso he won Italian Super 10 titles in both 2008/09 and 2009/10. Andy scored the opening try of the 2008/09 final at Rome's Stadio Flaminio which Benetton went on to win 29-20. In the 2009/10 final Andy scored the only try, securing the Man of the Match award in a game Benetton won 16-12.

He played in 16 Heineken Cup matches in his three seasons with Benetton Treviso (starting 15 and coming off the bench in 1).

Andy wrote a weekly column for Rugby Times magazine and Sportpost.com on life and rugby in Italy, and regularly contributed to Absolute Radio's Rock and Roll Sports podcast.

In July 2011, Vilk joined Rugby Lions on a free transfer, and was subsequently appointed captain. He led the Lions to the title in his first season, which they won with two games remaining winning every match in the process. In an interview with the Rugby Advertiser, Vilk said "This has been a fantastic squad who have come together so well and achieved fantastic results."

Vilk's fine form for the Lions earned him a recall to the England Sevens set-up, as he was selected for the squad to prepare for the final two legs of the 2012 Sevens World Series.[1] He was subsequently selected for the team for the Twickenham leg of the World Sevens Series.

Due to the downturn in financial fortunes at the Lions, Vilk returned to Italy in July 2012, to join Calvisano. He was the teams second highest try scorer during the 2012/13 campaign and helped them reach the playoff semi-finals. He continues to play for them in the 2013/14 season.

In May 2013, Andy took up position as Head Coach of the Italian Sevens team. In his first season in charge he took the team to the final of the IRB SWS Qualifier tournament in Hong Kong where they lost to Japan.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.