Ivor Jones

For the Welsh football (soccer) player, see Ivor Jones (footballer).
Ivor Jones
Full name Ivor Egwad Jones
Date of birth (1901-12-10)10 December 1901
Place of birth Loughor, Wales
Date of death 16 November 1982(1982-11-16) (aged 80)
Place of death Swansea, Wales
Rugby union career
Playing career
Position Flanker
Amateur clubs
Years Club / team
?
?
19221938
Loughor RFC
Swansea RFC
Llanelli RFC
National team(s)
Years Club / team Caps (points)
19241930
1930
Wales[1]
British Lions
16
5
(13)
(2)

Ivor Egwad Jones CBE (10 December 1901 16 November 1982)[2] was a Welsh rugby union player who played as a back-row forward, mainly at flanker, for Llanelli and won 16 caps for Wales, three of them as captain.

Jones was born in Loughor and joined Loughor RFC after leaving school, playing his first match for them at the age of 15. After playing a few games for Swansea he moved to Llanelli in 1922. He played for Llanelli until 1938, apart from a short period with Birmingham in 1924-25, and scored more than 1,200 points for the club. He captained Llanelli from 1925 to 1928, 1930 to 1932 and 1933 to 1936, and led them to the Welsh club title three times between 1927 and 1933.

He won his first cap for Wales in 1924 against England and made his last appearance as captain against Scotland in 1930. He was selected for the British and Irish Lions on their tour to Australia and New Zealand in 1930 and played in all five tests. Jones was generally considered to have been one of the outstanding players on that tour, but was never selected for Wales again.

After retiring as a player, Jones became chairman of the Welsh selectors, President of the Welsh Rugby Union and a Justice of the Peace.

Quotations

Harry Bowcott, former Wales captain and fellow tourist on the 1930 British and Irish Lions tour to Australia New Zealand,[3] speaking of the opening win in the series for the tourists:

It was a very cold day. There were snow showers before the game and a blizzard during it. We changed at the hotel and it was entirely due to Ivor Jones, the king of the tour, that we got off to a winning start. He broke clear at our ten-yard line and went all the way downfield so that there was only George Napia, the New Zealand full-back, left to stop him. He drew Napia and slipped the ball to Jack Morley for him to get over in the corner. We'd beaten this wonderful team called the All Blacks, much to their disgust. We were delighted.

Author Peter Jackson on Ivor Jones:[3]

No Lion, though, made as great an impact on New Zealand as Ivor Jones, the Llanelli back-row forward. They called him 'The King', and a few survivors of the oldest generation scattered around both islands still do. Jones, who devoted a lifetime to the service of Welsh rugby in many guises, including chairman of selectors and president, was almost a one-man team.

Bibliography

Gareth Hughes (1983) One hundred years of scarlet (Llanelli Rugby Football Club) ISBN 0-9509159-0-4

Peter Jackson (1998) Lions of Wales (Mainstream Sport) ISBN 1-84018-244-X

References

  1. Welsh Rugby Union player profiles
  2. Ivor Jones player profile Scrum.com
  3. 1 2 Lions of Wales, Peter Jackson, published by Mainstream Sport, Edinburgh, 1998, ISBN 1-84018-244-X
Rugby Union Captain
Preceded by
Albert Jenkins
Llanelli RFC Captain
1925-1928
Succeeded by
David Evan John
Preceded by
Llanelli RFC Captain
1930-1932
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Llanelli RFC Captain
1933-1936
Succeeded by
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 20, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.