Noel Pidding

Noel Pidding
Personal information
Full name Noel Douglas Pidding
Born 1927
Maitland, New South Wales, Australia
Died 17 August 2013 (aged 86)
Ingleburn, New South Wales, Australia
Playing information
Height 174 cm (5 ft 9 in)
Weight 86 kg (13 st 8 lb)
Position fullback, wing, halfback three-quarter
Club
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1947–53 St. George 104 34 248 0 598
1955–56 Easts (Sydney) 23 9 64 0 155
Total 127 43 312 0 753
Representative
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1947–54 New South Wales 26 13 46 131
1948–54 Australia 16 6 53 124

Noel Pidding (1927 – 17 August 2013) was an Australian rugby league player. He was a state and national representative, whose goal-kicking prowess enabled him to set a number of long-standing club and Australian point scoring records. His club career was with the St. George Dragons, with whom he won the 1949 premiership, and later at the Eastern Suburbs Roosters

Career

Pidding joined St. George in 1947, immediately cementing a spot in the top-grade as the club's full-back. He made his representative debut for New South Wales that year and in 1948 was selected for Australia, making his test debut against New Zealand in the first test at the Sydney Cricket Ground. He had a poor game in Australia's 19-21 loss and was unlucky enough to be starting his career at the same time as the "Immortal" Clive Churchill. Churchill replaced Pidding for the 2nd Test in Brisbane and went on to make thirty-seven national representative appearances at full-back over the next 10 years. Pidding was overlooked for the 1948-49 Kangaroo tour.

In 1949 Pidding moved to the wing and he played in that position in the Dragons' 1949 premiership victory over the South Sydney Rabbitohs, scoring two tries.

Pidding (front 2nd from right) in St. George's 1949 premiership-winning team

The move to wing revitalised his representative career. He was selected in the 1950 City-Country match scoring an individual record 27 points (1 try and 21 goals) and regained Australian selection in that year's series against New Zealand. He was the first St George player to top 200 points in a club season (1951) and that same year represented nationally against France.

He toured New Zealand again in 1952 before being selected for the 1952-53 Kangaroo tour which marked his career highlight. He played in all five Tests of the tour plus in seventeen minor matches. He scored 228 points on tour, a record second only to Dave Brown's 285 of 1933-34 which was scored in ten more matches than Pidding's feat.

He made further Test appearances in 1953 (New Zealand) and in 1954 (Great Britain) where he set a then individual record for an Australian player in an Ashes Test with 19 points (1 try and 8 goals). His representative farewell was in the inaugural 1954 Rugby League World Cup in France where he played in all three of Australia's pool clashes. Pidding is listed on the Australian Players Register as Kangaroo No.244. [1]

He had left St George after the club's 1953 Grand Final loss to South Sydney. He spent the 1954 season in the country with Maitland before returning to Sydney for two final seasons with Eastern Suburbs 1955-56.

In 1957 Pidding played in the first season of the Manawatu Rugby League competition, playing for the Marton club.[2]

Death

Pidding died at the age of 86 on 17 August 2013 at a nursing home in New South Wales. In his last years he had suffered from dementia.[3][4]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 17, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.