Richard Parks
Personal information | |||||||
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Full name | Richard David Parks | ||||||
Date of birth | 14 August 1977 | ||||||
Place of birth | Pontypridd, Wales | ||||||
Height | 6 ft 2 in | ||||||
Weight | 233lbs | ||||||
School | Monmouth School | ||||||
Senior clubs* | |||||||
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Representative teams | |||||||
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* Professional club appearances and points counted for domestic first grade only. |
Richard David Parks (born 14 August 1977 in Pontypridd, Wales) is a former Wales international rugby union player turned extreme environment athlete.
In rugby he represented Newport RFC, Pontypridd RFC, Celtic Warriors, Leeds Tykes, Perpignan and Newport Gwent Dragons over a professional career which spanned 13 years. In May 2009 he was forced to retire from rugby due to a shoulder injury.[1]
Early years
Richard was born on 14 August 1977 in Pontypridd to a Jamaican mother, Lee, and a Welsh father, Derek Parks. Richard grew up in Newport, Wales and attended Rougemont School, Newport and Monmouth School.
Richard first started playing Rugby at the age of 11 at Rougemont School and progressed quickly through the school ranks playing at flanker throughout.
He was selected for Welsh Schools at under 18 level and then had a brief spell with Newport youth before spending a year in South Africa in 1996 at Michaelhouse, a boarding school for senior boys in Durban. Richard competed for the first team at Michaelhouse whilst he studied A-level chemistry in order to gain entry to Cardiff University to study Dentistry.
Whilst in South Africa, Richard was invited to join the Natal Under 19s academy but this would have involved committing to attend university in South Africa. Richard always had the desire to play for Wales, therefore he chose to return home to take a contract up with Newport Rugby Football Club, and sign his first professional contract as a rugby player.
Newport RFC
In his first year at Newport RFC (1996–97) he was selected to play for the Welsh sevens team in Tokyo, Japan and in his second year at the age of 20 years, Richard was called up to train with the Welsh senior team. At the end of this season (1997–98) Richard was voted most promising player of the year by his club winning the Arthur Boucher Award.
Park’s 3rd season with Newport RFC saw him struck down with injury. He missed most of the season after suffering a stress fracture of his spine. Breaking his back resulted in Richard missing the opportunity to gain Welsh honours at an under 21 level.
After taking longer to recover than anticipated Richard was released from his contract at Newport RFC after 62 appearances and finished the season playing University Rugby for Cardiff Meds.
Pontypridd and playing for Wales
Parks was subsequently signed by Pontypridd RFC for the following season, and in 2001 Parks represented the Welsh Sevens in the 2001 Rugby World Cup Sevens in Argentina.
Pontypridd won the Principality Cup in 2002 and reached the Parker Pen Shield final losing 22 – 25 to Sale Sharks.[2]
Many of the Pontypridd squad, including Parks, were called up to represent Wales on a tour to South Africa. It was here on tour versus South Africa in Free State Stadium, Bloemfontein that 24-year-old Parks earned his first full international cap on 8 June 2002, in a 34-19 defeat, from the bench. He became the 1001st player to represent his country Wales,[3]
During the next season Richard was selected for the autumn international series where he gained his second cap against Fiji.
A final season at Pontypridd continued and Parks remained in the Welsh squad. He was named in the 6 Nations squad but was not capped.
During the summer of 2003, he was selected in the preliminary World Cup squad and added to his 2 caps with games against Scotland and Ireland. However, Parks missed out on final section to the World Cup in Australia.
Celtic Warriors
Following the Introduction of regional rugby union teams in Wales in 2003, Parks was signed to the newly formed Celtic Warriors. He played the whole of that new look 2003-04 season out of position at number 8 due to injuries in the squad, finishing with 19 appearances.[4]
Following the demise of the region after only one season, Parks joined the then Welsh head coach Phil Davies at Leeds Tykes.
Leeds and Perpignan
After a difficult start to the 2004-05 season through injury, Parks become an influential member of the Leeds squad and was at times named as vice captain.[5]
At the beginning of 2005 following injuries to key players, Leeds were bottom of the Zurich Premiership and some way adrift of their rivals. Despite the threat of relegation they made it to their first ever Powergen Cup final in 2005, defeating Bath 20-12 at Twickenham to claim their first ever trophy.[6][7]
Following the cup win they went on to win five straight games and avoided relegation finishing the season in eighth position. The following season saw the Tykes lose their first eight games in three different competitions, and were relegated at the end of the season. Parks subsequently signed for USA Perpignan for the 2006–07 season. However, due to a failure to gain sufficient game time, Parks returned to Wales for the 2007–08 season with the Newport Gwent Dragons.
Newport Gwent Dragons
Parks tore his knee ligaments in the Boxing Day derby against Cardiff Blues, marking the start of a long line of injuries, which ultimately led to his retirement from rugby. Early in his second season with the Dragons, Parks injured his shoulder in a tackle. Unaware of the severity of the injury, Richard continued to play and then had an operation over Christmas to repair his shoulder. He returned to action at the beginning of the year but his shoulder problem reoccurred. It was at this point, in May 2009 and after of trying many different courses of treatment to repair his shoulder, Richard was advised the damage to his shoulder was irreversible and following the second operation on his shoulder that year, he was advised he should not play rugby anymore. He had made 30 appearances for the Dragons. Richard retired from rugby on 26 May 2009 aged 31.[8]
737 Challenge and other expeditions
Following his retirement from rugby, Parks embarked on a challenge to climb the highest mountain on each of the world's 7 continents and complete the Three Poles Challenge within 7 months. [9]
On 12 December 2010, Parks left Cardiff on the centenary of the departure of the ill-fated Terra Nova Expedition, led by Robert Falcon Scott, from that city.[10] Parks was joined on parts of his 737 Challenge by Olympic rower Steve Williams OBE and Marie Curie nurse Janet Suart.[11]
He completed each leg of the 737 Challenge on the following dates:
- Leg 1: The South Pole - 27 December 2010, 6.10 am GMT
- Leg 2: Mount Vinson - 8 January 2011
- Leg 3: Aconcagua - 5 February 2011, 5.54 pm GMT
- Leg 4: Kilimanjaro - 27 February 2011, 4.57 am GMT
- Leg 5: Carstensz Pyramid - 15 March 2011, 11.28 pm GMT
- Leg 6: The North Pole - 11 April 2011, 2.20 pm BST
- Leg 7: Everest - 25 May 2011, 2.57 am BST
- Leg 8: Denali - 30 June 2011, 8.08 am BST
- Leg 9: Elbrus - 12 July 2011, 8.53 am BST
On 12 July 2011 he completed his challenge, finishing more than two weeks ahead of his self-imposed 7-month deadline. He completed his 737 Challenge in a record setting 06 Months, 11 Days, 07 Hours and 53 Minutes.[12] and set a new benchmark in the climbing of the 7 summits.
His 737 Challenge raised hundreds of thousands of pounds in aid of Marie Curie Cancer Care whilst creating an advertising value worth £3 million to the cancer charity.
In December 2012, he attempted to ski solo and unsupported to the South Pole from Hercules Inlet on the Antarctic coast. During his trek he received an extra food resupply, and in January he had to abandon the attempt as he could not reach the South Pole in time for the last plane back to South America. He returned to Antarctica at the end of 2013, and on 4 January 2014 he completed an unsupported and unassisted journey to the South Pole, convering 1,150 km (715 miles) in 29 days, 19 hours and 24 minutes, the fastest solo for a Brit.[13]
TV documentaries
Parks' 737 Challenge was filmed for a BBC Cymru Wales documentary; "Richard Parks - Conquering the World" was transmitted in 3 parts from Tuesday 26 July 2011 and has since been distributed across the globe. Filmed by Sports Media Services, the documentary showed the emotional and inspirational journey which saw Richard Parks conquer 7 Summits, 3 Poles in 7 Months.
In 2014 Richard's first network television series will be broadcast on Channel 5. His new documentary series, filmed by Zig Zag Productions, follows his year of preparation and endurance races as well as his solo, unsupported and unassisted journey to the South Pole.
Honours & Awards
- Powergen Cup/Anglo-Welsh Cup titles: 1 (2005)
- 2012 - Won Just Giving Celebrity Fundraiser of the year.
- 2012 - Awarded the Rugby Writers’ Club Special Award which was previously awarded to the likes of Phil Vickery, Sir Clive Woodward and Sir Ian McGeechan.
- 2012 - Awarded The ‘Chancellors Medal’ by the University of Glamorgan.
- 2012 - Awarded an Honorary Fellowship by the University of Wales.
- 2012 - Selected to carry the Olympic Torch.
- 2012 - Named in the Business Insider's top 100 most influential people in Wales
- 2012 - Invited to meet the Queen at Buckingham Palace.
- 2012 - Alongside 737 Challenge design partner Limegreentangerine, won a national CIM Marketing Excellence Award, winning SME of the year at the 2012 CIM Marketing Excellence Awards.
- 2013 - Awarded an Honorary fellowship by Cardiff University.
References
- ↑ BBC Sport - Injury forces Parks to quit rugby
- ↑ BBC Sport - Sale claim Shield glory
- ↑ Michael Owen being the 1000th player in the same game
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "Bath 12-20 Leeds". BBC. 16 April 2005. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
- ↑ BBC Sport
- ↑ Three poles challenge for rugby player Richard Parks
- ↑ BBC Sport - Richard Parks peaking for great adventure
- ↑ 737 Challenge
- ↑ "Richard Parks secures record with seventh summit". BBC Sport. 12 July 2011. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
- ↑ "Richard Parks claiming 'fastest Briton' record to reach South Pole", BBC News, 4 January 2014