Bobbie Goulding

For people with a similar name, see Bob Gould (disambiguation).
Bobbie Goulding
Goulding in 2009
Personal information
Full name Robert Dennis Goulding[1]
Nickname Bobbie Dazzler
Born (1972-02-04) 4 February 1972
Widnes, Lancashire, England, UK
Playing information
Position scrum-half/halfback
Club
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1988–91 Wigan 45 11 33 4 114
1991–92 Leeds
1992–94 Widnes 67 9 89 4 218
1994–98 St Helens 117 25 548 13 1209
1998–99 Huddersfield 29 4 78 4 176
2000 Wakefield Trinity 13 3 25 3 65
2001–02 Salford 33 2 59 4 130
2002 Leigh
2003–05 Rochdale Hornets
2014 Barrow Raiders 3 0 0 0 0
Total 307 54 832 32 1912
Representative
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1990–97 Great Britain 17 6 26 1 77
1995–96 England 5 2 18 1 45
Coaching information
Club
Years Team Gms W D L W%
200405 Rochdale Hornets
200708 Rochdale Hornets
2014 Barrow Raiders
Total 0 0 0 0
Representative
Years Team Gms W D L W%
2009 France

Bobbie Goulding (born 4 February 1972 in Widnes, Lancashire) is an English rugby league football coach and former player. A former Great Britain and England international representative scrum-half, Goulding played for a number of clubs including Wigan and St Helens, both of whom he won Challenge Cup finals with.

He also played for Leeds, Widnes, Huddersfield, Wakefield Trinity, Salford, Leigh, Rochdale Hornets and Australian side Eastern Suburbs. As a player he most famously captained St Helens in their double year of 1996.

Playing career

Born in Widnes, Goulding's usual position was as at scrum-half. In December 1988, he made his senior debut for Wigan at the age of 16, scoring a try in a 20–16 win against Halifax. In 1990, he became the youngest ever Great Britain Lions tourist at 18 years of age. In 1991, he moved to Australia to play for Eastern Suburbs, but returned to Wigan a few weeks later without making a first grade appearance. Unable to establish a regular place in the first team ahead of Andy Gregory and Shaun Edwards, he joined Leeds later that year for a fee of £100,000. He spent one season at Leeds before moving to his hometown club Widnes in 1992.

Goulding joined St Helens from Widnes in 1994 for an initial fee of £135,000, plus an additional £25,000 after four international appearances.[2] He once kicked 11 goals in a Super League match for St Helens.[3] Goulding captained St Helens at scrum half in the 1996 Challenge Cup Final, kicking four conversions and helping his team to a 40–32 victory over Bradford.[4]

Bobbie Goulding played scrum-half/halfback, and scored 2-conversion in St. Helens' 16-25 defeat by Wigan in the 1995–96 Regal Trophy final during the 1995–96 at Alfred McAlpine Stadium, Huddersfield on Saturday 13 January 1996.[5]

Goulding represented England at the 1995 Rugby League World Cup. He was selected to play for England in the 1995 World Cup final at scrum half back but Australia won the match and retained the Cup. He set the record as the highest points scorer in one game for Great Britain – 32 points V Fiji in 1996. At the end of Super League's first season, Goulding was named at scrum half back in the 1996 Super League Dream Team. He was the 1996 Great Britain Lions tour's top point scorer.

In the 1997 post season, Goulding was selected to play for Great Britain at scrum half back in all three matches of the Super League Test series against Australia.

On 1 June 2014 Goulding came out of playing retirement (after a nine-year break) to play in for Barrow Raiders in their Championship fixture against fellow Championship strugglers Rochdale Hornets. Goulding played with number 3+4 on his back, because the number 7 squad number was taken by Barrow Raiders Liam Campbell. Goulding helped the team to only their 2nd victory at that point all season and lifted Barrow Raiders off the bottom of the table.[6] He was sent off for dissent in the next fixture against Doncaster, and received a five-match suspension for the incident.

Coaching career

He joined Rochdale Hornets initially as player-coach, and his playing career ended in 2005 after a biceps injury. He left his post at Rochdale in November 2005, citing frustration at the club's financial problems. During his two seasons in charge at the National League One club he had not had a proper contract, despite impressing and twice being nominated for coach of the year.

He rejoined Rochdale as a coach in September 2007[7] before departing again in May 2008.[8]

On 28 February 2009 Goulding was named the coach of the French National team.[9]

On 31 March 2014 Bobby took charge as head coach of Championship side Barrow Raiders with the club routed to the bottom of the league. His job is to try and keep Barrow out of the bottom 5 relegation places as the leagues are being restructured in 2015.

Financial crisis at Wakefield Trinity

In 2000, at the height of a financial crisis at Wakefield Trinity, the contracts of all players aged over 24 were terminated during September 2000. The players affected were; Andy Fisher, Bobbie Goulding, Warren Jowitt, Tony Kemp (player-coach), Steve McNamara, Francis Maloney, Martin Masella, Steve Prescott, Bright Sodje, Francis Stephenson and Glen Tomlinson.[10]

References

  1. "Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 5 June 2015.
  2. Hadfield, Dave (20 July 1994). "Rugby League: Reilly denies Australian links: Halifax and Great Britain coach is keen to stay at home". The Independent. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
  3. Super League Records
  4. "steveprescottfoundation.co.uk". Steve Prescott Stats. Steve Prescott Foundation. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
  5. "13th January 1996: St Helens 16 Wigan 25 (Regal Trophy Final)". wigan.rlfans.com. 31 December 2014. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  6. "Goulding returns as Barrow Raiders beat Rochdale". North West Evening Mail. 2 June 2014. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
  7. Hornets appoint Goulding – Rochdale Online
  8. Goulding leaves Hornets – Rochdale Online
  9. Bobbie Goulding appointed new coach of France – Telegraph
  10. "Goodway calls for aid package". BBC. 24 April 2001. Retrieved 1 January 2010.

External links

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