Colin Deans

Scotland international rugby union player

Rugby player
Colin Deans
Birth nameColin Deans
Date of birth (1955-05-03) 3 May 1955 (age 69)
Place of birthHawick, Scotland
SchoolHawick High School
Rugby union career
Position(s) Hooker
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
Hawick Trades ()
Hawick ()
Provincial / State sides
Years Team Apps (Points)
- South of Scotland ()
International career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1976-78 Scotland 'B' 3
1978-87 Scotland 52 (8)

Colin Thomas Deans MBE (born 3 May 1955) is a former Scotland international rugby union player.[1]

Rugby Union career

Amateur career

He was born in Hawick in the Scottish borders. He played for Hawick Trades[2] and then Hawick.[3] His nickname was Beano.[3] Deans attended the primary school in Hawick where Bill McLaren taught.[3]

Deans recalls:[4]

In Hawick we were born into rugby. It’s like New Zealand in its devotion to the game. And honestly, popping off to bed aged nine knowing that the next morning it would be my time to be coached by Mr McLaren was even more exciting than Christmas Eve. He asked each of us our names. 'Colin Deans, sir.' 'Peter Deans' laddie?’ 'Yes sir.' 'You’ll be a hooker then.'

Richard Bath writes of him that he was:[3]

The prototype for the faster hooker, acting as an extra flanker that has since emerged, Deans has few equals. Superb in the loose and a wonderfully quick striker of the ball in the scrum, the rugged Deans was also a pinpoint line-out thrower.

Provincial career

He was capped by South of Scotland District.[5]

The Rugby World magazine gave this summary of Deans:[6]

Standing 5ft 10in tall, but light in stature by current standards, Deans was the first of a new breed of mobile hookers who played like an extra back-rower – although he was still famed for his brilliant lineout throwing and his swift striking at scrum time.

International career

He was capped 3 times for Scotland 'B' between 1976 and 1978.

Deans made his Scotland debut (at the age of 22) against France in 1978 when Scotland lost, 16 - 19.[3] He was active on the national team between 1978, and 1987, with his high point being in Scotland's 1984 Grand Slam.[3][7]

Allan Massie describes him as a hooker with back-row skills:[8]

He is the most remarkable loose forward of any hooker I have seen. There can have been few, if any, faster; indeed, his speed is such that from the broken play and the line-out he gives Scotland in effect a fourth back-row forward. This means that, like Carmichael, he is ideal for the modern game, capable of fulfilling his specialist role, but also of taking a full part in fifteen-man Rugby. He harries the defence tirelessly: in the great win at Cardiff in 1982 Deans had a big part in the build-up for two of the Scottish tries; he was also at Calder's shoulder to take a pass, had that been necessary, when the first try was scored.

He also says that Deans was, "with the possible exception of Peter Wheeler, the most accurate thrower-in of recent years."[9]

He obtained 52 caps for his country.[3] He is said to have been most effective when playing in combination with David Leslie.[9]

Noted for his skills at the line-out, of the game against Wales in 1984, the first Scottish Grand Slam since 1925, Allan Massie says "we would have probably lost that game if the Deans-Leslie combination had been less effective".[9]

With 52 caps he overtook Frank Laidlaw's previous record.[9]

Deans was selected for the 1983 British Lions tour to New Zealand, but despite playing well was surprisingly kept on the bench for the entirety of the 4 test matches.[3] New Zealand thrashed the British Lions on this tour.

References

  1. ^ "Colin Thomas Deans". ESPN scrum.
  2. ^ "Log into Facebook". Facebook. {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Bath, p133
  4. ^ "Scotland great Colin Deans is a hero to Eddie Jones and was key man in the last Scots side to beat England at Twickenham". scotsman.com.
  5. ^ "The Glasgow Herald - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  6. ^ World, Rugby (18 August 2016). "The greatest hookers of all time: Colin Deans". Rugby World.
  7. ^ "Rugby Union - ESPN Scrum - Statsguru - Player analysis - Colin Deans - Test matches". ESPN scrum.
  8. ^ Massie, p172-3
  9. ^ a b c d Massie, p173
Sources
  1. Bath, Richard (ed.) The Complete Book of Rugby (Seven Oaks Ltd, 1997 ISBN 1-86200-013-1)
  2. Massie, Allan A Portrait of Scottish Rugby (Polygon, Edinburgh; ISBN 0-904919-84-6)
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Scotland squad1987 Rugby World Cup
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Coach: Grant
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Notes
Note 1: Robert Seddon died on tour after a boating accident. Andrew Stoddart became captain for the remainder of the tour.

Note 2: Matthew Mullineux decided that after losing the first test that he should withdraw from further test matches, handing on field captaincy to Frank Stout, but remained tour captain.
Note 3: David Bedell-Sivright was injured during the first test. Teddy Morgan took over captaincy on the field but Bedell-Sivright remained tour captain.
Note 4: The team that John Raphael captained was not selected by the four Home Nations governing body, but had been organised by Oxford University and billed as the English Rugby Union team. However, it was considered the Combined British team by Argentina because it also included three Scots.
Note 5: Jack Jones was captain for the first test, but Tommy Smyth remained the tour captain.
Note 6: Bleddyn Williams captained in the third and fourth tests v New Zealand and the first test v Australia.
Note 7: Cliff Morgan captained in the third test.
Note 8: David Watkins captained in the second and foruth tests v New Zealand.
Note 9: Michael Owen captained the Lions in the first tour game, the test vs. Argentina in Cardiff. Brian O'Driscoll was injured at the beginning of the first test against New Zealand. Gareth Thomas replaced him as tour captain.
Note 10: Sam Warburton was injured in the second test. Alun Wyn Jones replaced him as captain for the third test.
Note 11: Tour captain Sam Warburton was named on the bench for the first test. Peter O'Mahony was the captain on the field.

Note 12: Tour captain Alun Wyn Jones left the squad for 17 days due to an injury in the first warm-up match, and was replaced by Conor Murray temporarily.
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