Charlie Ritchie Explained

Charlie Ritchie
Birth Name:Charlie Ritchie
Birth Date:8 September 1933
Birth Place:Peterhead, Scotland
Death Place:Aberdeen, Scotland
Ru Position:Hooker
Ru Amateuryears:1951-70
Ru Amateurclubs:Aberdeen GSFP
Ru Provinceyears:1966
1966
Ru Province:North and Midlands
North of Scotland District
Module2:
Embed:yes
Office:President of the Scottish Rugby Union
Term Start:1997
Term End:1998
Order:111th

Charlie Ritchie (8 September 1933 – 29 September 2008) was a Scottish rugby union player. He became the 111th President of the Scottish Rugby Union.[1] [2]

Rugby union career

Amateur career

He went to Ferry Hill Primary School and then Aberdeen Grammar School where he played rugby union at the school. He enjoyed studying languages at school; particularly German.

On leaving school Ritchie then played for Aberdeen GSFP.[3] He made over 500 appearances for the club.

Provincial career

He was capped by North and Midlands.[4]

He played for the combined North of Scotland District in their match against Australia in 1966.[3]

Administrative career

He was secretary of Aberdeen GSFP for 12 years; then a selector for North of Scotland District for 11 years. He joined the SRU as the North of Scotland District representative.

He was the Scotland team manager of the tour to Australia in 1992; and then became a liaison manager for teams touring Scotland.

He became the 111th President of the Scottish Rugby Union. He served one year from 1996 to 1997.[5]

He was notorious for fighting the corner of Aberdeen and the north-east of Scotland. He termed Scottish rugby full of a 'south and Edinburgh mafia'.[6]

Outside of rugby union

He did two years national service in Germany, and worked with the Intelligence Corps and became fluent in German.[6]

He worked in insurance with Guardian Royal Exchange, specialising in car insurance.[6]

On his retiral from insurance he ran the Colwyn Hotel in Aberdeen with his wife.[6]

Death

Ritchie died of cancer, having developed a large tumour at the start of 2008. He left his body to medical science so there was no funeral only a memorium.[6]

Tributes

Derek Younger, chairman of Aberdeen Grammar Rugby:[6]

We're all very sad at the news. He was a real fighter for rugby in the north-east and he earned a huge amount of respect for all the work he put in. He will be sadly missed.

The Aberdeen Grammar rugby programme gave this tribute:[6]

We can nowadays never hope to replace someone of his stature and all who now play or take part in rugby are due him a great debt of gratitude. His greatest legacy will be our success in building upon his lifetime's work to continue to grow and strengthen his beloved sport in Aberdeen, the North-east and beyond.

The Aberdeen side had a minute's silence in their next match against Jed-Forest for respect.[6]

Notes and References

  1. News: Reid. Alasdair. Game mourns ex-SRU president, Charlie Ritchie. The Daily Telegraph. 2008-09-30. 2020-04-15. en-GB. 0307-1235.
  2. Web site: Our Club. Aberdeenrugby.org.uk. 22 October 2021.
  3. Web site: Game mourns ex-SRU president, Charlie Ritchie. Alasdair. Reid. September 30, 2008. www.telegraph.co.uk.
  4. Web site: The Glasgow Herald - Google News Archive Search. news.google.com.
  5. Web site: Scottish Rugby Record 2018/19. PDF. S3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com. 14 April 2020. 16 November 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191116210013/https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/sru-files/files/SR_RR1819_digital.pdf. dead.
  6. Web site: Sport | The Scotsman. Scotsman.com.