Frank Mills | |
Birth Name: | Frank Matthew Mills |
Birth Place: | Mountain Ash, Wales |
Birth Date: | 18 March 1873 |
Death Place: | Porthcawl, Wales |
Height: | 6 ft |
Weight: | 13 st + |
Ru Position: | Forward |
Ru Amateuryears: | ?-1892 1892–1894 1894–1897 |
Ru Amateurclubs: | Mountain Ash RFC Swansea RFC Cardiff RFC Glamorgan |
Ru Nationalteam: | Wales |
Ru Nationalyears: | 1892–1896 |
Ru Nationalcaps: | 13 |
Ru Nationalpoints: | (0) |
Occupation: | Undertaker |
Frank Matthew Mills (18 March 1873 – 18 February 1925)[1] was a Welsh rugby union forward who played club rugby for Cardiff and Swansea and won 13 caps for Wales. He is best remembered as being one of the Wales squad that won the Triple Crown for the first time in 1893.
Although Mills originally played for Mountain Ash,[2] he came to note as a rugby player when he represented first-class club Swansea, which he joined in 1892. His first season at Swansea also saw him selected for Wales, coming into the pack with fellow new caps, Wallace Watts and Arthur Boucher. Although Watts and Boucher were Newport players, Mills' international career would mirror theirs; playing 11 games with Boucher and 12 with Watts.
His debut Wales campaign was a poor one for the country. Mills played in all three games of the 1892 Home Nations Championship, and Wales lost all of them. Despite this, the selectors kept faith with the team and in particular the forwards, which paid dividends the next season when Wales, under the captaincy of Arthur 'Monkey' Gould won the Triple Crown for the first time in their history. Mills played in all three games, in a pack which was recognised for its weight, strength and scrummaging tactics.
Mills was reselected for the 1894 Home Nations Championship, but a mixture of poor pitch conditions and Welsh in-fighting resulted in two loses and just a single win. At the end of the 1894 season, Mills is recorded playing at least one match for Glamorgan, alongside Swansea team-mate Billy Bancroft.[3] The next season Mills had switched clubs from the Whites of Swansea to the Blues of Cardiff, but retained his position in the Welsh squad. By playing in all three games of the 1895 Championship Mills had represented Wales in 12 consecutive international games, and his final game for Wales was the opening match of the 1896 tournament, which saw England run seven tries passed the Welsh without reply. The Welsh selectors lost faith in the pack, bringing in five new caps for the next game. Mills was one of those players replaced and never represented Wales again.
Wales[4]