Fred Gardiner (rugby union) explained

Fred Gardiner
Full Name:Frederick Gardiner
Birth Date:31 May 1874
Birth Place:Keady, County Armagh
Death Place:Belfast
Occupation:Linen merchant
School:Lurgan College
Position:Forward
Repyears1:1900–09
Repcaps1:22
Reppoints1:15

Frederick Gardiner (31 May 1874 — 7 June 1921) was an Irish rugby union international.[1]

Gardiner was born in County Armagh and attended Lurgan College.[2]

A linen merchant, Gardiner picked up work in Belfast after college and played for the city's North of Ireland club, from where he achieved his first Ireland selection in 1900. A versatile player, he was a back in matches for Ulster, but made most of his Ireland appearances as a forward. He was capped 22 times for Ireland and captained the team during the Home Nations in 1909, which would be his final year of international rugby.[3]

Gardiner, later a referee, officiated the 1912 Five Nations match between England and Scotland, then became Test rugby's first substitute referee when he came on for the second half of that year's Springboks match against Ireland.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Death Of Fred Gardiner . Sport (Dublin) . 11 June 1921.
  2. News: Irish Rugby International's Death . . 9 June 1921.
  3. Web site: Allen . Nicholas . Gardiner, Frederick Thomas . . en.
  4. Web site: Who Was The First Substitute Referee? . https://web.archive.org/web/20221001212420/https://worldrugbymuseum.com/from-the-vaults/countries/who-was-the-first-substitute-referee . 1 October 2022 . . 28 May 2018.