Richard Hill | |
Birth Name: | Richard John Hill |
Birth Date: | 4 May 1961 |
Birth Place: | Birmingham, England |
Weight: | 12st |
Ru Position: | Scrum-Half |
Repteam1: | England |
Repyears1: | 1984–1991 |
Repcaps1: | 29 |
Reppoints1: | 8 |
Years1: | 1983–1994 |
Clubs1: | Bath |
Apps1: | 248 |
Points1: | 260 |
Coachteams1: | Gloucester |
Coachteams2: | Harlequins |
Coachteams3: | Newport |
Coachteams4: | Bristol |
Coachteams5: | Chalon-sur-Saône |
Coachteams6: | Worcester Warriors |
Coachteams7: | Rouen Normandie Rugby |
Coachyears1: | -1999 |
Coachyears2: | 1999-2002 |
Coachyears3: | 2002-2003 |
Coachyears4: | 2003-2009 |
Coachyears5: | 2009-2010 |
Coachyears6: | 2010-2013 |
Coachyears7: | 2013- |
Ru Coachupdate: | 18 April 2013 |
School: | Bishop Wordsworth's Grammar School |
Richard Hill (born 4 May 1961 in Birmingham) is a rugby union coach and former English international rugby footballer.
Born in Birmingham, Hill was educated at Bishop Wordsworth's Grammar School in Salisbury, and Exeter University. Incidentally his namesake, Richard Hill MBE, who was in the England team to win the Rugby World Cup in 2003 also attended Bishop Wordsworth's School and both played for Salisbury Rugby Football Club.
One of Richard's early successes in 1980 was winning the Wiltshire Schools U18 Sevens tournament with Salisbury's Boys Grammar school Bishop Wordsworth's defeating Swindon's St. Joseph's Comprehensive Roman Catholic School in a hard fought final at the Headlands School in Wiltshire. The Salisbury school won by two tries to one. Unfortunately for the Swindon school Bishop Wordsworth were also able to field David Egerton who was also capped by England on 9 occasions.
Joining Bath Rugby as a scrum-half straight from university, in these amateur times his day job was working for Lloyds Bank. Unlike his half-back partner Stuart Barnes, Hill loved training. Nicknamed Duracell, he spent all his available time there, and his dedication spelled the inevitable introduction of the professional era.[1] In 1984 he debuted for England as scrum half against South Africa in Port Elizabeth on the controversial tour. In the 1987 season, he was made captain of England, losing the captaincy after the England-Wales match.
In the autumn of 1990, he rejoined the England squad and went on to play 20 consecutive games until his retirement. Richard was a major component in England's excellent form in the first three matches of the 1990 Five Nations campaign and he often provided the ammunition for the likes of Guscott, Carling and Underwood. He even managed to score his first try for England when he touched down against Wales. His final cap was in the 1991 World Cup Final against Australia. Source: http://www.sporting-heroes.net/rugby/england/richard-1961-hill-12718/brief-biography-of-international-rugby-career_a03277/
After assistant posts at Gloucester and Harlequins, Hill also spent a season as head coach of England Students and the backs coach as Ebbw Vale RFC. In 2002 he was appointed head coach of Newport RFC. A year later he joined Bristol Rugby, leading them back to the Guinness Premiership after two seasons, and then to third place and the playoffs in the 2006–7 season. In July 2009, he agreed to join French third division side Chalon-sur-Saône as head coach.[2]
In May 2010, Hill was named as head coach for Worcester Warriors.[3] Richard Hill in his first year as head coach, coached the Worcester Warriors back into the Aviva Premiership and held a contract at the Warriors until 2014.
On 16 April 2013, Hill was sacked from his post at Worcester [4] "following the club's recent run of form".
Hill, a fluent French speaker, moved to France to continue his coaching career where he was hired as General Manager in 2013 of Rouen, where he led them to the French Amateur Championship of France. Hill is committed to Rouen until 2023.