Rob Horne Explained

Rob Horne
Birth Name:Robert Horne
Birth Date:15 August 1989
Birth Place:Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Height:186cm (73inches)
Weight:92kg (203lb)
School:
  • Lugarno Public School
  • Georges River College, Oatley
Ru Position:Centre, Wing
Youthclubs1:Oatley
Amatyears1:2013
Amatteam1:Southern Districts
Amatapps1:5
Amatpoints1:10
Ru Amupdate:7 September 2013
Years1:2014
Clubs1:Greater Sydney Rams
Apps1:0
Points1:0
Years2:2017–2018
Apps2:21
Points2:40
Ru Clubupdate:14 April 2018
Superyears1:2008–2017
Super1:New South Wales
Superapps1:114
Superpoints1:145
Superupdate:15 July 2017
Ru Nationalyears:2007
2008–2009
2010–2017
Ru Nationalcaps:
5
34
Ru Nationalpoints:
(5)
(20)
Ru Ntupdate:24 June 2017
Ru Sevensnationalyears1:2008
Ru Sevensnationalteam1:Australia

Rob Horne (born 15 August 1989) is an Australian former rugby union footballer who played at centre for the Waratahs, Northampton Saints, and Australia.[1] [2]

Early life

Horne attended Lugarno Public School and Georges River College, Oatley Campus. He played club rugby as a junior with Oatley rugby club.

Club career

Super Rugby

Rob Horne made his Super Rugby debut for the Waratahs in 2008 at the age of 18, he came off the bench for Timana Tahu against the Blues. He quickly cemented his place in the team, starting in the 2008 Super 14 Final in which Waratahs lost to Crusaders 20–12.[3] [4]

Premiership Rugby

It was announced on 6 February 2017, that Horne would join English side Northampton Saints for the beginning of the 2017–18 season.[2]

Retirement

After making a big impact in his first season at Northampton Saints Horne was made captain for the first time during the local derby with Leicester Tigers on 14 April 2018. Thirteen seconds into the game, he was injured after tackling Sione Kalamafoni. Medics attended to him for some time on the field before transporting him to Leicester Royal Infirmary. Northampton went on to win the game 21–27.[5] One week later on 21 April 2018 it was announced that Horne had been forced to retire from professional rugby immediately due to injury. After receiving care at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital it was confirmed that he had sustained significant, career ending nerve damage to his right arm.[6] He later confirmed in an interview that this damage was to the Brachial Plexus nerves in his right shoulder. This left him with full paralysis of his right arm.[7]

International career

Horne was named as vice-captain for the Wallabies in 2016 alongside Michael Hooper, but was ruled out of game-time for the rest of the year after suffering from a leg injury against New Zealand in Sydney during the opening match of the Bledisloe series.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.waratahs.com.au/Waratahs/Team/SuperRugbySquad/PlayerDetail.aspx?pid=126 Waratahs Player Profiles
  2. Web site: Wallaby leader heading to Saints.
  3. Web site: Crusaders crowned Super 14 champions 2008 — Rugby videos of tackles, tries, funny incidents and more - Rugbydump.com . 21 April 2018 . 20 June 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180620232206/http://www.rugbydump.com/2008/05/534/crusaders-crowned-super-14-champions-2008 . dead .
  4. News: Horne set to notch a Waratah ton. Daily Telegraph. 26 May 2016.
  5. News: Leicester 21-27 Northampton. BBC Sport.
  6. Web site: Rob Horne retires from professional rugby through injury.
  7. Web site: Saints farewell interview: Rob Horne. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20180929000521/https://www.northamptonchron.co.uk/sport/saints-farewell-interview-rob-horne-1-8570958/amp. 2018-09-29.