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Andy McIntyre

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Andy McIntyre
Birth nameAndrew John McIntyre
Date of birth (1955-12-23) 23 December 1955 (age 68)
Place of birthToowoomba, Queensland
SchoolBrisbane Grammar School
Rugby union career
Position(s) Tighthead Prop
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
197?-198? University of Queensland Rugby Club ()
Provincial / State sides
Years Team Apps (Points)
198x-198x Queensland ()
International career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1982-1989 Australia 38 (12)

Andrew John McIntyre (born Toowoomba, 23 December 1955) is a former Australian rugby union player, who played as prop.

From Toowoomba in Queensland, McIntyre bordered at the prestigious Brisbane Grammar School playing flanker in the first XV and rowing in the first XIII.

After leaving school, while a student at University of Queensland, he played for GPS where he was moved to the tighthead prop position.

Following selection in the Queensland Reds, McIntyre worked tirelessly on developing his skills that saw his selection for the Wallabies.

He was selected in 1999 as a member of the Queensland Reds team of the century:

“3 Andy McIntyre

An internationally-respected prop who anchored the Queensland and Wallaby scrum in the 1980s and will always be remembered for that momentous pushover try against Wales in the 1984 Grand Slam tour. At the time of his retirement he was Australia’s most capped prop forward.”

His high work ethic and physical conditioning resulted in his well earned reputation as one of the greatest tightheads of the modern era.

Biography

Educated at Brisbane Grammar School, on Gregory Terrace,[1] McIntyre practiced rugby union in the University of Queensland RC team, with which he won the state championship, beating Brothers Old Boys in 1979, when the final was replayed due to a draw;[2] Mcintyre also played for the Queensland representative team in the 1980s.

He had his first cap for the Wallabies during the 1982 Bledisloe Cup against the All Blacks in Christchurch, and took part in the matches of the 1984 tour in Britain, where Australia won its first Grand Slam in the Northern Hemisphere.

Three years later, McIntyre was called in the Australian national team to play the 1987 Rugby World Cup, where the Wallabies finished in fourth place, and played his last international match in 1989, also against New Zealand, the team against which he played the first of his 38 international matches.

Notes

https://web.archive.org/web/20190322231512/http://www.redsrugby.com.au/Reds/HonourBoard/TeamoftheCentury.aspx

  1. ^ "The Nurseries of Australian Rugby Wallabies". Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
  2. ^ Daddy of grand finals