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Percy Montgomery

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Percy Montgomery
Birth namePercival Colin Montgomery
Date of birth (1974-03-15) 15 March 1974 (age 50)
Place of birthWalvis Bay, South Africa, now Namibia
Height1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Weight93 kg (205 lb)
SchoolSouth African College School
UniversityCape Peninsula University of Technology
SpouseFlorencia de la V
Children2
Rugby union career
Position(s) Fullback, Centre, Flyhalf
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
2002–05
2003–05
2007–08
WalesNewport
WalesDragons
FrancePerpignan
Barbarians
17
38
14
(207)
(251)
(95)
Correct as of 22 May 2013
Provincial / State sides
Years Team Apps (Points)
1996–2002
2005–07
Western Province
Template:Rut Sharks (Currie Cup)
64
4
(341)
(42)
Correct as of 22 May 2013
Super Rugby
Years Team Apps (Points)
1996–2002
2006–07
2009
Stormers
Sharks
Stormers
52
21
6
(217)
(213)
(0)
International career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1997–2008  South Africa 102 (893)
Correct as of 22 May 2013

Percival Colin "Percy" Montgomery OIS (born 15 March 1974 in the South African enclave of Walvis Bay, now Namibia) is a retired South African rugby union player. When he ended his international career in August 2008, he held the all-time records for both caps and points for South Africa's national team, known as the Springboks.

Career

Montgomery was born 15 March 1974 in Walvis Bay, an enclave of South Africa that was transferred to Namibia in 1994. He attended the oldest school in the country, South African College Schools, in Cape Town. He played the early part of his South African domestic career for Western Province in the Currie Cup and the Stormers in Super Rugby; before moving to Wales in 2002 to join Newport RFC, and joined the Newport Gwent Dragons after the 2003 reorganisation of Welsh rugby into a regional setup. [citation needed]

At the end of the 2004–05 Northern Hemisphere season, he returned to play in South Africa for the Template:Rut Sharks (Currie Cup) in the Currie Cup and the Sharks in Super Rugby. He later spent the 2007–08 Northern Hemisphere season in the French Top 14 competition with Perpignan before returning to South Africa in June 2008. He then played for Western Province and the Stormers before ending his playing career in May 2009.

Percy Montgomery in action for South Africa

Montgomery earned his first Springbok cap against the British and Irish Lions in July 1997 as an outside centre. He played at the 1999 Rugby World Cup finals and had amassed 50 caps by the end of 2001. However, his Springbok career stalled after his move to Wales, since at that time players were only eligible for Springboks selection if they were playing domestically. After a change in policy, he was recalled by new coach Jake White in 2004. He was the leading points scorer in the Tri Nations in 2004 and 2005, and currently holds the record for the most points scored in a career by a Springbok rugby player. On 17 June 2006 against Scotland, he became the first Springbok player to reach 600 points in his Test career, and on 9 June 2007 he passed the 700-point mark against Manu Samoa. [citation needed]

On 14 September 2007, Montgomery reached two major milestones in the springboks' second 2007 Rugby World Cup pool match against England. He became the first Springbok to score 800 Test points and, more significantly, he equalled Joost van der Westhuizen as the most-capped Springbok with his 89th appearance. He took sole possession of the Springboks caps record on 22 September against Tonga. He was the leading point scorer in the 2007 Rugby World Cup, playing a key role in the Boks' successful march to the Webb Ellis Cup.

Montgomery's 893 Test points give him well over twice as many points as the player in second place on the all-time Springboks points list, Naas Botha, who played in only 28 Tests compared to Montgomery's 102, since most of his prime years were in South Africa's era of isolation from world rugby.

On 13 May 2003 while playing for Newport, Montgomery was sent off for pushing a touch judge to the ground, and was later heavily fined and given a two-year ban, with 18 months suspended, for the offence of "assaulting a match official".[1] He consequently missed the 2003 Rugby World Cup and returned to play in Wales in early December 2003.[2]

He left Wales to join the Sharks for the 2006 Super 14 season where he played fullback.

For the 2007–08 season, he signed for the French Top 14 club USA Perpignan and moved to France after the World Cup. In May 2008, he was signed by coach Rassie Erasmus to return to Western Province after completing his commitments with the Springboks. He was contracted to play for Province in the Currie Cup and the Stormers in the Super 14 to 2009 .[3]

Montgomery became the first Springbok to earn 100 caps, being awarded a gold cap after their game against the All Blacks in Cape Town, losing 19–0.[4]

Retirement

Percy Montgomery running the ball for the Springboks against Samoa in 2007, with Jaque Fourie supporting on the outside.

Percy Montgomery announced his retirement from international test rugby on 30 August 2008, after the Springboks beat Australia 53–8 in their last game of the 2008 Tri-Nations.[5]

In May 2009, he rejoined the Boks, but this time in a coaching role as the team's kicking consultant in the run-up to the British and Irish Lions' tour of South Africa.[6] Shortly after his appointment was announced, he confirmed his retirement as a player, indicating that he had planned to end his playing career at the end of the 2009 Super 14 season.[7]

Honours

Western Province
South Africa

References

  1. ^ Wyn Griffiths: "Rugby Union: Montgomery suspended for pushing touch judge." The Independent, London, 4 June 2003.
  2. ^ "Montgomery Returns." European Rugby Cup website, 5 December 2003.
  3. ^ "WP sign Montgomery."
  4. ^ "Lauding a win for all reasons". The Dominion Post. 17 August 2008. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  5. ^ Percy Montgomery retires
  6. ^ "Percy to join Springbok management" (Press release). South African Rugby Union. 10 May 2009. Retrieved 12 May 2009.
  7. ^ "Monty confirms his playing days are over" (Press release). South African Rugby Union. 18 May 2009. Retrieved 21 May 2009.