Mike Gibson (rugby union)

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Mike Gibson
Full name Cameron Michael Henderson Gibson
Date of birth (1942-12-03) 3 December 1942 (age 81)
Place of birth Belfast, Northern Ireland
School Campbell College
University University of Cambridge
Rugby union career
Playing career
Position Centre
National team(s)
Years Club / team Caps (points)
1964-1979
1966-1971
1963-1976
Ireland
Lions
Barbarians
69
12
9
(112)
(0)
(6)
correct as of 24 Jun 2012.

Cameron Michael Henderson Gibson MBE (born 3 December 1942) is a former rugby union footballer who represented Ireland and the British and Irish Lions at international level.

Gibson is regarded as one of the greatest rugby union footballers; upon his induction into the IRB Hall of Fame in May 2011, former teammate and fellow Hall of Fame inductee Syd Millar said about Gibson that:

... [he] was one of the finest players of his generation, one of the finest players ever to represent Ireland and the British & Irish Lions and a man who epitomised the very ethos of the Game and its values.[1]

Early life

Gibson was educated at Campbell College in Belfast, and went on to study law at the University of Cambridge.

Club career

Gibson played the bulk of his career for North of Ireland F.C. ("North")

While studying, Gibson played for Cambridge University.

In February 1966 he played for London Irish against St Mary's Hospital.

He continued playing club rugby until 42.

International career

Ireland

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Gibson's distinguished career began Ireland in 1964, and earned his 69th and final cap in the second and final test win against Australia in Sydney in 1979 at age 36. A versatile player, he represented his country in four different positions. Gibson had a distinguished international career; The Irish Solicitor's all-round talent marked him out as arguably the greatest centre of any era and certainly, prior to his premature transfer to centre, the finest fly half of any era. Gibson's brilliance lay in the perception and timing of his attacking play, the focus and anticipation of his defence, and the rare dedication and commitment with which he applied himself across a 15-year international career in which he appeared in a then-world record 81 Tests.

Famed as much for his great hands and line-breaking ability as his tactical skills and rapier boot, Gibson scored 112 Test points (9 tries, 16 penalties, 7 conversions and 6 drop goals) for Ireland in a career that also saw him tour five times with the British & Irish Lions.

Gibson's record Ireland caps haul of 69 was overtaken by lock Malcolm O'Kelly against Scotland in February 2005. The mark had lasted for 26 years. His record of 56 appearances in the Five Nations (now Six Nations) was not equalled until countryman Ronan O'Gara reached the mark in Ireland's final match of the 2011 Six Nations.

British and Irish Lions

Gibson toured with the British and Irish Lions five times.

On the 1968 tour to South Africa, Gibson made history in the opening Test by becoming the first replacement in international rugby, and showed his stamina by playing in 11 of the final 13 matches after Welsh fly-half Barry John had been invalided out of the tour.[2]

John would return for the following tour, the now famous 1971 tour to New Zealand, where he would star at fly-half. With captain John Dawes, Gibson formed a brilliant midfield combination and with Gareth Edwards, Gerald Davies, J.P.R. Williams and David Duckham, they constituted arguably the finest back-line in Lions history.

The 1971 tour remains to date the Lions' sole series victory over the All Blacks, and it was on this tour that Gibson won the respect of the New Zealand rugby public with his attacking flair and timing.[2]

Gibson's work commitments saw him join the 1974 Lions in South Africa as a replacement during the second half of the tour. Gibson was renowned for his humility, and demonstrated it here by willingly playing understudy to the new Test pairing of Ian McGeechan and Richard Milliken.[2]

Gibson was selected for his fifth Lions tour in 1977, equalling fellow Irishman Willie John McBride's record. However, back and hamstring problems meant that Gibson was unable to compete for a test place.[2]

Representative teams

Gibson played for a combined Scotland/Ireland XV in the 1970 Centenary of RFU celebration match against a combined England/Wales XV[3] and again in the 1972 Scottish Rugby Union Centenary match.[4]

Honours

He was awarded an MBE for services to the game.

When the International Rugby Hall of Fame was instituted in 1997, Gibson was one of the initial fifteen inductees. Upon his induction into the IRB Hall of Fame in 2011, Gibson was quick to pay tribute to his teammates, also calling rugby the greatest team sport.[1]

In January 2012 Gibson was inducted into the Belfast Telegraph Hall of Fame.[5]

In an interview in 2011, Irish rugby great Brian O'Driscoll praised Gibson's contribution to Irish rugby:

At times when Irish rugby wasn't successful Mike was always the shining light. He played international rugby for 15 years and that speaks volumes about him. He was a magnificent player and a true ambassador for the game.[5]

Professional career

Since retirement, Gibson has practised as a solicitor in Belfast, where he continues to play an active role in the rugby community.[1] Fellow Irish international David Humphreys trained as a solicitor in Gibson's firm.

References

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External links