- Dai Parker
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Dai Parker Full name David Stewart Parker[1] Date of birth 8 August 1904 Place of birth Llansamlet, Wales Date of death 16 June 1965 (aged 60)Place of death Swansea, Wales Notable relative(s) Tom Parker, brother Rugby union career Playing career Position Forward Amateur clubs Years Club / team ?
1923-?Llansamlet RFC
Swansea RFCNational team(s) Years Club / team Caps (points) 1924-1930
1930Wales[2]
British Lions10
5(11)
(3)David 'Dai' Parker (8 August 1904–16 June 1965) was a Welsh international rugby union prop who played club rugby for Swansea. He won ten caps for Wales and was selected to play in the 1930 British Lions tour of New Zealand and Australia.
Contents
Club career
Parker first played for Swansea in 1923, and in 1924 he was part of the Swansea team that played the 1924 touring New Zealand team. Swansea lost heavily, but when Parker scored with a penalty kick he was the first person to score against the tourists, even though the game was the fifth of the series.[3]
Parker was Swansea's lead scorer over five consecutive seasons between 1925/26 and 1929/30. He was also chosen to captain Swansea in the 1927/28 season.
International career
Parker was first chosen to represent Wales in a match against Ireland as part of the 1924 Five Nations Championship. The Welsh team saw ten changes from the prior game against Scotland, which Wales had lost 10-35 and Parker was one of six new caps, five of them in the pack. Played in front of the Prince of Wales at the Cardiff Arms Park, Wales lost narrowly. The selectors kept faith in Parker and he was chosen to play in the next game, away to France. Wales were victorious, halting a losing streak of four matches, thanks to a drop goal from Vincent Griffiths.
Parker was next selected for Wales to face the same touring New Zealand team he had lost to playing for Swansea in 1924. Under the captaincy of Jack Wetter, Wales were outclassed by the All Black's speed and combination play. Parker worked tirelessly in the pack[4] along with Steve Morris and Charlie Pugh, but were let down by uninspiring back play. Teddy Morgan, writing in the Western Mail, commented that "The Welsh side hardly deserved a score, though the forwards surpassed themselves."
Parker played the entire 1925 Five Nations Championship, one of only three players in the pack to hold their position throughout the tournament, the others being Aberavon's Bryn Phillips and Llanelli's Idris Jones. Although Wales lost three of the four games, Parker scored in two of the games, a conversion in the win over France and a conversion and a penalty goal in a loss to Scotland.
Parker missed the next three Championships, but was reselected for the 1929 tournament. Parker was back on the score sheet converting one of the two tries in a victory over the French. In the final match of the Championship, Parker converted a try by Frank Williams to steal a draw with Ireland. Parker's final international cap was in the opening game of the 1930 campaign, a draw with England at the Arms Park.
In 1930, Parker was selected to join the British Lions in their tour of Australia and New Zealand. Parker played in all five tests of the tour, scoring a penalty goal in the fourth test against New Zealand in Wellington. On the tour he was often used as a hooker, playing in that position for all four New Zealand tests.[5]
International matches played
Wales[6]
- England 1925, 1930
- France 1924, 1925, 1929
- Ireland 1924, 1925, 1929
- New Zealand 1924
- Scotland 1925
British Lions
- Australia 1930
- New Zealand 1930, 1930, 1930, 1930
Bibliography
- Billot, John (1972). All Blacks in Wales. Ferndale, Glamorgan: Ron Jones Publications.
- Godwin, Terry (1984). The International Rugby Championship 1883-1983. Grafton Street, London: Willow Books. ISBN 000218060X.
- Smith, David; Williams, Gareth (1980). Fields of Praise: The Official History of The Welsh Rugby Union. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. ISBN 0708307663.
References
- ^ Swansea RFC player profile
- ^ Welsh Rugby Union player profiles
- ^ Billot (1972), pg 59.
- ^ Billot (1972), pg 68.
- ^ Ospreys player profiles
- ^ Smith (1980), pg 470.
Forwards Doug Prentice (Leicester and England) (captain) · Henry Rew (Blackheath and England) · Dai Parker (Swansea and Wales) · WB Welsh (Hawick and Scotland) · Brian Henry Black (Oxford U. and England) · Michael "Mike" Joseph Dunne (Lansdowne and Ireland) · George Beamish (Leicester and Ireland) · James Leo Farrell (Bective Rangers and Ireland) · John McDonald Hodgson (Northern) · Henry O'Hara O'Neill (Queens and Ireland) · Ivor Jones (Llanelli and Wales) · Harry Wilkinson (Halifax and England) · Samuel "Sam" Airey Martindale Martindale (Kendal and England) · Douglas Kendrew (Leicester and England) · HCS Jones (Manchester and England)Backs Jack Bassett (Penarth and Wales) · WG McG Bonner (Bradford) · Carl Aarvold (Cambridge U. and England) · James "Jim" SR Reeves (Harlequins and England) · Jack Morley (Newport and Wales) · Anthony "Tony" L Novis (Blackheath and England) · R Jennings (Redruth) · Harry Bowcott (Cambridge U. and Wales) · Tommy Jones-Davies (London Welsh and Wales) · Paul Finbarr Murray (Wanderers and Ireland) · Roger Spencer Spong (Old Millhillians and England) · Wilfred "Wilf" Henry Sobey (Old Millhillians and England) · Thomas "Tom" Caldwell Knowles (Birkenhead Park) · Howard Poole (Cardiff)Coach James BaxterCategories:- Welsh rugby union players
- Wales international rugby union players
- Rugby union props
- Swansea RFC players
- British and Irish Lions rugby union players from Wales
- People from Swansea
- 1904 births
- 1965 deaths
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