- Mel Baker
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Mel Baker Full name Albert Melville Baker Place of birth Newport, Wales Rugby union career Playing career Position Wing Amateur clubs Years Club / team 1907-1922 Newport RFC
Griqualand WestNational team(s) Years Club / team Caps (points) 1909-1910
1910Wales
British Isles3
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(0)Albert Melville "Mel" Baker (1885 - ?) was a Welsh international, rugby union wing who played club rugby for Newport and South African regional team Griqualand West. He won three caps for Wales[1] and was selected for the British Lions 1910 tour of South Africa.
Contents
Rugby career
Baker first played for Newport in 1907 and was part of the team that faced three the 1910 touring Australian team and scored Newport's only try in the game.
Baker was first capped for Wales on 6 February 1909 when he played against Scotland at Inverleith, under the captaincy of Billy Trew. Wales won the match, and Baker was selected to face France in a match which was at the time not classified as an offiical part of the Home Nations Championship. Wales beat France 47-5 in a one sided game in Paris, with Baker running in a hat-trick of tries. Wales won the Grand Slam that year but Baker was not part of the first game of the next season's tournament. He was reselected for the second match against Scotland, and scored a fourth international try in a 14-0 win for Wales.
In 1910 Baker was offered a place on the British Isles tour of South Africa under the captaincy of Newport's Tommy Smyth. Baker managed to play in only one of the three test games, but decided to stay in South Africa after the end of the tour. He played for South African regional team Griqualand West and in 1911 was part of the team that won the Currie Cup.[2] He played one more game for Newport, during a visit to Wales in 1922, when he turned out in a game against the Barbarians, scoring one of the tries in a 15-6 win for Newport.[3]
International matches played
Wales[4]
British Isles
- South Africa 1910
Bibliography
- Starmer-Smith, Nigel (1977). The Barbarians. Macdonald & Jane's Publishers. ISBN 0860075524.
- Smith, David; Williams, Gareth (1980). Fields of Praise: The Official History of The Welsh Rugby Union. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. ISBN 0-7083-0766-3.
References
- ^ Welsh Rugby Union player profiles
- ^ Newport RFC player profile
- ^ Starmer-Smith (1977), pg 111.
- ^ Smith (1980), pg 463.
British and Irish Lions – 1910 South Africa tour Forwards Smyth (Newport) (c.) · Tyrrell (Queen's University) · Smith (Richmond) · Waller (Newport) · Reid-Kerr (Greenock Wanderers) · Stevenson (St. Andrews University) · Speirs (Watsonians) · Crean (Liverpool) · Jarman (Newport) · Piper (Cork Constitution) · Robertson (Edinburgh University) · Pillman (Blackheath) · Ashby (Queen's College) · Handford (Kersal) · Richards (Bristol) · Webb (Abertillery)Backs Williams (Newport) · Baker (Newport) · Plummer (Newport) · Neale (Bristol) · Foster (City of Derry) · Timms (Edinburgh University) · Jones (Pontypool) · Spoors (Bristol) · Wood (Leicester) · Humphreys (Tynedale) · Isherwood (Cheshire and Sale) · Milroy (Watsonians)Coach Rees and CailCategories:- Rugby union wings
- Wales international rugby union players
- Welsh rugby union players
- 1885 births
- People from Newport
- Newport RFC players
- British and Irish Lions rugby union players from Wales
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