- Mark Coyne (rugby league)
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Mark Coyne Personal information Born August 16, 1967 Playing information Position Centre Club Years Team Pld T G FG P 19??–87 Brothers (Brisbane) 1988–98 St. George Dragons 207 56 0 0 224 1999 St. George Illawarra 15 5 0 0 20 Total 222 61 0 0 244 Representative Years Team Pld T G FG P 1990–97 Queensland 19 4 0 0 16 1995–97 Australia 9 2 0 0 8 Source: Rugby League Project and Yesterday's Hero Mark Coyne (born 16 August 1967) is an Australian former rugby league footballer, a state and national representative player. His club career was with the St. George Dragons and the merged St George Illawarra Dragons - he captained both sides. He played principally at centre but sometimes as a winger in his notable representative career.
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Club career
A Queenslander, Coyne was graded with the Brothers club in Brisbane, playing for them in the Grand Final of the 1987 Brisbane Rugby League Grand Final and scoring a try. He then relocated to the St George Dragons in Sydney in 1988. He made his first grade debut in 1989 and impressed with his trademark right foot step.
In 1992 Coyne played in the Dragons 28-8 Grand Final loss to the Brisbane Broncos. Coyne played in the 1993 Grand Final for the Dragons where once again they went down to the Broncos 14-6. 1994 saw Coyne take on the role as captain of St. George, a year when the Dragons failed to make the finals.
Coyne's leadership capabilities were fully acknowledged in 1995 when he was captain of St. George, vice captain of Queensland and made his Test debut for the Kangaroos. 1996 saw Coyne lead the Dragons to another Grand Final, but despite playing a great game himself the Dragons went down controversially to the Manly Sea Eagles 20-8.
In 1998 Coyne was honoured with a testimonial year at St. George and impressively, he chose to donate all the proceeds of that testimonial season to a children's charity.
Coyne hung up his boots in 1999, whilst playing for the St. George Illawarra Dragons (a joint venture of the St. George Dragons and the Illawarra Steelers) and after 12 seasons wearing the Dragons' Big Red V. By the end of his career he had played in 9 Test matches; 19 Origins and over 200 first grade matches, of which over 100 were as captain.
Representative career
Coyne made his State of Origin debut in game II of 1990 for Queensland, after impressive performances in the centres for his club. Mark had to bide his time and wait another two years before being selected for Queensland in games II and III of 1992. In game II that year Coyne popped up a great pass to send Billy Moore over for a try. Queensland went on to win the match 5-4. In 1993 Coyne played in all three games and set up a try for Mal Meninga in game II.
1994 would ultimately provide the most memorable of Coyne's State of Origin appearances and enabled his entry to the annals of Maroon and Origin folklore. In game I, with Queensland down 12-10 and 40 seconds left on the clock, from deep in their own half the Maroons started one of the most memorable try-scoring movements. Allan Langer handled the ball twice in the 11-pass sequence which was finished when Coyne extended his arm in the right corner to thwart the last ditched defensive efforts of Brad Fittler and Ricky Stuart, breaking Blues' hearts in the process and winning the match in a heart-stopping finish.
Loyal to the ARL during the Super League war Coyne was one of a handful of senior Queensland players available for representative honours that year and along with Trevor Gillmeister and Dale Shearer he brought experience and spirit to the young Queensland side and their novice coach Paul Vautin. History shows that Queensland won the 1995 Origin series 3-nil.
His ARL loyalty was repaid when he made his Australian representative debut in the 1995 trans-Tasman series against New Zealand and he played in all three Tests. Later that year he was selected in Australia's 1995 World Cup squad, played in two pool games, the semi-final and was a member of side that won the final against England 16-8 at Wembley Stadium.
He was a mainstay of Australian representative sides during the schismatic years of Super League and made further representative appearances against Papua New Guinea, Fiji and a Rest of the World side in 1997.
Later years
Coyne is currently part of the National Rugby League's judiciary panel and is Chairman of the NRL RLPA Education and Welfare Committee.[1]
Mark Coyne is now married to Annie and has 3 kids; Elly, Sophie and James and lives in SydneyCareer statistics
207 games for St. George
15 games for St. George Illawarra
19 games for Queensland (State of Origin)
9 games for the Australian Kangaroos
3 Grand Final appearances: 1992, 1993, 1996 (missed the 1999 Grand Final against the Melbourne Storm due to injury)References
- ^ Zillman banned for four weeks for biting AAP, 19 August 2009
- Andrews, Malcolm (2006) The ABC of Rugby League Austn Broadcasting Corpn, Sydney
- Big League's 25 Years of Origin Collectors' Edition , News Magazines, Surry Hills, Sydney
- Whiticker, Alan & Hudson, Glen (2006) The Encyclopedia of Rugby League Players, Gavin Allen Publishing, Sydney
External links
- Mark Coyne at the Former Origin Greats website.
- Queensland Representatives at qrl.com.au
Australia squad – 1995 Rugby League World Cup Champions (8th Title) 1. Lee Murphy | 2. Nathan Blacklock | 3. Paul McGregor | 4. Mark Coyne (c) | 5. Jamie Ainscough | 6. Anthony Mundine | 7. Trent Barrett |
8. Craig Smith | 9. Nathan Brown | 10. Corey Pearson | 11. Darren Treacy | 12. Lance Thompson | 13. Wayne Bartrim |
14. Shaun Timmins | 15. Colin Ward | 16. Brad Mackay | 17. Craig Fitzgibbon | Coach: David WaiteCategories:- 1967 births
- Living people
- Australian rugby league players
- St. George Dragons players
- St. George Illawarra Dragons players
- Queensland Rugby League State of Origin players
- Rugby league centres
- Australia national rugby league team players
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