- George Piggins
George Leslie Piggins AM (born
October 14 ,1944 ) is anAustralia nrugby league personality. He is a former player, coach and administrator of theSouth Sydney Rabbitohs club. Following their exclusion from the premiership at the end of theSuper League war , Piggins also successfully led the Rabbitohs' battle for re-inclusion in theNational Rugby League in the early 2000's.Playing career
Piggins played the game as a hooker. He established himself in first grade in 1967 but was left out for
Elwyn Walters in the finals and took several years to re-establish himself in first grade. In 1971 Piggins played a superb game in the grand final when Walters was injured and late the following year finally established a permanent first grade berth for good. In 1974, with Walters leaving for Easts, Piggins advanced so much that he played for New South Wales and the following year, despite Souths finishing last after winning only two of their last sixteen games, Piggins' toughness saw him represent Australia in the 1975 World Cup. The following year, he scored a memorable bustlingtry (one of only eight in 120 first grade games) against theWestern Suburbs Magpies and again played for New South Wales. With injuries catching up, however, Piggins retired at the end of 1978, but his experience and the skill of coachJack Gibson that season was an important precursor for the Rabbitohs reaching the semis in 1980 after winning only one of their last eighteen games in 1977.Coaching career
In 1986, Piggins took over as first grade coach and with the work-rate of a relatively lightweight but extremely tough forward pack containing
Les Davidson , David Boyle, Michael Andrews, Wayne Chisholm, skipperMario Fenech and young giant Ian Roberts, took the Rabbitohs into fourth place in his first two seasons. Although they scored the fewest tries of the thirteen clubs playing, their ability to win tight, low-scoring games kept the Rabbitohs at the top of the table. Injuries to their pack in 1988 saw them decline despite remedying their weakness in backline pace through acquiringPhil Blake , but 1989 saw the Rabbitohs as the undisputed pace-setters until the finals, winning twelve games in a row through a watertight defence and skilful, soild backline play. 1990, however, was a disaster as Boyle, Andrews and Chisholm succumbed to injury and Fenech and Davidson declined. The Rabbitohs' watertight defence became incredibly thin and the team won only two games all season - actually conceding more tries in their last five games than in the entire 1989 home-and-away season. Piggins was axed as coach at the end of that year but took up a position as manager whilst the Rabbitohs, consistently in the lower reaches of the table and in desperate financial trouble.In 2000 Piggins was awarded the
Australian Sports Medal for his contribution to Australia's international standing in the sport of rugby league.Administration
"for service to Rugby League football as an administrator, coach and player, and to the South Sydney community".
External links
* [http://www.eraofthebiff.com/p48a.html George Piggins at eraofthebiff.com]
* [http://www.abc.net.au/austory/transcripts/s336534.htm "In George We Trust" - "Australian Story" Transcript]
* [http://rugbyleagueproject.com/players/George_Piggins.html George Piggins stats at rugbyleagueproject.com]
* [http://www.yesterdayshero.com.au/PlayerProfile_George-Piggins_6636.aspx George Piggins at yesterdayshero.com.au]
* [http://www.nrlstats.com/archive/players.cfm?PlayerID=6016 George Piggins at nrlstats.com]
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