Full name | William Joseph Reedy | ||||||||||||||||
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Date of birth | 8 June 1880 | ||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Buller, New Zealand | ||||||||||||||||
Date of death | 1 April 1939 58) | (aged||||||||||||||||
Place of death | Ross, Porirua, New Zealand | ||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||
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William Joseph Reedy (8 June 1880 — 1 April 1939) was a New Zealand rugby union international. [1]
Reedy, a forward, played rugby in his native Buller District for the White Star club, before taking up a job in the Hutt Valley when he was 27. [2] He joined Wellington club Petone and made his representative debut with Wellington in 1907. [1]
In 1908, Reedy was capped twice by the All Blacks against the touring Anglo-Welsh team, for the 2nd Test draw in Wellington and 3rd Test win in Auckland. The Anglo-Welsh were retrospectively classed as a British Lions side. [1] [3]
David Gallaher was an Irish-born New Zealand rugby union footballer best remembered as the captain of the "Original All Blacks"—the 1905–06 New Zealand national team, the first representative New Zealand side to tour the British Isles. Under Gallaher's leadership the Originals won 34 out of 35 matches over the course of tour, including legs in France and North America; the New Zealanders scored 976 points and conceded only 59. Before returning home he co-wrote the classic rugby text The Complete Rugby Footballer with his vice-captain Billy Stead. Gallaher retired as a player after the 1905–06 tour and took up coaching and selecting; he was a selector for both Auckland and New Zealand for most of the following decade.
The following lists events that happened during 1961 in New Zealand.
The following lists events that happened during 1908 in New Zealand.
The following lists events that happened during 1936 in New Zealand.
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