Damon Keating

Last updated

Damon Keating
Personal information
Full nameDamon Keating
Born (1974-07-25) 25 July 1974 (age 50)
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Height185 cm (6 ft 1 in)
Weight100 kg (220 lb; 15 st 10 lb)
Playing information
Position Prop
Club
YearsTeamPldTGFGP
2000–01 Brisbane Broncos 40000
2002 Wakefield Trinity Wildcats 241004
Total281004

Damon Keating (born 25 July 1974) is an Australian former rugby league footballer who played as a prop for the Brisbane Broncos in the Australian National Rugby League competition. He later moved to England to play for the Wakefield Trinity Wildcats in 2002. [1]

Contents

Background

Keating was born in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Playing career

While with the Brisbane Broncos, he also played for the Past Brothers in the Queensland Cup. Keating played and captained the winning Toowoomba Clydesdales in the 2001 Queensland Cup Grand Final against the Redcliffe Dolphins. [2]

Related Research Articles

The Brisbane Rugby League premiership was a rugby league football competition in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was first held in 1922 and for every year until 1997. The competition was reinstated in 2001, known as the FOGS premiership under the Queensland Cup. The competition consists of Brisbane's top six rugby league clubs. Each participating team is a feeder club for the Queensland Cup.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shane Webcke</span> Australia international rugby league footballer

Shane Webcke is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer, who spent his entire club career playing for the Brisbane Broncos. Webcke represented Queensland in the State of Origin 21 times and also captained the side. He made 26 test appearances for Australia. His position was prop forward and at his peak he was renowned as the best front rower in the world. Alongside Glenn Lazarus and Arthur Beetson, Webcke is considered by many to have been one of the finest post-war front-rowers to play the game.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brad Thorn</span> Australia rugby league & NZ rugby union international footballer

Bradley Carnegie Thorn is a New Zealand Australian rugby union coach and former rugby league and rugby union footballer. Born in New Zealand, he represented Australia in rugby league and New Zealand in rugby union in a twenty-two year career as a player, starting at age nineteen and finishing at age forty-one. He was the head coach of the Australian Super Rugby Pacific team, the Queensland Reds. Thorn is their second longest-serving coach in history and their longest serving coach in the professional era.

John Ribot, also known by the nickname of "Reebs", is an Australian sports administrator, former rugby league footballer of the 1970s and 1980s. Once a Queensland State of Origin and Australian international representative, Ribot was the 1980 NSWRFL season's equal top try-scorer. Also a member of the 1982 "Invincibles" Kangaroo touring squad, he played club football in Brisbane for Fortitude Valley, Wests and Redcliffe, and in Sydney for Newtown, Wests and Manly-Warringah.

Kevin David Walters is an Australian professional rugby league football coach and former player, who has been the head coach of the Brisbane Broncos in the National Rugby League (NRL) since 2021.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dane Carlaw</span> Australia international rugby league footballer

Dane Carlaw is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 2000s and 2010s. An Australia national and Queensland State of Origin representative forward, he played in Australia for National Rugby League club, the Brisbane Broncos and in France for Super League club, Catalans Dragons.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Petero Civoniceva</span> Former Australia & Fiji international rugby league footballer

Petero Civoniceva, is a Fijian-Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1990s, 2000s and 2010s. A Queensland State of Origin and Australian international representative prop forward, in 2009 he broke the record for most international matches for Australia of any forward in history. Civoniceva played his club football for the Brisbane Broncos, with whom he won the 1998, 2000 and 2006 NRL Premierships, as well as for the Penrith Panthers, whom he captained. Late in his career whilst playing for the Redcliffe Dolphins in the Queensland Cup, Civoniceva captained the Fiji national team in their 2013 Rugby League World Cup campaign. The Petero Civoniceva Medal is awarded to the Australian Fijian rugby league footballer of the year, while the Civoniceva Medal is awarded to the Queensland Cup player voted as the best and fairest.

Steven Renouf is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s. Nicknamed 'the Pearl', he was known as one of the sport's greatest centres. Renouf set numerous records for the Brisbane Broncos club. After spending eleven years with Brisbane, which yielded four premierships, he left Australia to play for English club Wigan Warriors, where he spent two seasons before retiring. He was named in Australia's Indigenous team of the century (1908–2007).

William Carne is a former Australian rugby footballer who played rugby league for the Brisbane Broncos from 1990 to 1996, as well as representing both Queensland and Australia and rugby union for the Queensland Reds. An attacking player with dangerous speed, he played at wing and fullback.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Steele Retchless</span> US international rugby league footballer

Steele Retchless is a former United States international rugby league footballer who played as a second-row and prop forward in the 1990s, and 2000s. He played for the Brisbane Broncos and the South Queensland Crushers in the ARL Premiership and the London Broncos in the European Super League. He also played for the Ipswich Jets and Easts Tigers in the Queensland Cup.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nick Slyney</span> Australian rugby league footballer

Nick Slyney is an Australian former rugby league footballer who played in the 2000s and 2010s. He played at representative level for the Queensland Residents, and at club level in the National Rugby League (NRL) for North Queensland Cowboys and the Brisbane Broncos, in the Queensland Cup for Northern Pride RLFC (2009–2010) and the Redcliffe Dolphins, and in the English Super League for the London Broncos, and as a prop, second-row or lock.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anthony Seibold</span> Australian rugby league footballer and coach

Anthony Seibold is an Australian rugby union and rugby league coach, and former rugby league player. He was defence coach with the England national rugby union team, and since 2023 has been head coach for the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles of the National Rugby League (NRL).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rugby league in Queensland</span>

In Queensland, Rugby league was introduced in 1908 and is the most watched winter sport in the state and the second most participated football code after soccer. Within its first decade it surpassed rugby union there to become the most popular football code as players switched to play professionally in the Queensland Rugby League (QRL). In the 1920s, Queenslanders began leaving to play professionally in the New South Wales Rugby League which became a more popular competition. However Queensland maintained a strong rugby league culture, with the state continuing to perform well in interstate rugby league. The later advent of the State of Origin series ensured that players would return to represent their state. Regarded as “Australian sport's greatest rivalry”, the term "Origin fever" is used by the media to describe the passion of the Queenslanders public for the competition and the chant "Queenslander!", attributed to Billy Moore in 1995, has become the state's battle cry. The Queensland Rugby League is the governing body and has 58,912 registered tackle players. Rugby league authorities often count an additional 70,000 registered touch football players as participants, though that sport is only loosely affiliated and is governed by Touch Football Queensland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jaydn Su'a</span> Samoa international rugby league footballer

Jaydn Su'a is a Samoa international rugby league footballer who plays as a second-row forward for the St George Illawarra Dragons in the National Rugby League (NRL).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Caleb Timu</span> Australia international rugby union footballer

Caleb Timu is a New Zealand-born Australian rugby footballer of Samoan heritage who played rugby union for the Queensland Reds in the Super Rugby competition and for Montpellier Herault Rugby in Top 14. His position of choice is back row/loose forward.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ali Brigginshaw</span> Australia international rugby league footballer

Ali Brigginshaw is an Australian rugby league footballer who plays for the Brisbane Broncos in the NRL Women's Premiership and Valleys Diehards in the QRL Women's Premiership.

Annette Brander is an Australian rugby league footballer who plays as a second-rower for the Brisbane Broncos in the NRL Women's Premiership and the Central Queensland Capras in the QRL Women's Premiership.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Patrick Carrigan</span> Australia international rugby league footballer

Patrick Carrigan is an Australian professional rugby league player who plays as a lock for the Brisbane Broncos in the National Rugby League (NRL) and Australia at international level.

Kobe Hetherington is an Australian professional rugby league footballer who plays as a lock for the Brisbane Broncos in the National Rugby League (NRL).

Brendan Piakura is a Cook Islands international rugby league footballer who plays as a second-row forward for the Brisbane Broncos in the National Rugby League (NRL).

References