Date of birth | 13 May 1991 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Place of birth | Westport, New Zealand | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.60 m (5 ft 3 in) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 87 kg (192 lb; 13 st 10 lb) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Molly Wright (born 13 May 1991) is a New Zealand-born Scottish rugby union player who plays for Sale Sharks Women in Premiership Women's Rugby.
She has played for the Scottish Women's team since 2020, including in the 2021 Women's Six Nations Championship. [1] Wright qualifies for Scotland through residency, having moved there in 2017. [2]
While attending the University of Otago, New Zealand, she played for the establishment's team from 2011 to 2013. During her time playing there, she transitioned from playing in position 12 to hooker. [3] She then played for Otago Spirit in 2013, before moving to New Zealand's Canterbury Women in 2014. [4]
On moving to the UK in 2017, Wright played for Watsonians as a Hooker / Prop since 2017. [5] She played in the final of the 2018 Sarah Beaney Cup against Hillhead Jordan, which Wright's team lost, although Wright scored one of seven tries for her side during the match. [6] In 2019, the Ladies XV won the Sarah Beaney Cup for the first time in the victory over Hillhead Jordanhill, with a final score of 21-17 and Wright was awarded player of the match in the final. [7]
Wright signed for Sale Sharks Women in late 2021, making her debut against Loughborough Lightning. [8]
Wright was selected for the first time for Scotland Women in January 2020 to play against Spain; a match which the team won 36–12. During the match, she came off the bench to score 7 tries. [9] She earned further caps in the disrupted 2020 Women's Six Nations Championship in matches against Ireland and England under the coaching of Philip Doyle. [10]
She says of her appointment to the Scottish team, "If you had asked me three or four years ago I would have seen myself in the position I am in now as an international player I’d probably have said ‘no’, but it has been an opportunity that I have been very lucky to have and I have to keep putting in the hard work.” [11]
In the 2021 Women's Six Nations Championship, Wright was given a three-match ban after being handed a red card for a high tackle on English player Vickii Cornborough shortly after coming on in the team's opening match against England, which was lost 52–10. [12] The ban was later halved at a disciplinary hearing but she missed the games against Italy and Wales as a result. [13]
Wright first started playing rugby at the age of four in Reefton, New Zealand, playing for her local club there until the age of 14. Her first coach was her father. She continued to play when she moved to Canada at 16. [14]
Wright moved to Scotland in January 2017 and spent a few months in Dumfries before moving to Edinburgh, where she began playing rugby to meet people. [15]
She is also a qualified physiotherapist. During the COVID-19 epidemic, she was deployed to help rehabilitate patients in the NHS who were recovering from the disease. [16]
Watsonian Football Club is a rugby union club based in Edinburgh and part of the Scottish Rugby Union. The club is connected with George Watson's College as a club for former pupils, and changed its policy in the 1980s to be a fully open club, welcoming players of all abilities regardless of whether they attended the school or not. It is one of a small number of rugby union clubs entitled to call itself a 'football club', rather than a 'rugby football club'. Watsonians run a number of sides; the top male side plays in the FOSROC Super Series tournament, the Women's side plays in the Tennents Scottish Women's Premiership Scottish Rugby's Women's League
Hillhead Jordanhill Rugby Football Club (HJRFC) is a Scottish rugby union club based in Glasgow, Scotland. HJRFC has roots going as far back as 1904 with the formation of the Hillhead Sports Club, however, the rugby club as we know it today was founded in 1988 with a Women's section added in 1995, they have played at their current home ground, Hughenden in the West End of Glasgow since then. Despite their name, the club is not located in either Hillhead or Jordanhill, although the pre-merger clubs did have historical links with these areas. Hughenden is located in Hyndland beside Great Western Road.
The Scottish Women's Rugby Union (SWRU) was the national governing body for women's rugby union in Scotland. It was responsible for the governance of women's rugby union within Scotland. Its role was all encompassing. It went from youth recruitment, through administrating all senior based competition, through to the performance and management of the Scotland women's national rugby union team.
The Scottish Womens Premiership is the top national competition for women's rugby union clubs in Scotland. The 2021-2022 season began on 12 September 2021. Ayr RFC decided to step down from the Premiership to National League Division 1, they were replaced by Heriot’s Blues Women.
Hillhead Rugby Football Club is a former rugby union football club based in Glasgow, Scotland. Founded in 1904 as a club for former pupils of Hillhead High School, it lasted until 1988 when it merged with Jordanhill RFC to form Hillhead Jordanhill RFC.
Watsonian Women is a women's rugby union team based in Edinburgh and part of the Scottish Rugby Union. The club is part of Watsonians RFC and plays at the club's home ground of Myreside Road, Edinburgh.
The 2003–04 season is the eighth in the history of the Glasgow Warriors as a professional side. During this season the young professional side competed as Glasgow Rugby.
The Women's domestic rugby union leagues in Scotland are organised in a similar vein to the men's domestic leagues: on a national basis for the top leagues and regional leagues below feeding into those leagues.
The Scottish Rugby Academy provides Scotland's up and coming rugby stars a dedicated focused routeway for development into the professional game. Entry is restricted to Scottish qualified students and both male and female entrants are accepted into 4 regional academies. The 2018–19 season sees the fourth year of the academy, now sponsored by Fosroc.
The Scottish Rugby Academy provides Scotland's up and coming rugby stars a dedicated focused routeway for development into the professional game. Entry is restricted to Scottish qualified students and both male and female entrants are accepted into 4 regional academies. The 2019-20 season sees the fifth year of the academy, now sponsored by Fosroc.
Jade Elizabeth Konkel is a professional rugby union player who plays her club rugby with Harlequins Women in the PWR. Konkel is the Captain of Harlequins Women. She is a Number 8 and has represented the Scottish national team since 2013.
Panashe Muzambe is a Scottish professional rugby union player. She is the first black woman to play rugby for Scotland.
Louise Iona Matheson McMillan is a Scottish rugby player from Glasgow. She plays for Scotland and has frequently represented them in major championships since 2016, including the 2021 Women's Six Nations Championship.
Hannah Smith is a Scottish rugby player from Falkirk. Since 2013, she has played in multiple Women's Six Nations Championships, including the 2021 Women's Six Nations Championship. She was selected for the postponed 2020 Tokyo Olympics Team GB Rugby Sevens.
Abi Evans is a Scottish rugby union player from Livingston who played in the 2021 Women's Six Nations Championship. She has played international rugby for Scotland since 2015.
Megan Gaffney is a former Scottish rugby union player. She is from Edinburgh and has competed internationally for Scotland since 2011. She has twice been selected for the Great Britain 7s training squad for the Rio and Tokyo Olympics. She retired from international rugby at the end of 2022.
Katie Dougan is a Scottish rugby player from Fort William who has played in multiple Women's Six Nations Championships, including the 2021 Women's Six Nations Championship.
Mairi McDonald is a Scottish rugby player from Glasgow who has played for the Scottish Women's team since 2018, including in the 2020 Women's Six Nations and 2021 Women's Six Nations Championship. She played in her first Six Nations Championship at the age of 22 and has already earned six international caps at the age of 23.
Emma Orr is a Scottish rugby player from Biggar who plays for the Scotland women's national rugby union team and the Scotland women's national rugby sevens team. Currently plays club rugby for Heriots Blues Women in the Scottish Premiership.
Sophie Anderson is a Scotland international rugby union player.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)