Jeremy Guscott
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox rugby biography
Jeremy Clayton Guscott (born 7 July 1965) is an English former rugby union player who played for Bath, England and the British Lions.<ref name="Bath">Template:Cite web</ref> Usually an outside centre, he also appeared for England on the wing.
On 17 November 2016, Guscott was inducted to the World Rugby Hall of Fame during the opening ceremonies for the Hall's first physical location in Rugby, Warwickshire.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Early life
Guscott was born in Bath, Somerset, one of the two sons of Jamaican hospital porter Henry Guscott and his English wife Sue.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He was educated at Ralph Allen School. He played for Bath, his home city, throughout his career, most of which was during the amateur era. Guscott was originally a bricklayer, briefly drove buses for Badgerline in Bath, and worked for British Gas in a public-relations role before the game turned professional.<ref name="Bath" />
Rugby career
At club level Guscott played for Bath from 1984 to 2000, scoring 710 points in 266 appearances. He also started for Bath in the victorious 1998 Heineken Cup Final as they defeated Brive.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
During the English off season in 1987, Guscott travelled to Australia and played for Wollongong Waratahs RFC in the Illawarra District Rugby Union competition.
Marking his England debut with a hat-trick of tries in the 58–3 win over Romania in Bucharest in May 1989, Guscott received a call-up for the in-progress British Lions tour of Australia, making a series-winning contribution in the second and third Tests. He also travelled to New Zealand in 1993 with the Lions, playing in all three Tests; though in this tour the Lions lost 2 matches to 1.
When Will Carling stepped down as England captain in 1996, Phil de Glanville was appointed his successor. As de Glanville was thereby guaranteed a place in the team, Carling was moved from inside centre to outside centre and Guscott was relegated to the bench. Such was Guscott's talent and form at the time that even Carling noted in his autobiography that it was an extraordinary decision for then England Coach, Jack Rowell, to make. In the 1997 Five Nations, Guscott came off the bench to play on the wing in wins against Ireland and Wales.
Guscott toured with the British Lions in South Africa in 1997, where he scored the winning drop goal during the decisive second test.<ref name="Lions">Template:Cite web</ref> He started the third and final test in this series but broke his arm and could not finish the game.
His last game for England was against Tonga in a 1999 Rugby World Cup pool match at Twickenham, scoring a length-of-field try and receiving a standing ovation upon the game's conclusion. An increasingly debilitating thigh injury forced Guscott to call time on his career and take an early exit from 1999 World Cup competition. England lost to South Africa, without him, in the quarter final. In all, Guscott represented England in three World Cups – 1991, 1995, and 1999 – helping England to an appearance in the 1991 final. He missed most of the 1994 international season through injury.
Guscott now works for the BBC as a pundit on their rugby programmes.
Personal life
Guscott is married to Saz, who is a psychologist. He has 3 daughters, Imogen, Holly and Saskia, from his previous marriage.
See also
Bibliography
- At the centre – autobiography Template:ISBN
References
External links
- [https://www.imdb.com/{{#if: 1011242
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Template:British and Irish Lions 1989 Template:British and Irish Lions 1989 France Template:Four Home Unions 1990 Template:England Squad 1991 World Cup Template:British and Irish Lions 1993 Template:England Squad 1995 World Cup Template:British and Irish Lions 1997 Template:England Squad 1999 World Cup
- 1965 births
- Living people
- People educated at Ralph Allen School, Bath
- Barbarian F.C. players
- Bath Rugby players
- Black British sportsmen
- British & Irish Lions rugby union players from England
- England international rugby union players
- English rugby union players
- English people of Jamaican descent
- Sportspeople of Jamaican descent
- Rugby union centres
- Rugby union players from Bath, Somerset
- World Rugby Hall of Fame inductees
- 1991 Rugby World Cup players
- 1995 Rugby World Cup players
- 1999 Rugby World Cup players
- 20th-century English sportsmen