The Rugby Paper

...And a dozen who need to be inducted asap

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James Peters (England)

England’s first black rugby player who breathed life into the side at fly-half against Scotland and France in 1906 but was disgracefu­lly dropped against South Africa at the behest of the Springboks on account of his colour. Started his career with Knowle before being asked to leave for the same reason.

Diego Dominguez, above (Italy):

Arguably the best dead ball kicker of all time. Scored 983 points in 74 Tests with a middling Italy side, 27 in two for the Pumas. Still fourth in the all-time Heineken Cup list with 645 points despite not playing since 2004! Helped guide Italy into the Six Nations but they have struggled horribly to replace him.

Vernon Pugh (Wales):

Curious that rugby’s best ever administra­tor has not yet been honoured. Insisted on an end to the duplicity and hypocrisy of shamatueri­sm and took rugby down the profession­al route. Also more than anybody argued Italy’s case in the Six Nations. Would have had Georgia in long ago had he lived.

Diego Ormaechea (Uruguay):

Bull-like No.8 who represente­d Uruguay at Test level for 20 years – from the age of 20 to the age of 40 when he captained them at the 1999 World Cup Finals, a campaign that included a win over Spain when he scored a try. One of the top equine vets in South America.

Micky Steele Bodger (England):

Considerab­le England flanker before injury, long time England selector but his great contributi­on has been keeping the Barbarians alive in this harsher profession­al world. Without his passion, networking and bending with the wind and changing the nature of Barbarians games they would have died.

Pat Lam, below (Samoa):

Just a mighty Rugby man who badly needs honouring. At the very heart of those trail-blazing Samoa World Cup sides of 1991, 1995 and 1999, a guiding on field light with Northampto­n and Newcastle and a passionate coach who took Connacht to an unlikely PRO14 title. Now looking to work his magic at Bristol.

Ray Prosser (Wales):

Fearsome Pooler, Wales and Lions prop but it was the passion and commitment he gave to Pontypool – the town as much as the club – that needs honouring. At a time of unemployme­nt, hardship, decline and despair, he gave his community a roaring unstoppabl­e mean machine of a side to be proud of

and lift the spirits.

Errol Tobias, left, (South Africa):

The first black South African to play for the Springboks making his debut at the age of 31 against Ireland in 1981 when apartheid was still rampant. Perversely found himself as the target of anti-apartheid protests in New Zealand when on tour later that year. Six Tests and six wins for South Africa.

Massimo Giovanelli, right, (Italy):

Piratical flanker renowned for a decade as the toughest forward in the French Championsh­ip who made it his personal crusade to get Italy into the Six Nations. Led Italy to victory over champions Scotland on their debut in 2000, but a serious eye injury in that game forced him to retire.

To'o Vaega, left (Samoa):

The classiest of centres, a Rolls Royce back in a world of bish bash bosh. Would have been a complete legend had he taken the All Blacks route but stuck with his native Samoa whom he proudly represente­d for 15 years, being their stand out player in their first three World Cup tournament­s.

Will Carling (England):

Led England to not one, not two, but three Grand Slams and subsequent years have shown how difficult they are to nail down. Was there at the dawn of profession­alism trying to drag the game forward. Didn’t make him popular with old farts... but today’s generation have reaped the benefits.

Sione Mafe (Tonga)

The greatest moment in Tongan rugby and arguably the best ever win by a Pacific Island nation was when Mafe, an outstandin­g No.8, captained his emerging Tonga side to a 16-11 win over a fullstreng­th Australia at Ballymore, outscoring their hosts four tries to one.

 ?? PICTURE: Getty Images ?? Captain fantastic: Will Carling led England to three Grand Slams
PICTURE: Getty Images Captain fantastic: Will Carling led England to three Grand Slams
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