Gordon Hamilton (rugby union)

Irish rugby union player
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroIrish rugby union player
PlacesUnited Kingdom
isAthlete Rugby union player
Work fieldSports
Gender
Male
Birth13 May 1964, Belfast
Age60 years
The details

Biography

Gordon Fredric Hamilton (born 13 May 1964 in Belfast) is a retired Irish rugby union player. He played as an open-side wing-forward.
Hamilton played for N.I.F.C., Ballymena and Ulster.
He had 10 caps for Ireland, from 1991 to 1992, scoring a single try. The most famous moment came of his career came at the 1991 Rugby World Cup, when he scored a try in the last couple of minutes of Ireland's quarter-final against Australia to put Ireland ahead. However, Michael Lynagh scored at the other end to put Ireland out of the tournament.
Hamilton owned and ran a shipping and stevedoring business in Ireland with an annual turnover in excess of £40 m and a workforce of 170 people before selling his group of companies to J&J Denholm Group of Scotland in 2012.
Hamilton currently works on a voluntary basis for the Irish Rugby Football Union and Campbell College Belfast.

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