Ted Spillane

New Zealand rugby league player and coach
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroNew Zealand rugby league player and coach
PlacesNew Zealand
wasAthlete Rugby league player
Work fieldSports
Gender
Male
Birth1 November 1904, Dunedin
Death1 January 1991Leeds (aged 86 years)
The details

Biography

Edmund Timothy "Ted" Spillane (5 January 1905 – 1991) was a New Zealand professional rugby league footballer of the 1920s and '30s, and coach of the 1930s. He played at representative level for Dominion XIII, and Canterbury, and at club level for Marist, and the English clubs Wigan, Keighley, and Bradford Northern (captain), as a Wing, Centre, Stand-off/Five-eighth, or Scrum-half/Halfback, i.e. number 2 or 5, 3 or 4, 6, or 7, and coaching at club level for Bradford Northern (assistant), and Bramley, he died in Leeds.
Spillane played in Canterbury's 26-66 defeat by Auckland in the 1928 New Zealand rugby league season Northern Union Cup in Auckland. Having become a well-known player and five-eighth for the Marist senior team, he signed on with English club Wigan in October 1929.
Spillane played Scrum-half/Halfback in Dominion XIII's 6-3 victory over France at Stadium Municipal, Toulouse on Sunday 21 March 1937.
Spillane married Edith Coyle in Bradford in 1938.
He worked as an assistant coach at Bradford before being appointed Bramley's head coach.

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