DANIEL CLIVE THOMAS ROWLANDS O.B.E.
a.k.a
Clive 'Top Cat' Rowlands
RESOURCES - TOP CAT COLLECTION
Clive Rowlands - An appreciation by Alan Evans
The date was 7 August 1956 and the opposition a formidable Eastern Province XV in Port Elizabeth. The man himself takes up the story : “I was not expecting to play in the game at all. Howard Merrick had been named at scrum-half in the team and as there were no replacements in those days I was expecting to spend the afternoon watching the game from the grandstand. But in the coach on the way to the ground our open-side wing-forward Leighton Davies was suffering from flu symptoms. So it was decided that as a precaution Leighton shouldn't play and that I was the new (in every sense of the word) wing-forward. I always knew my first game for Wales would be something memorable but I hadn't expected this!” With his eyes firmly set on first-class rugby Rowlands had already dipped his toes into the water with Llanelli. Now based in Monmouthshire, the logical move was to join Pontypool in September 1960. It was an astute decision because he formed a promising half-back partnership with Benny Jones, widely regarded as the best uncapped fly-half in Welsh rugby. But again fate played a hand when a serious knee injury curtailed his season. Within two years, however, the career of Clive Rowlands was to begin an entirely new chapter. Pontypool appointed him club captain in 1962/63 in what was to be a landmark season for him. Drafted into the Probables XV at half-time in the First Welsh Trial in November, he then graduated to captain in the Final Trial in the New Year and the fairy tale was completed when he made his Wales debut as captain against England at Cardiff Arms Park on 19 January 1963. The record books might suggest that it was not an auspicious International Championship campaign for Wales. The worst possible start was the home defeat against England – ironically what turned out to be the last in Cardiff for 28 years during which time Rowlands the Coach was to mastermind several coruscating victories against the Old Enemy. Yet there were extenuating circumstances for that debut defeat on a frozen pitch. The opening exchanges featured a strong start by the inexperienced (there were six new caps) Wales XV. Rowlands' tactical kicking, long and short, twisted and turned the England defence on the treacherous surface only for both Welsh wings, Robert Morgan and Dewi Bebb, to lose their footing with the line at their mercy. Wales also finished strongly with a try but by then the damage was done and England has set the foundations for a 13-6 victory and what for them would be a title-winning season. Chastened by defeat Rowlands and his team headed north a fortnight later for a match that would achieve notoriety in the annals of the game. Wales' 6-nil victory against Scotland at Murrayfield included a drop-goal – from a lineout, no less – by their scrum-half but what it is remembered for is the extraordinary statistic of 111 lineouts (one wag commented that they stopped counting after 100 so it could have been many more!). It is generally assumed that Rowlands' tactics – he only gave five passes to his fly-half, Dai Watkins in the entire match – contributed to a change in the Laws of the game so that there was no kicking direct to touch outside the '25'. But that change didn't come for another four years and rather overlooks the fact that Rowlands' great kicking skill was to keep the ball marginally in play so that the opposing full-back would return it to touch for a Wales' throw-in. Whatever, for years since the captain has dined out on tales, apocryphal or otherwise, on 'the match of 111 lineouts'. One of the Wales' centres that day was Llanelli's Brian Davies. It was his second and final cap and he still maintains he never received a pass – and was dropped. A good story but probably of the fisherman's variety – the Playfair Annual reports that Davies received a try-scoring pass from number 8 Alun Pask but dropped the ball over the goal-line. Pride of place, though, goes to the man himself when years later he was entering Murrayfield as a radio commentator and the turnstile operator asked him for a pass. “Pass? I never pass at Murrayfield...” If the rest of the 1963 campaign petered out with further defeats against Ireland and France, and the calendar year itself ended with another Arms Park defeat against New Zealand, the dawn of 1964 was to see the first green shoots of recovery to international respectability. Two wins book ended by an opening drawn match at Twickenham and another against France at Cardiff secured Wales a shared Championship with Scotland. Reality then set in when Wales' first senior overseas tour took them to South Africa in May. Rowlands' satisfaction at being the only Welsh player to tour there as a Young Dragon in 1956 and as a fully-fledged international eight years later was tempered by the heavy 3-24 defeat to the Springboks. It proved to Wales and for their captain to be the darkest hour before the dawn. What might be called the Rowlands Project, at least as a player, reached fruition in the early months of 1965. Another win at Murrayfield, sandwiched between comfortable victories over England and Ireland at the Arms Park, secured a first Triple Crown for 13 years and saw Clive Rowlands carried off shoulder-high by the exultant fans. Not even a final defeat in Paris could deprive Wales of the Championship title. And then his international playing career when he captained his country in all 14 games ended almost as unexpectedly as it had started. In 1966 the number 9 jersey for Wales – and later that summer the Lions – was worn by Abertillery's Allan Lewis. Wales had forsaken their former captain's kicking and tactical skills and unique leadership style for a swifter passing game. Rowlands, to his credit, reportedly sat out the campaign “cheerfully” as a travelling reserve.
Meanwhile, he continued to give great service at club level in the Principality. In September 1966, having replaced his teaching career in Monmouthshire with employment in the oil industry, he joined Swansea and within weeks was coaxing and cajoling the All Whites' pack to a famous victory over the touring Wallabies. A year later, by then captain of Swansea, he also led West Wales to a pulsating performance on the same St Helen's Ground, taking the legendary All Blacks' side of Brian Lochore down to the wire before losing 14-21. The great Kiwi journalist Terry McLean wrote: “The West Welshmen were charging about like volunteer firemen and Rowlands, their half-back and captain, was striking all sorts of Napoleonic poses with signals, feints, and expressions which were probably a dead ringer for what Bonaparte said to his Old Guard.” The parallels with his playing career were soon apparent. Just as his international debut five years previously had been blotted by defeat against England, so now his first foray as national coach stuttered disappointingly. Albeit with an under strength team shorn of several players who had toured with the Lions that summer, Wales could only draw one and lose the other test to the Pumas in Buenos Aires. No caps had been awarded and by the time the International Championship (gradually metamorphosing into the 'Five Nations' largely at the behest of the media) kicked off in February 1969 the new coach had at his disposal the young guns that would mature into the superstars to light up the glory days of the 1970s. With names like TGR Davies, John and Edwards, the two Brians Thomas and Price, to call on, plus new caps such as JPR Williams and Mervyn Davies, Wales defeated Scotland by three tries to nil at Murrayfield, stopped a Triple Crown seeking Ireland in their tracks in Cardiff, drew a thrilling game with France in Paris, and, finally, inflicted carnage on England in a five-try extravaganza to secure another Triple Crown and Championship. It had been, by any standards, an astonishing start to a coaching career. In that summer of '69 Wales went on tour Down Under, defeated Fiji and Australia, and not for the last time were themselves put to the sword by New Zealand. More lessons were learned and brought unprecedented rewards in the next five seasons. Clive Rowlands stayed as coach until the spring of 1974, by which time Wales had remained undefeated in home internationals in Cardiff, gained the first Grand Slam in 19 years, and won or shared four Championship titles. The period was dubbed one of 'Crowning Glory' and would continue for the rest of the decade. The former coach was still only 36 and alongside a burgeoning business career with his own sports shops, Clive Rowlands would enter a new phase as a respected administrator in the game. He continued as a Welsh selector and in 1978 managed another overseas tour by Wales to Australia. Ten years later he continued to be in demand even further afield. Having been in charge of a 'British Lions XV' that celebrated the centenary of the International Rugby Board with a one-off match against the Rest of the World in 1986, he received the ultimate accolade of manager of the British and Irish Lions' squad that toured Australia in 1989. Some eyebrows may have been raised as this most Welsh of Welshmen married the diverse identities of the four home unions but his legendary inter-personal and man-management qualities triumphed. The Lions won the test series 2-1. Their coach Ian McGeechan later wrote : “Clive always talked to the players about the Lions badge getting bigger as the tour went on. After every success, the badge was getting bigger and his pride in what we were doing was obvious. I remember looking at him and hugging him as the final whistle was blown in the third test; he had tears running down his cheeks, it mattered and I was looking at a very proud man.”
In Wales, of course, Rowlands' success surprised no one. He was manager for the first Rugby World Cup in 1987, when Wales finished third, and the less memorable tour to Australia in 1991 and was national president in 1989/90. By then he had achieved every honour in the game – international player and captain, coach, manager, selector and president. What followed, almost logically, was his recruitment as a summariser for Welsh language rugby commentaries.
Half a century on the English are still paying for that win at the Arms Park when DCT Rowlands was first capped. |
TOP CAT COLLECTION
INTERNATIONAL JERSEYS
AUSTRALIA 1959 - DES CONNOR JERSEY - A No 7 Australia international jersey from the collection of Clive Rowlands, Wales 1963-65. The jersey was exchanged with Des Connor in 1969 who opposed him as coach in the Australia v Wales test match at the Sydney Cricket Ground. Desmond Michael 'Des' Connor played 12 tests for Australia 1957-59 before moving to New Zealand in 1960. The quality of his play was such that he was soon selected to represent his new country. He had the distinction of playing a further 12 tests for the All Blacks between 1961 and 1964. CLICK HERE TO VIEW THIS JERSEY IN MORE DETAIL THIS JERSEY IS PART OF OUR AUSTRALIAN INTERNATIONAL JERSEY COLLECTION - MORE INFO PLEASE CLICK HERE |
WRM-0974- mmjyin.as 1959vebr- connor7- WRM-esss |
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AUSTRALIA 1966-67 INTERNATIONAL JERSEY - A No 3 international jersey from the collection of Clive Rowlands, Wales 1963-65. Clive played in Swansea's 9-8 victory over the touring Australians and has indicated that the jersey was given to him by Ken Catchpole at that game. The Aussie tour party played each match with tour numbers. Unfortunately the number doesn't match with Ken's, his was number 13 while number 3 belonged to Stewart Boyce. So we must assume therefore, that this jersey belonged to Boyce. CLICK HERE TO VIEW THIS JERSEY IN MORE DETAIL THIS JERSEY IS PART OF OUR AUSTRALIAN INTERNATIONAL JERSEY COLLECTION - MORE INFO PLEASE CLICK HERE |
WRM-1003- mmjyin.as 1966- WRM-uyss |
KOREA No 5 JERSEY - A No 5 Korea international jersey from the collection of Clive Rowlands, Wales 1963-65. Date unknown |
Ref: WRM-0989- mmjyin. kodauk9- rowlands-cl- WRM-gss |
NEW ZEALAND ALL BLACKS 1963 v WALES JERSEY - KEVIN BRISCOE - A No 7 New Zealand All Blacks international jersey from the collection of Clive Rowlands, Wales 1963-65. This jersey was worn by All Black scrum half Kevin Briscoe in the first New Zealand victory over Wales in Cardiff. Previously Wales had beaten the All Blacks on three occasions at the Arms Park (1905, 1935 & 1953) with the All Blacks winning in Swansea in 1924. This victory brought New Zealand within one victory of drawing level with Wales in this famous historical series. New Zealand won the match 6-0 with a Don Clarke penalty and a Bruce Watt drop goal. Clive Rowlands was carried off towards the end of the match with a jarred spinal disc which caused momentary paralysis |
WRM-0973- mmjyin.nz 1963vewa- briscoe7- WRM-bsss |
UNITED STATES - USA No 9 JERSEY - A No 9 USA international jersey from the collection of Clive Rowlands, Wales 1963-65. Date unknown. |
WRM-0990- mmjyin. usdauk- rowlands9 |
OTHER REPRESENTATIVE JERSEYS
FIVE NATIONS IRFB CENTENARY 1986 JERSEY - An un-numbered player issue IRFB centenary 1986 jersey from the collection of Clive Rowlands, Wales 1963-65. The Five Nations played the Overseas Unions at Twickenham to celebrate the centenary. Clive was manager of the Five Nations team. CLICK HERE TO VIEW THIS JERSEY IN MORE DETAIL
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Ref: WRM-0987- mmjyspbg5 -nations1986 -pliu- rowlands-cl- WRM-rys |
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WORLD XV v BRITISH LIONS 1986 JERSEY - A No 25 World XV jersey from the collection of Clive Rowlands, Wales 1963-65. The jersey was exchanged with Bob Templeton of Australia who managed the World XV that faced the British Lions at Cardiff Arms Park in 1986. Clive was manager of the British Lions team and went on to manage them on the successful tour to Australia in 1989. |
Ref: WRM-0979- mmjyspbg. wo1986vebr25 -rowlands- WRM-uys |
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WORLD XV 1988 JERSEY - An un-numbered player issue World XV jersey from the collection of Clive Rowlands, Wales 1963-65. Clive was manager of the World XV team that faced Australia in Sydney. |
Ref: WRM-0988- mmjyspbg. wo-xv-veas 1998- rowlands-cl -WRM-rly |
MISCELLANEOUS MEMORABILIA FROM THE CLIVE ROWLANDS COLLECTION
CLIVE ROWLANDS COLLECTION FOR SALE at www.rugbyrelics.com
If still available these items can be on either of the following pages:
If still available the above items will be found on either of the following pages:
Dai's Diary - May 2012 - When we look back in 50 years time, we may see that we are in the middle of the 3rd Golden Era, but then again maybe not. Prior to this current successful period of the Welsh national team Welsh rugby has had two Golden Era's, the early 1900s and the 1970s. The 1970s can be split into two distinct halves 1969-1974 and 1975-1979. The reason for this is a change of the national coach in 1974 when John Dawes took over from Clive Rowlands. Of the two, Dawes was by far the more successful player and coach but in my opinion this was a natural development in sport. The Dawes era was a summit of a mountain and it is unlikely the London Welshman would have scaled the dizzy heights that he did without the groundwork and the tutelage of Clive Rowlands. Top Cat, I believe was the catalyst that turned the Welsh national team from a mediocre outfit into a the world rugby superpower of the late 1970s. During his playing career Rowlands built the base of the mountain, learning his trade, when he took over as coach he helped build and Wales as a rugby nation climbed the mountain higher, he was Sherpa Tenzing to Dawes' Hillary, together they scaled rugby's Everest. |
RESOURCES
Playing - An interview with Welsh journalist JBG
Thomas about the tactics used in the Triple Crown season of 1965 and the way
forward for Welsh rugby. (source Rugby World - June 1965)
Coaching - A profile of Handel Rogers (Manager) & Clive Rowlands (Coach)
prior to the Wales tour of New Zealand, Australia & Fiji in 1969. Written by
JBG Thomas
"Clive" - Paperback autobiography of Clive Rowlands
- text in Welsh "Clive Rowlands - Top Cat" - Paperback autobiography
of Clive Rowlands with John Evans - text in English Published to co-incide with the WRU Centenary this
is a marvellous book with biographies of 100 great Welsh
internationals, from Frank Hancock in 1884 to Graham Price in 1975.
Includes a chapter on Clive Rowlands.
*****
Acknowledgements Dai Richards (World Rugby Museum), Alan Evans, |
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