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John Barnett (rugby)

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John Barnett
1908 Wallaby
Rugby union career
Position(s) Lock
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1903-1909
1906
Newtown RUFC
Lithgow RU
()
Correct as of 31 December, 2007
Correct as of 31 December, 2007
International career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1907-09 Australia 5 (0)
Correct as of 31 December, 2007

Olympic medal record
Men's Rugby union
Gold medal – first place 1908 London Team competition

John Thomas "Jumbo" Barnett (19 January 1886[1] – 1918) was a pioneer Australian rugby union and rugby league player and won an Olympic gold medal winning in rugby at the 1908 Summer Olympics. He was one of Australia's early dual-code rugby internationals.

Rugby union career

A hooker/prop with the Newtown Rugby Union club in Sydney, Barnett was selected on the first Wallaby 1908-09 Australia rugby union tour of the British Isles and France, the squad captained by Herbert Moran. That side competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics in London and Barnett was a member of the Australia national rugby union team captained by Chris McKivat which won the gold medal.

1908 Olympic Gold Final Wallabies v Cornwall.

On his return to Australia he joined the fledgling code of rugby league along with fourteen of his Olympic teammates.

Rugby league career

Barnett and five other gold medal winning Wallabies joined the Newtown club in Sydney in 1910 where he played the next six seasons.He was a member of the premiership winning Newtown side Nseason 1910. He was selected in both Ashes Tests against Great Britain in 1910 when Australia hosted the tourists.

Barnett made his international league debut in the First Test in Sydney on 18 June 1910. Four of his former Wallaby team mates also debuted that day Bob Craig, Jack Hickey, Charles Russell and Chris McKivat - making them collectively Australia's 11th to 15th dual code internationals. This mirrored a similar occurrence two years earlier when five former Wallabies in Micky Dore, Dally Messenger, Denis Lutge, Doug McLean snr and Johnny Rosewell all debuted for the Kangaroos in the same match - the first ever Test against New Zealand.

Barnett died in 1918 aged 31 from the effects of meningitis after a three-week battle with pneumonia.[2]

Sources

  • Whiticker, Alan (2004) Captaining the Kangaroos, New Holland, Sydney
  • Whiticker, Alan & Hudson, Glen (2006) The Encyclopedia of Rugby League Players, Gavin Allen Publishing, Sydney

Footnotes

  1. ^ www.scrum.com source reports his date of birth as 19 Jan 1881
  2. ^ Whiticker p22