Keith Winning
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2015}}
{{Use Australian English|date=August 2015}}
{{Infobox rugby biography
| name = Arch Winning
| image =
| birth_name = Keith Charles Winning
| birth_place = Maleny, Queensland, Australia
| birth_date = {{birth date|1928|2|2|df=y}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|2003|6|6|1928|2|2|df=y}}
| height =
| weight =
| school = Brisbane Grammar School
| ru_currentposition =
| ru_currentteam =
| position = Flanker
| amatyears1 =
| amatyears2 =
| amatyears3 =
| amatteam1 = University
| amatteam2 = GPS
| amatteam3 = Randwick
| amatapps1 =
| years1 =
| apps1 =
| points1 =
| superyears1 =
| super1 =
| superapps1 =
| superpoints1 =
| provinceyears1 = 1945–53
| province1 = Queensland
| provinceapps1 =
| provincepoints1 =
| repyears1 = 1947–51
| repteam1 = Australia
| repcaps1 = 1
| reppoints1 = 0
| repsevensyears1 =
| repsevenscomp1 =
| website = [http://www.espnscrum.com/australia/rugby/player/5430.html Winning at Stats Guru]
}}
Keith Charles "Arch" Winning (1928 – 2003) was an Australian national representative rugby union player for Australia. He captained the national side in the sole Test match appearance he made.
Biography
Born in Maleny, Queensland Winning's early rugby was played at Brisbane Grammar and at the University of Queensland. He burst onto the representative scene in 1947 at aged 19 playing for Queensland. Howell asserts that Winning was a surprise selection in the squad for the 1947–48 Australia rugby union tour of Britain, Ireland, France and North AmericaHowell pp133-5 that year. Squad captain Bill McLean and Colin Windon were the senior flankers in the squad with Jim Stenmark and John Fuller also picked. Winning beat out Roger Cornforth for a tour berth but a debilitating groin injury restricted him greatly and he played in only eight matches of the tour, none of them Tests.
In 1951 Winning was selected to captain Australia in a Test match against the All Blacks in Sydney. He backed up a week later in an Australian XV in a match in which his jaw was badly broken. That match marked the end of his national representative career although he appeared again for Queensland through to 1953.
Winning died at a Wallaby reunion lunch in 2003.
References
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Further reading
- Howell, Max (2005) Born to Lead – Wallaby Test Captains, Celebrity Books, Auckland NZ
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{{succession box|title=Australian national rugby union captain|before=Nev Cottrell|after=Colin Windon|years=1951}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Winning, Keith}}
Category:Australia international rugby union players
Category:Australia national rugby union team captains
Category:Australian rugby union players
Category:University of Queensland Rugby Club players
Category:People from Maleny, Queensland
Category:Rugby union players from Queensland
Category:People educated at Brisbane Grammar School