Jim Telfer

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Jim Telfer bigraphy, stories - Scottish rugby union player

Jim Telfer : biography

17 March 1940 –

James "Jim" Telfer (born 17 March 1940) is a Scottish rugby union coach and a former rugby player. A former headmaster at Hawick High School and chemistry teacher, he has won fame as a Scottish forwards coach who gave punishing training sessions to his players. With Sir Ian McGeechan he has had success with both the Scotland national rugby union team and the British and Irish Lions.

Coaching

He was head coach to the British and Irish Lions on their tour of New Zealand in 1983. He was assistant coach, with particular responsibility for the forwards, on the British and Irish Lions tour of South Africa in 1997.

Telfer coached Scotland to the Grand Slam in 1984 and, as assistant to Sir Ian McGeechan, to his second Grand Slam in 1990. In his second term as head coach from 1998–1999, Scotland won the final Five Nations Championship.

He currently manages and coaches the Melrose RFC Under-18 team – .

Playing career

Telfer gained twenty one caps, and may have gained more, but for injury; as Allan Massie writes of him:

"Telfer is a man of innate authority. (There’s a wealth of quiet reserve and self-knowledge, touched by that form of self-mockery which appears as under-statement, in the way he will describe himself as being a ‘dominant personality’)"Massie, p189

Telfer played back row for Scotland and for the Lions in 1966 and 1968. He was impressed and heavily influenced by New Zealand rugby. Unfortunately, after a cartilage operation he slowed up.

George Crerar said of Telfer "The great thing about Jim Telfer is that he makes sure that if he isn’t going to win the ball the other side won’t get it either."Massie, p190

Sources

  • Bath, Richard (ed.) The Complete Book of Rugby (Seven Oaks Ltd, 1997 ISBN 1-86200-013-1)
  • Massie, Allan A Portrait of Scottish Rugby (Polygon, Edinburgh; ISBN 0-904919-84-6)
  • Telfer, Jim Jim Telfer: Looking Back… For Once (Mainstream Publishing, 2005, ISBN 1-84596-062-9)