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Guy Easterby
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Key Information
Guy Easterby (born 21 March 1971) is a former rugby union player for Ireland. He is currently head of rugby operations of Leinster.
His father is English and his mother is Irish.[1] He is the brother of Simon Easterby, also an Ireland international and the most capped back-rower to come from Yorkshire.
Easterby made his senior Ireland debut against the United States on 10 June 2000 and marked the occasion by scoring two tries in a record 83–3 victory.[2] Easterby made his test debut in the same year as Peter Stringer but always trailed the Munster scrum-half in the Irish pecking order. 21 out of his 27 appearances before the 2005 Six Nations Championship were made as a substitute. He enjoyed a stint with London Scottish after enjoying his most successful part of his career with Rotherham in the English Premiership and with Leinster in Ireland. He retired after the 2006–07 season, though he made a comeback against Edinburgh Rugby on 15 December 2007[3]
References
[edit]- ^ Adoption crisis, Irish Times, 16 March 2000
- ^ "www.munsterfans.com". Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 21 December 2008.
- ^ "Easterby starts for Leinster". Retrieved 15 December 2007.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
Guy Easterby
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Family background
Guy Easterby was born on 21 March 1971 in Tadcaster, North Yorkshire, England.[6] His father, Henry Easterby, was English, while his mother, Katherine, was Irish and an international hockey player from Blackrock, Dublin.[7] This mixed heritage granted Easterby Irish citizenship from birth, enabling his eligibility to represent Ireland in rugby union despite his English birthplace.[5] Easterby's younger brother, Simon Easterby, also pursued a professional rugby career as a back-rower, earning 65 caps for Ireland between 2000 and 2008.[5] The brothers shared strong Yorkshire roots, with their family's sporting involvement prominent in the region. The Easterby family has broader ties to British sports, particularly horse racing; notable relatives include Mick and Peter Easterby, prominent trainers who were uncles to their father, underscoring a legacy of athletic and equestrian achievement that complemented Guy's dual heritage.Education and early rugby
Easterby attended Ampleforth College, a prestigious Catholic boarding school in North Yorkshire, where he honed his rugby abilities while also pursuing interests in cricket.[8][7] The school's strong sporting tradition provided a foundational environment for his athletic development during the early 1990s.[9] In his youth, Easterby represented Yorkshire and the North of England at the Under-21 level, gaining competitive experience against regional opponents.[8] These appearances showcased his emerging talent as a scrum-half in the amateur era.[10] Easterby's entry into club rugby came through Harrogate RFC in amateur Yorkshire leagues, where he played from 1989 to 1995.[11] This period aligned with rugby union's pivotal shift to professionalism in 1995, when the International Rugby Board declared the game open, allowing player contracts and marking the end of strict amateurism.[12]Club career
English clubs
Easterby began his professional rugby career in 1996 by signing with the Rotherham Titans, entering the Rugby Football Union leagues in the immediate post-professionalization era following the 1995 shift to open professionalism in the sport. As a scrum-half measuring 1.83 m in height and weighing 94 kg, he focused on building his game through consistent play in domestic competitions during his three seasons with the club from 1996 to 1999.[8][6] Seeking advancement to higher levels of competition, Easterby transferred to London Scottish in 1999, where he gained exposure in more competitive divisions of English rugby. Notable among his contributions that season was a try-scoring performance in London Scottish's 27-17 win over Newcastle, highlighting his growing influence as a playmaker at the base of the scrum.[11] Across his stints with Rotherham Titans and London Scottish, Easterby accumulated approximately 50-60 appearances centered on league fixtures, honing his scrum-half skills without achieving major titles, prior to his departure from English rugby.[11]Welsh and initial Irish clubs
Easterby transitioned to Welsh rugby in 1999, joining Ebbw Vale RFC where he played as scrum-half during the 1999/2000 season. He featured in key Welsh/Scottish League matches, including a 29-17 victory over Newport on 12 February 2000 and a 47-26 win against Pontypool on 8 April 2000, as well as the European Shield quarter-final loss to London Irish (20-21). His contributions helped Ebbw Vale secure doubles over opponents like Glasgow in the Welsh/Scottish League and Connacht in the European Shield pool stage, advancing to the quarter-finals.[13] In 2000, Easterby moved to Llanelli, linking up with his brother Simon at the club ahead of the 2000/2001 season. He made multiple appearances for the Llanelli Scarlets in the Heineken Cup across the 2000–2003 period, including five games in 2000/2001 (one try scored), five in 2001/2002, and three in 2002/2003. Notably, in April 2003, he started in the Scarlets' Principality Cup semi-final win over Cardiff, spinning the ball out to set up a try in a 44-10 victory.[14][3] Easterby's initial foray into Irish provincial rugby began in 2004 with Leinster, where he served as a tactical scrum-half during the 2004–2007 period. He contributed to Celtic League (later Magners League) campaigns, making 18 appearances in 2005/2006 (six tries) and 13 in 2006/2007, while also featuring in 14 Heineken Cup matches over the spell, including six starts in 2005/2006. Known for his game management, Easterby provided steady service from the base of the scrum in European competitions, helping Leinster build competitiveness in the Heineken Cup pools.[3] During this time, Easterby balanced provincial duties with club rugby at Blackrock College RFC from 2004 to 2007, playing in the All-Ireland League while supporting his Leinster commitments. This period marked his integration into Irish rugby structures, blending professional provincial play with domestic club involvement before a brief retirement at the end of the 2006/2007 season.[6]Leinster spells and retirement
After initially announcing his retirement from professional rugby at the end of the 2006–07 season, Guy Easterby made a brief return to Leinster in December 2007 on a short-term contract until the conclusion of the Heineken Cup pool stages, prompted by an injury to scrum-half Chris Whitaker that left the squad short on experienced cover at the position. During the 2007/08 season, prior to this return, he had been playing for English club Otley in National League 2, featuring in all 12 league fixtures.[15][6][16] He debuted in this second spell against Edinburgh on 15 December 2007, starting at scrum-half in a 29–10 pool defeat at Murrayfield, where he burrowed close to the line for a potential try that was ultimately held up on video review. Over the course of this limited engagement through early 2008, Easterby featured in five matches for Leinster, comprising three Heineken Cup outings—against Edinburgh (away), Leicester Tigers (home), and Toulouse (away)—and two Magners League games, providing tactical nous and leadership in a competitive backline.[3] Easterby's contributions during this period helped stabilize Leinster's scrum-half options amid a transitional phase, supporting the province's progression to the Heineken Cup quarter-finals for the third consecutive season, where they fell 18–16 to Toulouse despite his earlier experience against the French side in the pools. Across both spells with Leinster (2004–07 and 2007–08), he amassed 64 appearances and 25 points, primarily from tries, without securing any major silverware, though his reliability aided consistent European campaigns that reached at least the quarter-final stage annually during his tenure.[6][3] At the age of 37, Easterby fully retired from playing at the conclusion of the 2007–08 season, citing the physical demands of the professional game and increasing competition from emerging talents such as Eoin Reddan, who had joined Leinster that year and established himself as the primary scrum-half. This marked the end of a club career that emphasized experience over accolades, paving the way for his transition into off-field roles within Irish rugby.[6]International career
Selection and debut
Born in Harrogate, England, Guy Easterby qualified to represent Ireland through his mother, Katherine, an Irish hockey international from Blackrock, Dublin, which aligned with the Irish Rugby Football Union's eligibility criteria allowing selection based on parental birthright following the advent of professionalism in 1995.[17] Easterby's initial selection came under head coach Warren Gatland, who favored the scrum-half's physical presence and strong form at Llanelli over more established options like Peter Stringer for the 2000 summer tour of the Americas.[18] He earned his international debut on 10 June 2000 against the United States in Nashua, New Hampshire, starting in the 83-3 victory and scoring two tries alongside debutant Geordan Murphy.[19][2] Easterby secured his second cap three days later in a 27-27 draw with Canada in Markham, Ontario, rounding out the tour.[2] In early 2001, he featured in a midweek preparatory match against Romania, contributing to a 37-3 win in Bucharest, before appearing in the 2001 Six Nations Championship against Scotland and Wales.[2]Key appearances and statistics
Guy Easterby won 28 caps for Ireland between 2000 and 2005, scoring 30 points through six tries with no successful conversions, penalties, or drop goals.[6] He featured in the 2003 Rugby World Cup, appearing in all three group stage matches against Romania, Namibia, and Argentina before starting in the quarter-final defeat to France (21-43).[2] Easterby also contributed to several Six Nations campaigns, including the 2001, 2003, and 2004 editions. In 2004, Ireland secured the Triple Crown with victories over Scotland, Wales, and England.[20] Among his notable appearances, Easterby came off the bench in Ireland's historic 19-13 win over England at Twickenham in the 2004 Six Nations, helping secure the Triple Crown—the team's first since 1985.[21] He marked his debut against the United States in June 2000 with two tries in an 83-3 victory.[19] Despite these highlights, Ireland achieved no major tournament successes during his tenure, with the team exiting the 2003 World Cup in the quarter-finals. Easterby's international career concluded in February 2005 amid stiff competition at scrum-half, particularly from Peter Stringer, who had emerged as the preferred starter; his final appearance was as a replacement in a 40-13 Six Nations win over Scotland at Murrayfield.[22]| Year | Caps | Tries | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | 2 | 2 | 10 |
| 2001 | 4 | 1 | 5 |
| 2002 | 6 | 1 | 5 |
| 2003 | 8 | 2 | 10 |
| 2004 | 7 | 0 | 0 |
| 2005 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 28 | 6 | 30 |
