Conrad Byrne

Conrad "Con" Augustus Byrne[2] was a New Zealand rugby footballer who was part of the professional 1907–1908 New Zealand rugby tour of Great Britain.[1]

Con Byrne
Personal information
Full nameConrad Augustus Byrne
Born17 May 1884
Takaka, Nelson, New Zealand
Died30 April 1931 (aged 47)
Takaka, Nelson, New Zealand
Playing information
Height180 cm (5 ft 11 in)
Weight90.3 kg (14 st 3 lb)
Rugby union
PositionProp, Hooker, Three-quarters, forward
Club
YearsTeamPldTGFGP
1905Takaka10219
1906–07Petone1750015
Total1852124
Representative
YearsTeamPldTGFGP
1902–04Golden Bay30000
1906–07Wellington51003
1907Wellington Province10000
Rugby league
PositionForward
Club
YearsTeamPldTGFGP
1910North Sydney606012
1910–12Huddersfield72125046
1913Takaka10000
1913Petone10000
Total801211058
Representative
YearsTeamPldTGFGP
1907–13New Zealand33411034
Source: [1]

Early years

Originally from Nelson, Byrne was a farmer by trade.[3] He moved to Wellington in 1906 and joined the Petone club where he impressed in the club competition almost immediately. Byrne was subsequently selected for Wellington and made his debut against Canterbury on August 18 where he scored a try and was part of the side that won the Ranfurly Shield. He played on 4 matches that season against Canterbury, Southland, Wanganui, and Auckland.

Wellington rugby team in 1906. Byrne is 4th from the right in the back row.

Rugby league career

Byrne was selected for the professional All Blacks in their 1907–1908 tour of Great Britain and Australia. Like all players on the tour he immediately received a life ban from the New Zealand Rugby Union. On the tour's return leg Byrne played in the first ever trans-Tasman test which was the début match of the Australia national rugby league team. In the second test against Australia Byrne captained the side to a 24–12 victory that clinched the series. Byrne played in three test matches while on the tour.

New Zealand Rugby League Team of 1907–08 to Tour England

In 1908 and 1909 Byrne played for Wellington, including in matches against Taranaki. In 1909 Byrne again toured Australia with the New Zealand side, captaining the side in all three test matches.

In 1910 Byrne joined the North Sydney club in the NSWRL Premiership and later moved to Huddersfield for two seasons, as a forward (prior to the specialist positions of; prop, hooker, second-row, loose forward), during the era of contested scrums.[4]

During the 1910–11 Northern Rugby Football Union season Byrne played as a forward, i.e. number 11, in Huddersfield's 8–2 loss against Wakefield Trinity in the 1910 Yorkshire Cup Final at Headingley Stadium on Saturday 3 December 1910.[5]

By 1913 Byrne had returned to New Zealand and was selected to be part of the tour of Australia, playing in his seventh and final test match. He contracted a bad cold on the tour which limited his playing time to just the 1 match. He had played 1 match for the Takaka club on May 10 against Nelson before his selection for the tour and then 1 match for Petone on May 24 against Athletic prior to the departure of the New Zealand team. Following the tour it appears that he stopped playing, aged 29.

Legacy

Byrne was named in the second-row in the Petone Panthers' Team of the Century in 2012.[6]

References