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Rugby player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Bernard "Ben" Egan (8 July 1908 – 24 August 1961) was an Australian international rugby union player.
Full name | John Bernard Egan | ||||||||||||||||
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Date of birth | 8 July 1908 | ||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Warren, NSW, Australia | ||||||||||||||||
Date of death | 24 August 1961 53) | (aged||||||||||||||||
School | The Kings School | ||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||
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Egan grew up in a sporting family from Warren, New South Wales. His brother Thomas was a state representative cricketer and his younger brother Bryan toured with the Wallabies. They all attended The Kings School.[1]
An Eastern Suburbs centre, Egan was the youngest member of the New South Wales squad on the 1927–28 northern hemisphere tour, aged only 18. Wallabies caps were retrospectively awarded for the tour's international matches, on account of the fact that the Waratahs were the country's sole representative team at the time, but Egan only featured in seven uncapped tour fixtures. A leg injury suffered during the tour sidelined him throughout 1928 and he spent the year in the country as a jackaroo. He didn't play for his state again until 1930, in a win over the visiting British Lions.[2][3]
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