A Full Back Slower Than Your Average Prop
By (Author) Ian Smith
Birlinn General
Arena Sport
10th October 2019
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
796.333092
Hardback
368
Width 165mm, Height 240mm, Spine 25mm
559g
Listed as one of the five worst international selections ever, and described in a book about Scottish rugby as 'a full back slower than your average prop', Ian Smith cheerfully won nine caps for Scotland in a career that saw him score every point for his team on his debut in an historic victory over South Africa (and in so doing became the first Scottish full back to score a Test try) and defeated a star-studded England team to lift the Calcutta Cup at Murrayfield in the 1970 Five Nations.
One of eight international full backs to have come out of Heriot's FP, Smith also played for a dashing, innovative Edinburgh University side that revolutionised attacking back play. But this book is so much more than a story of a fleeting Test career. It is a window to another time, when a player could appear, as Smith did, for his club's third XV and two weeks later make his international debut for his country. And then, nine Tests later, return to his club where he was only considered good enough to play for the second XV.
'On its surface, A Full Back Slower Than Your Average Prop may seem like a nostalgic trip into the golden days of rugby but upon reflection it provides the perfect microcosm of a shifting society'
* Dentist magazine *'Ian Smiths engaging memoir of his rugby career will delight readers who remember the amateur days with pleasure and nostalgia and astonish many too young to have had the good fortune to have known them'
-- Allan Massie * Scotsman *'Ian Smiths story is special elements of his [rugby] journey would simply not be possible today'
* Sunday Times *'Smith may just have been the best cherubic, well-nourished, wooden-legged (but not really) full-back weve had'
* Scotsman *Ian Smith was born and brought up in Edinburgh where he was educated at Heriots and the University of Edinburgh before joining the army and later setting up his own dental practice. He played eight Tests for Scotland from 1969 to 1970. He lives in Norfolk.