South African rugby union player
Rugby player
Ferdie Bergh
Birth name Willem Ferdinand van Rheede van Oudtschoorn Bergh Date of birth (1906-11-02 ) 2 November 1906Place of birth Stellenbosch , Cape Colony Date of death 28 May 1973(1973-05-28) (aged 66) Place of death Belville , South AfricaHeight 1.92 m (6 ft 4 in) Weight 97 kg (214 lb) University Stellenbosch University
Willem Ferdinand van Rheede van Oudtschoorn Bergh (2 November 1906 – 28 May 1973), better known as "Ferdie" Bergh , was a South African rugby union player.[ 1] [ 2]
Biography
He was originally from Stellenbosch , well known as a Springbok rugby breeding ground.[ 2] He studied at Stellenbosch University , after which he went to Potchefstroom . He played his first provincial rugby for the Western Transvaal and after that he played for four more provinces.[ 3]
Ferdie Bergh gained 17 caps for South Africa between 1931 and 1938, scoring seven tries in that period.[ 1] [ 2]
Willem Ferdinand van Rheede van Oudtschoorn Bergh may hold the record for having the longest name in international rugby,[ 1] comprising 43 letters in total, including seven words and five names ("Van Rheede" and "Van Oudtschoorn" counting as single names.
He is most famous for scoring the winning try in the only test rugby series ever won by South Africa in New Zealand.
Test history
No.
Opponents
Results (SA 1st)
Position
Tries
Dates
Venue
1.
Wales
8–3
Lock
1
5 Dec 1931
St. Helen's , Swansea
2.
Ireland
8–3
Lock
19 Dec 1931
Lansdowne Road , Dublin
3.
England
7–0
Lock
1
2 Jan 1932
Twickenham , London
4.
Scotland
6–3
Lock
16 Jan 1932
Murrayfield , Edinburgh
5.
Australia
17–3
Number 8
2
8 Jul 1933
Newlands , Cape Town
6.
Australia
6–21
Number 8
22 Jul 1933
Kingsmead , Durban
7.
Australia
12–3
Lock
12 Aug 1933
Ellis Park , Johannesburg
8.
Australia
11–0
Lock
26 Aug 1933
Crusaders Ground , Port Elizabeth
9.
Australia
4–15
Lock
2 Sep 1933
Springbok Park , Bloemfontein
10.
Australia
9–5
Lock
1
26 Jun 1937
Sydney Cricket Ground , Sydney
11.
Australia
26–17
Lock
1
17 Jul 1937
Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney
12.
New Zealand
7–13
Lock
14 Aug 1937
Athletic Park , Wellington
13.
New Zealand
13–6
Number 8
4 Sep 1937
Lancaster Park , Christchurch
14.
New Zealand
17–6
Number 8
1
25 Sep 1937
Eden Park , Auckland
15.
British Isles
26–12
Lock
6 Aug 1938
Ellis Park, Johannesburg
16.
British Isles
19–3
Lock
3 Sep 1938
Crusaders Ground, Port Elizabeth
17.
British Isles
16–21
Lock
10 Sep 1938
Newlands, Cape Town
See also
Bibliography
Cotton, Fran (Ed.) (1984) The Book of Rugby Disasters & Bizarre Records . (Compiled by Chris Rhys. London. Century Publishing. ISBN 0-7126-0911-3 )
References
^ a b c Cotton, p74
^ a b c Scrum.com player profile, retrieved 20 February 2010
^ Craven, Daniel Hartman (1980). Die groot rugbygesin van die Maties . Kaapstad: G. & S. pp. 152– 153. ISBN 0620048794 . OCLC 86067195 .
External links