Name Geordan Murphy Partner Lucie Silvas Weight 87 kg | Height 1.85 m Role Rugby player | |
![]() | ||
Similar People Lucie Silvas, Richard Cockerill, George Chuter, Harry Ellis, Aaron Mauger Profiles |
Geordan murphy total rugby
Geordan Edward Andrew Murphy (born 19 April 1978 in Dublin) is an Irish rugby union coach and former player. He played as fullback or wing both for the Irish international team and the English club Leicester Tigers.
Contents
- Geordan murphy total rugby
- Rbs 6 nations fantastic full backs josh lewsey v geordan murphy
- Youth
- Playing career
- Retirement and coaching
- References

Rbs 6 nations fantastic full backs josh lewsey v geordan murphy
Youth

He was officially named George after his father but his mother called him Geordan to avoid confusion. His six brothers and sister all played rugby union. Murphy was educated at Newbridge College, Newbridge, Co. Kildare before attending Waterford Institute of Technology and De Montfort University in Leicester.

Murphy played Gaelic football at Minor (U18) level with Kildare GAA in the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship.
Playing career

In 1997 shortly before he joined Leicester Tigers he gained his first U18 rugby cap for Ireland. He gradually made his way into the Tigers' first team squad, while gaining caps for Ireland U21. Opportunities at fullback were limited by the presence of Tim Stimpson, but he gained a place on the right wing. Murphy started in both of Leicester's back-to-back Heineken Cup final wins in 2001 and 2002, scoring a try in the latter final.

Murphy broke his leg in Ireland's last warm-up game against Scotland at Murrayfield prior to the 2003 Rugby Union World Cup and did not compete.

As he matured, Murphy preferd full back over wing. His main rivals in recent years for the Ireland full back starting position has been Girvan Dempsey and Rob Kearney. In his autobiography he stated that he had a poor working relationship with former Ireland Coach Eddie O'Sullivan mainly because he played for an English team. Murphy was named as the starting full back for Ireland in the crucial game against Argentina on 22 November 2008, and scored one of Ireland's two tries in that game.
He was a member of the victorious Ireland team that won the 2009 Six Nations Championship and Grand Slam. In May 2009, Murphy was named in the Barbarians squad to play England and Australia along with Ireland team mate Gordon D'Arcy.
He took over the Tiger's Captaincy on the field in the 2008/9 season, when club captain Martin Corry was not in the team, and led them to two finals that season – Heineken Cup and English Premiership, the latter of which they won. The following season, he was named official club captain, though missed out on much of the season due to injury. He returned in February, to lead the team to a successive Guinness Premiership title, when the Tigers beat Saracens 33–27 in the final.
Murphy was chosen to captain Ireland against the New Zealand Maori in June 2010. On 11 September Murphy was picked to start in the first match of the 2011 rugby world cup since Rob Kearney was injured. Ireland won the game 22-10 against the United States. He came on then to replace Keith Earls in the Russia game.
Retirement and coaching
In May 2012, Murphy announced his retirement from international Rugby.
In May 2013, Murphy announced his retirement from all forms of rugby, and that he was declared to become assistant coach at Leicester from the 2013-14 season onwards to the present. Since then he taken control of the LV Cup, now called the Anglo-Welsh Cup, and in the 2016/17 season masterminded Tigers winning of the Cup, their first trophy since he retired.
In the Clash between Bath and Leicester at Twickenham, he took control when new head coach Matt O'Connor had only just arrived.