Frans_ten_Bos

Frans ten Bos

Frans ten Bos

Scotland international rugby union player


Frans Herman ten Bos (21 April 1937 1 September 2016)[1] was a Scottish rugby union footballer. He played for Scotland as a lock in the 1960s,[2] and was capped seventeen times.[3]

Quick Facts Date of birth, Place of birth ...

Ten Bos attended Fettes College in Edinburgh,[3] where he was introduced to the game, and later played for Oxford University RFC and London Scottish FC.[2]

Ten Bos was controversially dropped before the Scotland-Ireland game in Dublin in 1960, because he was recovering from an injury.[4] Yet according to Bill McLaren, "he took part in all the preparatory activities and pronounced himself as fit to play. He certainly gave it 100 per cent during a vigorous session." Yet Alf Wilson, chairman of the selectors, did not think so, and he was replaced by Oliver Grant of Hawick. McLaren continues: "there was a feeling that ten Bos had been unfairly treated and that the lad himself was hurt and distressed by the decision to leave him out."[4]

Notably, ten Bos scored a try against Wales in Cardiff, in the 1962 match there, which resulted in Scotland's first victory against Wales in an away game in thirty five years; the score was 8-3 to Scotland.[5]

A famous story involving ten Bos and Hugh McLeod is told by Bill McLaren. On the evening before the 1963 game between Scotland and France at Colombes in Paris, Hugh McLeod and Bill McLaren were out having a meal together and bumped into ten Bos near a cafe.[6] Hugh McLeod took Ten Bos aside, and told him bluntly:

"Frans, ye think ye're a guid forrit [forward] but really ye're jist a big lump o' potted meat. If ah was half yer size I'd pick up the first two Frenchman that looked at me the morn [tomorrow] and ah'd chuck them right ower the bloody stand."[6]

Scotland later won the game 11-6, rare for an away game.[6]

Ten Bos tapped McLaren on the shoulder as they left the cafe, and said, "You know, I'd follow him anywhere."[6]

He later became Chairman of Henderson Strata Investments.[3]

He is profiled in the August, 1973 edition of Rugby World.[7]

He died on 1 September 2016 at the age of 79.[8]


References and sources

Printed and Electronic Sources

  • McLaren, Bill Talking of Rugby (1991, Stanley Paul, London ISBN 0-09-173875-X),
  • Massie, Allan A Portrait of Scottish Rugby (Polygon, Edinburgh; ISBN 0-904919-84-6)
  • Distinguished Pupils on Fettes.com

Footnotes

  1. Massie, p173
  2. "Distinguished Pupils". Archived from the original on 21 February 2009. Retrieved 21 November 2009.
  3. McLaren, p90
  4. McLaren, p122
  5. McLaren, p123
  6. "Rugby World Magazine back issues". Archived from the original on 7 December 2009. Retrieved 21 November 2009.

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