Gaston Lane
Birth name | Gaston Lane | ||||||||||||||||
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Date of birth | 31 January 1883 | ||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Paris, France | ||||||||||||||||
Date of death | 23 September 1914 | (aged 31)||||||||||||||||
Place of death | Lironville, France | ||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in) | ||||||||||||||||
Weight | 68 kg (150 lb) | ||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||
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Gaston Lane (31 January 1883 – 23 September 1914) was a French rugby union player. He was 1 m 68 cm tall and weighed 68 kg.
He played right wing three quarter (later centre) for Racing club de France and for the French national team; at first he also played for AS Bois-Colombes then for the Paris Cosmopolitan Club.
He played in the first French international and was capped ten times, along with Marcel Communeau.
He was a tradesman. He was killed on the front in Moselle at the start of the First World War.
He was an excellent club rugby player, and also occasionally contributed articles to Sporting.
Career
[edit]Club
[edit]- Racing club de France
- Cosmopolitan Club, Paris
- AS Bois-Colombes (initially)
International
[edit]Gaston Lane was first selected for the French national team for the 1 January 1906 match against the All-Blacks, the first French Test match.
Highlights
[edit]Club
[edit]- Second place in French national rugby championship, 1912 with Racing club de France, and captain, alongside Géo André and Pierre Failliot, who also played three quarters.
International
[edit]- 16 caps.
- 1 try (3 points).
- Caps by year: 2 in 1906, 1 in 1907, 2 in 1908, 3 in 1909, 2 in 1910, 2 in 1911, 3 in 1912, 1 in 1913.
- Participated in the first official France match against the All Blacks in their first European tour.
- Captain five times (in 1906, 1910, 1912 & 1913), and captain of the French first XV in the first Five Nations Championship, against Wales at Swansea in 1910 (the second was Marcel Communeau in the next match).
- He was in 4 seasons of the Five Nations Championship in the pre-war period.
- First victory against a Home Nations team, Scotland, in the second French Five Nations Championship, in 1911.
References
[edit]- Godwin, Terry Complete Who's Who of International Rugby (Cassell, 1987, ISBN 0-7137-1838-2)