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Latest News
Role Description – Game Day Manager
February 19, 2024
Reports to: General Manager The MRFC Game Day Manager (GDM) is responsible for all non-rugby aspects of the Club during Home Matches. Working directly with and reporting to the General...
Read MoreMarlins Fillets Interview With New GM – Greg Marr
December 14, 2023
Greg Marr, the new general manager of Manly Rugby, gave an interview to Marlins Fillets discussing his rugby background, his return to the club, and his plans for its future...
Read MoreWelcome Matt Curll, the 26th president of Manly Rugby Union Football Club.
November 16, 2023
Welcome Matt Curll, the 26th president of Manly Rugby Union Football Club. Matt, a born and bred local, was a member of our 1997 Shute Shield-winning side and has remained...
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𝐍𝐄𝐖 𝐀𝐂𝐀𝐃𝐄𝐌𝐘 𝐓𝐎 𝐒𝐂𝐇𝐎𝐎𝐋 𝐌𝐀𝐍𝐋𝐘 𝐑𝐔𝐆𝐁𝐘'𝐒 𝐘𝐎𝐔𝐍𝐆 𝐓𝐀𝐋𝐄𝐍𝐓
The search is on for the next Michael Hooper or Alicia Lucas as Manly Rugby looks to future proof its next generation of talent.
New Marlins coach Sam Lane will oversee a pre-season academy aimed at giving the area's best young male and female players intensive training ahead of the 2025 season.
Lane will be joined by assistant first grade coach Damien Cummins and women's head coach Ben Tuipulotu, with specialist coaches drafted in to oversee areas like goalkicking and set pieces.
The age groups are under-14s/15s and under-16/17s in both boys and girls – four teams in all - with once-a-week sessions across four weeks starting from November 25 at Keirle Park.
There will be a break over Christmas-New Year before the sessions resume at the start of February for a further four weeks.
It will give players a firm foundation for the 2025 season while allowing the Manly contingent to assess the junior talent at their disposal and keep tabs of their progress.
"I was part of the Manly rugby academy along with guys like Harry Bergelin, BJ Hartmann, Dan Alley, Adam Crerar and a few others who went onto play in our 2015 first grade grand final," Lane explained.
"It set the foundation for our connection to the Marlins and made us want to work our way up to play grade.
"There are well known challenges to rugby in Australia at the moment so it’s important we are doing what we can to provide our local juniors the opportunities to enjoy our great game and develop their skills and so they want to stay in the game.
"We want to develop the next Michael Hooper and Alicia Lucas through this academy."
The one-hour sessions begin Monday, November 25, and continue for the following three Mondays.
The academy will then break before resuming on the first Monday in February and run for another four weeks.
Cost is $100 for eight sessions.
Interested players can register here: manlyrugby.iwannaticket.com.au/event/manly-marlins-rugby-junior-academy-202425-MzIzMTU
For further information, contact Juniors President Peter Gibson at coltsjuniors@manlyrugby.com.au ... See MoreSee Less
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Love this!!! Sign me up.
Game Will Be Broadcast Live on espn2broadcast.takemaster.org/rugby.php
Manly Marlins 2025 Draw ... See MoreSee Less
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July 26 game vs Woodies will be at TG Milner.
How come you only play certain teams once in the season?
Marlins not mahs
The Mahs line out king, forward pack enforcer and king of the Steyne is set to make his debut for @officialtongarugby this weekend 😤
A massive congratulations to the doko @mata_ele on this achievement! It’s been a long time coming 👑 ... See MoreSee Less
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Four of Manly rugby's greatest and most loyal servants were awarded life membership at our recent AGM.
(From left to right) Damien Cummins, Rob Gallacher, Geoff Riddington and David Begg were all bestowed the honour by club president Matt Curll amid emotional scenes.
None of the four knew life membership was coming their way, joining an illustrious list of men and women to have gone before them during the club's 141-year history.
Their achievements and contributions are too long to list here, but "Turtle" Cummins and Gals were members of our 1997 premiership-winning team and have been involved with the club for well over 30 years in on and off field roles.
Beggy was our president from 2012-16 - one of the lengthiest tenures in our history - and a longtime board member, as well as refereeing in the Shute Shield and serving as president of the Sydney Rugby Union.
Riddo has been with us since 1973 - as a player, coach, administrator, committee member, volunteer and supporter. He continues to bleed red and blue.
Please join us in congratulating (and thanking) these four outstanding men #boomboom ... See MoreSee Less
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Robert Gallacher Damien Cummins David Begg Geoff Riddington It was a pleasure reading out the long list of contributions by each of you, our new four life members. It was particularly special to do so in front of your family and friends. The AGM was packed to the rafters and we all celebrated afterwards - Shute Shield Rugby @ Manly Marlins Rugby is alive and kicking!
Fantastic contributions all round . 4 of the best . Well deserved to you all
Congratulations All, very well deserved, much respect to each and every one of you for the massive contribution you have all put in to the club...
Four champion blokes who have done so much for the red & blue cause. Congratulations to all ❤️💙
Congrats all. Rob Robert Gallacher has put a huge contribution into junior rugby in the area as well. Well deserved reward.
Well done.guys. Making me feel old. When Allan was involved with club I remember Damien just starting and David Begg and his dad. Great to be recognised for all your hard work. Keep it coming. Miss being there for the 200 club
Congratulations to you all. Very well deserved and special recognition to Rob and Geoff. Working with you both was a privilege. Enjoy.
Congrats guys, well deserved 👏
Congratulations one and all and very well deserved👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
Congratulations guys. Very much deserved. Now the work begins!
👏. Great clubs have Great leaders, administrators and supporter base. Well played , coached, administered and supported . A labour of ❤️ . Rugby Legends !!!! Four cheers 🍻 🍻
Congratulations to all from an old Easts Beast Great Rugby men David Begg started reffing 5th grade in 1989 when I was coaching Easts
How good! Absolutely well deserved!!!!
Congratulations, boys well deserved👌👌👌👌
Well done and well deserved
Congrats to all — very well deserved
Well deserved and a great honour 🍻🍻
Great work Guys and well earned.
Congratulations. Great work!!
Well done guys, fantastic honor
Congratulations legends
Congratulations guys.
Congratulations to you all. Thank you for your time and effort over many, many years. Enjoy your celebrations. You have earned it.
Congratulations gents well done
Some of the finest. Well done gents.
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We’re in need of accommodation to house players for the 2025 season! If you’re in the Northern Beaches and have a place that needs to be rented out, get in touch 🏠 ... See MoreSee Less
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Tizza, Manly Rugby Coach and Player, brain given up for science. FitzSimonds who wrote this in 2014 is speaking at 6.30pm Mosman Art Gallery 4th November 2024
Great impact: Barry ''Tizza'' Taylor as Manly rugby coach. Photo: Fairfax Archives
It was 2014 when FitzSimons published this piece.
Around about the time you are likely reading this, a skilled surgeon is delicately cutting out and removing the brain of former NSW Waratahs coach Barry ''Tizza'' Taylor. By the time of his funeral on Friday afternoon at Manly, that brain will be in ice and on its way to Boston University. Now those who knew Tizza and who were as fond of him as I was may be forgiven for registering some surprise that - ahem - his, of all Australian brains, is the first to be preserved for medical science in this manner. But therein lies a story …
From the age of 10, Tizza was a strong, willing rugby player. Not a world-beater, true, but he never saw a tackle he didn't want to make, never saw a scrap he didn't want to be part of, never backed down to a bigger man. In all of his long career, playing to the age of 33, he never wanted to come off when he'd been hit - even hard - never wanted to sit out a game if ever he could take the field.
And yet, while like all rugby players of his generation he knew that concussion was no big deal, for Tizza that cavalier approach was a point of honour. As the son of Dudley Taylor - the undefeated middleweight boxer and prize fighter in the pubs around Glebe during the Depression - he was a second-generation star graduate of the School of Hard Knocks, and knew that it wasn't how hard you hit, it was how hard you could get hit and keep coming back for more. In the words of his wife Enid, ''Tizza was concussed many, many times, and just played through it.''
In pure rugby terms, this approach earned him great respect as he formed lifelong friendships, played 235 games at breakaway for his beloved Manly, and learnt enough about the game and the motivations of young men to become a successful Australian under 21s and NSW Waratahs coach (teams that I had the honour to play in under his fine stewardship.)
But did all those concussions all those years ago have a long-term effect on him? It is to answer that question that Tizza's brain is on its way to Boston.
What we do know is that at the comparatively young age of 57 years, back in 1993, Tizza was already showing early signs of dementia. Short-term memory loss was one of the first signs, as was erratic behaviour and odd outbursts of anger from this usually even-tempered and loving family man. At first they thought he was just turning into a ''cranky old man'', and even though by his 60th birthday he was, in the words of his son Steven, ''already quite dotty'', still they thought it was just Tizza being Tizza … only more so. But then his condition worsened, particularly with his loss of memory and inability to control his anger.
''He couldn't remember what he had for breakfast,'' Steven says, ''yet could recall things from 60 years ago with the most minute detail. His condition would decline, then it would plateau for a while, then we'd notice another slip, followed by a plateau, etc, until finally he just wasn't there at all. It's been probably three years since he recognised any of us.''
When Tizza died late last Wednesday afternoon, it was a mercy, for the Tizza we all knew and loved was actually long gone.
In a conversation I had on Thursday morning with his grieving widow Enid, she talked with love but despair of her experience with him over the past two decades. She mentioned that she had seen the story I did for Channel Seven's Sunday Night earlier this year focusing on the study being done by Boston University on the brains of deceased former NFL and ice hockey players, whereby they test for a condition known as CTE - chronic traumatic encephalopathy - very broadly, a degenerative brain disease frequently resulting in early dementia, caused by repeated concussions and sub concussive hits. It is like bruising on the brain that doesn't go away, and gets worse with age.
Enid mentioned the symptoms displayed by those players sounded remarkably familiar and, with her blessing and encouragement, I called Christopher Nowinski of Boston University. Gentle calls to Enid and Steven were made in return, and the Taylor family has very generously allowed Tizza's brain to be harvested for their brain bank. The family thinks, as I do, that he would have enjoyed the enormous fuss he has caused even after he has gone, and the old Tizza would have laughed himself silly at the thought that, at long last, his really was the most studied Australian rugby brain of the lot. (And would still be, Tizza, years after your death!)
None of this is to say that Tizza's dementia was definitely caused by his long rugby career and refusal to bow to repeated concussions. But we will all know more soon.
Vale, Tizza - you dinkum were a one-off, and will long be fondly remembered in rugby, surf-lifesaving and wider Manly circles. You made an impact on rugby, mate, and we just want to know what true impact rugby had on you.
trybooking.com/CVRUH
Mosman Council 9978 4128 or
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As a close family friend of the Taylors it was incredibly sad to see Tizza's deterioration over the years. The findings in Boston were quite alarming, to say the least. Whilst I'm not a fan of Fitzsimmons, its an important message to all about the long term health impacts of contact sports.
The one and only Tizza. Coached by and coached with Tizza. Learnt about rugby But also about life and its many challenges.
What a privilege to know this man, be coached by him and to see him in the water at Queenie more than once ❤️..and to this day, remember the last time we met..you were on Enid's arm. My love to the family
I noticed it in 1992 when playing 1st Grade for the club after arriving from Townsville with the Army. I didn’t really get to know him as well as the locals however I was so pleased that he did donate his brain to medical science and we are benefiting from that research already. Vale Barry!
Very relevant taking into consideration the new ABC show "Plum". As a daughter of an AFL player, sister of Rugby League players and wife & mother of 2 Rugby Union players I'm finding this show very close to real life.
A fine man Tizza! God Rest his soul.
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A couple of mini mahs and the Adonis having a hit out yesterday! Congrats to @joe__dillon representing the @brumbiesrugby U19 and @tomkklem and @davekennett representing @nswwaratahs U19 💙❤️ ... See MoreSee Less
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💙❤️
The Manly Marlins Rugby Club are saddened to hear the recent passing of JON MITCHELL - one of the toughest back rowers the club has ever produced.
The following tribute is by his former coach, 'Moose' Lane.
In the 1974 second grade grand final against Gordon, at 37 years of age, he played part of the match with a compound fracture of his finger and refused to leave the field until trainers and I forced him off.
He was a tenacious back rower with outstanding speed, strength and stamina. A crushing defender too. He was simply a fearsome competitor who played for the whole 80 minutes.
He was also without a doubt, one of the fittest players I had ever come across in all the years of coaching at Manly. He spent countless hours training under fitness legend George Daldry at the famous Tattersalls gym in the city.
Jon would later become a selector, administrator and board member but most players in the 1980s will remember him as one of the most demanding trainers of all time.
His gym in Campbell Parade, Manly Vale was nick named 'Changi' and open to all players on the proviso, "Work out properly or don't turn up at all !"
I also believe Jon played a key role in the club's resurgence from 1974 and eventually led to the club's 1983 First Grade Premiership.
He personally took the late Ollie Hall under his wing and resurrected his rugby career by making him super fit and winning the premiership and gaining Wallaby selection later that year at the age of 36.
Jon was also a keen member of the Manly SLSC, featuring strongly in swim events and R and R. He also loved boats and sailed out of Pittwater with Bob Miller (later known as Ben Lexcen of America's cup fame) and won Australian Titles and international events.
As a career, Jon was a very successful architect. One of his most notable achievements was the design of the AMP building at Circular Quay.
In later years he was a successful developer, entrepreneur and commercial property owner. Like his rugby career, he was a very tough businessman and didn't take too kindly to fools. But those that worked for him, said they learnt a lot.
RIP Jon 'Wallaby' Mitchell.
FUNERAL DETAILS:
10.30 am Thursday October 24
St Mary's Catholic Church
Raglan Street, Manly
CELEBRATION OF HIS LIFE
2 - 5 pm
Manly Skiff Club ... See MoreSee Less
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Sorry to hear this news. Not only as a player did I know him but I also worked for him at Blades Night club on the Manly beachfront in 1982-83. Unfortunately it wasn't a success and only lasted about 12 months. RIP Jon.
Thank you to the club and coach Moose for this incredibly touching tribute to my dad. An incredible sportsman, business man, entrepreneur but he was an even better daddy 💔🙏🏽
Jon was a great player, great team mate and a great entrepreneur. He certainly helped me on the field, had my back. Manly will miss him. Knowing Jon, he is probably working on his next project. 😃👍👀🏉🏉
Sad to hear. Great man. Trained at his gym in Manly Vale. One memory was 10 of us having to do 1000 situps on a wooden floor before they invented floor mats. No skin left on my tail and couldn't sit down for days. RIP Jon
Very sad. Played with Jon in a variety of grades & in that grand final. Tough, uncompromising & a gentleman. Fond memories of his training regime in the gym at his house.
Piggy backing up the snake at north head. Another JM torture. RIP Jon
Our first landlord in Manly. I understand he was one tough hombre, but I never saw any of that as a very grateful tenant. Condolences.
Very sad to hear that news ! He really took Ollie Hall to an incredible level of fitness that he’d never been at before culminating in his Wallaby selection. He was a terrific mentor! Vale Jon Mitchell
Crickey his 400/200 repeats at Passmore were the work of the devil… fittest i had ever been..i also worked at Blades night club. RIP a Manly Legend… Cheers Jon… Cunno
Reading all these stories of my dad brings me great comfort in an otherwise indescribable period of pain. We hope that all that knew him are able to join us to pay tribute to his incredible life and legacy this coming Thursday 24 October, 1030am at St Mary’s Catholic Church, Raglan Street Manly, followed by a celebration of his life at the Manly Skiff Club 2-5pm
Cheers to a great rugby bloke.
Another Manly & Sydney legend leaves us all 👏👍🙏
RIP, condolences to your family
May John be resting in peace . 💕💕💕
Robyn Carraro not sure if Dave knew him
RIP
Thanks to the Club & Moose🙏
Vale Jon!
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A big congratulations to @kemuvaletini_ for being selected in the @fijirugbyunion Flying Fijians for the upcoming November tour 🇫🇯 ... See MoreSee Less
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Awesome work Kemu well deserved brother. 👍💪🔥🙏
Congratulations 🎊 Kemu Valetini
Manly Marlins Rugby Vinaka vakalevu for nurturing and moulding radiant future rugby 🏉 players 💯Kemu deserves it...especially world class goal kicker like him🙏🙌
Wananavu Kemu
Sa qai vo ga nomu mistackle sa rui levu.
Wananavu
Vakanuinui vinaka Kemu.
Kaji 🫡🇫🇯
Vinadu mai tau sa qai koya qo
wananavu
Game Changer
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