John Tod (rugby union)
John Tod (8 October 1862 – 8 September 1935) was a Scotland international rugby union player.[1] He was nicknamed 'The Prince of Dribblers' and it is said that he introduced the dribbling game to rugby union.[2] Tod, himself, rated the later Watsonian player and Scotland international William Cownie as a much better dribbler of the rugby ball than he was, saying that Cownie was the prettiest dribbler he had ever seen touch a rugby ball.[2] Rugby Union careerAmateur careerHe played for Edinburgh University and then Watsonians.[3] A letter to The Scotsman on Tod's death by a "D.P.M" relayed this information:[4]
Provincial careerHe played for East of Scotland District in their trial match against West of Scotland District in January 1883.[5] He played for Edinburgh District in the 1883, 1884 and 1885 inter-city matches against Glasgow District.[6][3][7] International careerHe was capped 9 times - and not 8 times as "D.P.M." counted above - for Scotland in the period 1884 to 1886.[8] He scored 2 tries.[8] Medical careerHe became a G.P. and practiced in Leith. He was prominent in Masonic circles in Edinburgh.[9] FamilyHis father was James Robertson Tod (1827-1901) and his mother Ann Campbell (1824-1912). He was one of their 7 children. He married Mary Bennett in 1907. DeathHe died on holiday at Strathpeffer on the local golf course. Tod was a regular attendee of the Strathpeffer Spa. The Scotsman reported that he had played only one stroke on the golf course before collapsing dead. The Daily Mirror used the headline grabbling line: "First stroke his last" in reporting his death. References
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