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Jonny Wilkinson
England
Full name Jonathan Peter Wilkinson
Born
May 25, 1979, Frimley
Current age 30 years 260 days
Major teams British and Irish Lions, Newcastle, Toulon, England
Position Fly-half
Height
5 ft 10 in
Weight 193 lb
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| Span | Mat | Start | Sub | Pts | Tries | Conv | Pens | Drop | Won | Lost | Draw | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All Tests | 1998-2010 | 80 | 76 | 4 | 1140 | 7 | 155 | 234 | 31 | 56 | 23 | 1 | 70.62 |
| England | 1998-2010 | 74 | 70 | 4 | 1073 | 6 | 148 | 218 | 31 | 55 | 19 | 0 | 74.32 |
| British and Irish Lions | 2001-2005 | 6 | 6 | 0 | 67 | 1 | 7 | 16 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 25.00 |
| Rugby World Cup | 1999-2007 | 15 | 14 | 1 | 249 | 1 | 23 | 53 | 13 | 12 | 3 | 0 | 80.00 |
| Five/Six Nations | 1998-2010 | 34 | 32 | 2 | 494 | 4 | 84 | 93 | 9 | 27 | 7 | 0 | 79.41 |
| Test debut | England v Ireland at Twickenham, Apr 4, 1998 match details |
| Last Test | England v Wales at Twickenham, Feb 6, 2010 match details |
| Test Statsguru | Main menu | Career summary | Match list | Most points | Most tries | Tournament list |
Jonny Wilkinson will forever be remembered as the man who kicked England to Rugby World Cup glory in Australia in 2003 - slotting a last-gasp drop goal in extra-time to edge out the hosts in a thrilling tournament finale. Regularly a left-footer, the talented fly-half slotted that memorable kick with his right foot to cement his place in English sporting history. That moment is just one highlight of a record-breaking career that has seen Wilkinson rise to one of the sport's all-time greats.
Wilkinson won his first cap against Ireland on April 4, 1998 aged 18 years and 314 days to become England's second youngest player - narrowly missing the record held by Harlequins' Colin Laird who debuted in 1927 aged 18 years and 124 days. A young Wilkinson was a member of the England touring party that endured the so-called 'Tour of Hell' in 1998 that saw them suffer heavily at the hands of Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. But it proved to be a learning experience for Wilkinson, and by the end of 2001 he had eclipsed the England Test points record of 396 held until then by his mentor Rob Andrew.
In March 2008, he became the international rugby record points scorer, overtaking Wales' Neil Jenkins. His first converted penalty against Scotland at Murrayfield, took him three points past Jenkins' tally of 1090 Test rugby points. This achievement came a little earlier than expected after the IRB granted full Test status to the 2005 British and Irish Lions warm-up Test against Argentina. Two more penalties in the second half of the Scotland clash took his tally to his current tally of 1099 points.
Wilkinson also scored a record 29th Test drop goal against France in the 2008 Six Nations Championship - surpassing the record he had shared with Argentine legend Hugo Porta. He also holds the Rugby World Cup points record with 249, capturing the record previously held by Scotland's Gavin Hastings during England's 2007 quarter-final victory over Australia. He is also the only player to score points in two Rugby World Cup finals - scoring four penalties and that famous drop goal in the 2003 victory over Australia and two penalties in the 15-6 loss to South Africa in 2007. He has also toured with the British & Irish Lions twice - to Australia in 2001 and New Zealand in 2005 scoring 67 Test points in the 6 Lions Test matches he has started.
Following that memorable night in Sydney in 2003, Wilkinson's career has been blighted by injury. Knee ligament, arm, shoulder and kidney problems meant he did not appear again for England until 1,169 days later in their opening game of the 2007 Six Nations Championship against Scotland on 3 February 2007. In his comeback England match, Wilkinson scored a Calcutta Cup record of 27 points in a Man-of-the-Match performance. The following week against Italy, he became the highest point-scorer in the history of the Five/Six Nations Championship. Injury problems returned later that year but he battled back to be part of England Rugby World Cup squad that surprised many as they made their way to the final where they were beaten by the Springboks.
Wilkinson was subsequently under pressure from a new generation of stars targeting the No.10 shirt. One of whom, Danny Cipriani, displaced him for the final match of the 2008 Six Nations Championship against Ireland. And he was ruled out of England's summer tour to New Zealand instead opting for shoulder surgery at the end of the season.
Wilkinson was retained as a member of the England Elite Squad by manager Martin Johnson in the summer of 2008 but his injury woes returned to haunt him in October of that year when he suffered a dislocated knee injury on Premiership duty for Newcastle. That injury ruled him out of action for eight months, including the 2009 Six Nations and the British & Irish Lions' tour to South Africa.
Wilkinson played all of his club rugby in the Premiership for the Falcons who he joined straight from school in the summer of 1997 at the age of 18. With them he has won the Premiership title (1997-98) and the domestic cup competition (2001 - injury ruled him out of their 2004 victory) but most recently they have struggled to compete for the big honours.
He brought his 11-year association with the club to an end in 2009 by signing a lucrative two-year deal with French Top 14 club Toulon. He returned to action for his new club in June 2009 and was re-called to the international set-up the following month by Johnson. He later reclaimed the England No.10 shirt for November international series.
The 2003 IRB Player of the Year and BBC Sports Personality of the Year, Wilkinson has also had an unwavering commercial presence since arriving on the international stage with companies keen to be associated with the England stalwart. The famously tee-total Wilkinson has endorsed many products, provided exclusive newspaper columns and published several rugby books and DVDs.
Jonny Wilkinson Injury Factfile
2002: May - Suffers ankle ligament damage in Newcastle's defeat by Gloucester, ruling him out for the rest of the season.
2003: December 13 - Newcastle confirm Wilkinson has fractured a facet in his shoulder - known as a 'stinger'. Falcons predict an absence of two to three weeks.
December 28 - Suffers a recurrence of his shoulder injury and has to come off during Newcastle's win over Northampton.
2004: February - Ruled out of Six Nations after shoulder operation.
October - Ruled out for up to six weeks with a haematoma in the upper right arm and has to stand down as England captain for autumn Tests.
2005: January - Suffers knee ligament damage in Newcastle's Heineken Cup defeat in Perpignan.
March - Suffers medial ligament damage on Newcastle comeback against Harlequins.
July - Suffers shoulder injury in British and Irish Lions' second Test defeat in New Zealand and misses third match.
September - Ruled out of early season action after undergoing an appendix operation.
November - Has a major operation for related groin problems.
2006: January - Suffers a torn adductor muscle.
September - Forced off with a knee ligament injury during Newcastle's home game against Worcester, effectively ending his hopes of playing in the autumn Tests.
November - Makes comeback for Newcastle against Bristol but suffers kidney damage and requires one month's rest.
2007: September - Suffers fresh injury blow as a twisted ankle in training rules him out of England World Cup opener against USA.
2008: May - Undergoes shoulder surgery which keeps him out of England's summer tour of New Zealand.
October - Undergoes surgery after dislocating left kneecap in match against Gloucester and is ruled out for five months.
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