Kyle Winter

Kyle Winter
Full name Kyle Johan Winter
Date of birth (1974-09-20) September 20, 1974
Place of birth Poughkeepsie, New York, U.S.
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight 109 kg (240 lb; 17.2 st)
University Northeastern University ('99)
Rugby league career
Position Prop, Lock
Professional clubs
Years Club / team Caps (points)
2009-2012
2010
2012
Boston Thirteens
New England Immortals
Oneida FC
10
1
3
(8)
(0)
(4)
Rugby union career
Playing career
Position prop, utility forward
Professional / senior clubs
Years Club / team Caps (points)
2002-2014 Mystic River Rugby Club 42 (15)
National team(s)
Years Club / team Caps (points)
2009-2010  Indonesia 3 (0)

Kyle Johan Winter (born September 20, 1974) is an American former rugby union player. He played senior level Division I rugby with the Mystic River Rugby Club in the American Rugby Premiership and has represented Indonesia on the national level. He also played rugby league with the Boston Thirteens in the USARL.

Early life

Winter grew up in Hyde Park, NY and attended Franklin Delano Roosevelt High School where he was a member of the varsity soccer and rowing teams. He later attended Boston University where he was first introduced to rugby after failing to make the rowing team. While at B.U., he was also a member of the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity,[1] but transferred to SUNY New Paltz after one year. He then attended Northeastern University, playing rugby for the NU "Maddogs" throughout the remainder of his college career until his graduation in 1999.[2]

Rugby Union career

Senior Club Rugby

After college, Winter played briefly with Clontarf Rugby in Dublin, Ireland, making just a handful of appearances as a utility forward with their junior sides before the 2001 foot-and-mouth outbreak halted the majority of the 2001 rugby season. Following the lifting of the travel ban in 2002, Winter joined Bus Éireann RFC in the Leinster junior league for the remainder of their season.

Upon returning to the United States, Winter began his career with Mystic River in 2002, where he was a prop / utility forward. Secondary roles with the club included second row and the number 8 position. He played twelve years with the Mystics helping them to five Northeast Championships and five straight USA Rugby Division I Sweet 16 tournaments between 2008 and 2012, including three trips to the National Quarter-Finals.[3] Due to injuries during the 2014 season, Winter saw his playing time split between the Mystic's D1 side and the D2 Mystic Barbarians, suiting up for only two league matches that year.[4]

International Rugby

Winter, whose father emigrated from Bandung, Indonesia, was named to the 42-man training squad for the Indonesian National Rugby Team (known as the Rhinos) after a trial session while in Bali in 2008.[5] In 2009 he attended the national training camp held in Jakarta. He first wore the Indonesian jersey in June 2009 when he was selected to play for the President's XV squad in the inaugural Minister's Cup, after which he was named to the 28-man roster that would travel to Manila, the Philippines to compete in the HSBC Asian 5 Nations Tournament,[6] part of the Rugby World Cup qualifier tournaments for countries in the Asian Rugby Football Union. On July 1, 2009, Winter made his international test match debut for Indonesia as the starting loose-head prop against Guam.[7] Later that week, he would again start in the front row against Iran in the tournament consolation final, where the Rhinos would lose 48-13 and place 4th in the tournament.[8]

Rugby League career

In 2009, Winter signed with the Boston Thirteens in the American National Rugby League where he played prop, though he was forced to miss much of the second half of the season due to national team duties with Indonesia. Winter re-signed with Boston for the 2010 season and was later named to the New England Immortals RLFC, a representative side consisting of the top players from the New England area. He made his rugby league rep side debut in July 2010 in an exhibition match against Canada at the 2010 AMNRL "War at the Shore" tournament.[9] Winter continued with the Boston Thirteens after the AMNRL/USARL split in 2011 as a utility forward. The following year he was traded to Oneida FC, playing in just three matches before retiring from rugby league after the 2012 season.

References

  1. Lambda Chi Alpha - List of Notable Alumni
  2. 1999 Cauldron (PDF). www.archive.org. 1999. Boston: Northeastern University. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  3. "Club History". www.mysticrugby.com. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  4. "USA Rugby Player Stats". www.usarugby.org. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  5. "Rhinos Pick 42-Man Squad ahead of 5 Nations Tourney". Jakarta Globe. 13 May 2009. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  6. "Winter Named to Indonesian National Side". 30 June 2009. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  7. "28-Man Rhino Squad set to play Guam in A5N opener". Jakarta Globe. 30 June 2009. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  8. "Rhinos History". www.rugbyindonesia.or.id. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  9. 2010 AMNRL War at the Shore
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