Tom Billups

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Tom Billups
Birth nameThomas Wayne Billups
Date of birth (1964-12-26) December 26, 1964 (age 59)
Place of birthBurlington, Iowa, United States
Height5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Weight210 lb (95 kg; 15 st 0 lb)
UniversityAugustana College
Occupation(s)Coach
Rugby union career
Position(s) Hooker
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
Old Blues of California ()
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1996–1997
1997–1998
1998–1999
1999–2000
Blackheath F.C.
Harlequin F.C.
Neath RFC
Pontypridd RFC

15[1][2]

18[3]

(0)

International career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1993–1999
United States
44 (10)
Correct as of 1 January 2021[4]
Coaching career
Years Team
2001–2006
United States

Tom Billups (born December 26, 1964)

Blackheath Rugby Club, Harlequin F.C., and Pontypridd RFC
as a professional. After retiring as a player in 1999, he joined the staff of the United States national team and was the head coach from 2001 to 2006. In addition to coaching the Eagles, Billups managed the U.S. national sevens team program and coached the 2005 U.S. sevens team. In 2015 Billups was inducted into U.S. Rugby Hall of Fame, and was the first person to be inducted as both a player and coach. In 2018 Billups became the 14th recipient of the Craig Sweeney Award which was first award in 1979 in memory of former United States national team member and captain, Craig Sweeney. The Sweeney Award is presented to a former national team player who has contributed significantly to the game while displaying exemplary character on and off the field.

Billups also coached the Collegiate All-American Team and the United States Marine Corps. Billups currently serves as associate head coach for the varsity rugby program at the University of California, Berkeley, after joining the staff in 2000.[6]

Playing career

College

Tom Billups began his rugby career in 1984 with the Quad City Irish, a rugby union club in Davenport, Iowa, while an undergraduate student at Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois. In 1985, Billups in part led the QC Irish to the 7's national championship. Starting out as an offensive lineman for the Augustana football team, Tom played football in the Fall, wrestled in the Winter and played rugby for the Quad City Irish in the Spring. Billups was a four-year letter winner during the Viking's run of four consecutive national championships for football and ended his collegiate football career 49-0-1. Billups attended Augustana College from 1983 to 1987 and graduated with a B.A. in Psychology. Tom Billups is also a member of the Augustana College Athletics Hall of Fame through his participation in four consecutive NCAA Division III national football championships.

Professional

In 1990, Billups played a season in New Zealand's Bay of Plenty before moving back to the States. He relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1991 to play for and captain the Berkeley Old Blues, which won the national championship in 1992.

After the professionalization of the game in the mid-1990s, Billups was one of the first American rugby players to sign a professional contract in 1996.[

Blackheath Rugby Club in London from August 1996 to February 1997. Billups then played for the Harlequins from 1997 to 1999 and was the Supporter's Club Player of the Year during the 1997-1998 season. In 1999, Billups finished his professional playing career in Wales playing first for Neath RFC and then with Pontypridd RFC
.

International

Tom Billups played and captained the United States national rugby sevens team from 1989 until 1993. He first represented the U.S. at the 1989 Hong Kong Sevens tournament.

Billups earned his first international test cap in June 1993, when the U.S. played Canada. During his international career from 1993 to 1999, he won 44 caps, with 12 of those as captain. Billups represented the United States at the 1999 Rugby World Cup, where he played his last game of rugby against Australia and officially retired. Billups is the most capped hooker in USA Rugby history.

Coaching career

United States national team

Tom Billups served as the assistant coach of the United States national team during the 2000 season, the 2001 Pan-American Championship and England's June 2001 tour of the United States. Later in 2001, Billups accepted the interim head coaching position for a test against South Africa and was named the Eagles' full-time head coach at the start of 2002. Billups is the only Eagles coach to own a winning career record against "Tier 2" and "Tier 3" countries,[citation needed] with a 12-8 mark. In 2003, he posted a 7-6 mark, an American record for single-season wins,[citation needed] including four straight victories. At the 2003 Rugby World Cup, Billups steered the Eagles to their first World Cup victory since 1987 against Japan, as well as an admirable one-point loss against Fiji (19-18). The USA's second-place finish at the Pan -American Championship in August 2003 was its best-ever showing. In 2004, Billups coached the team to two three-point defeats to Canada and a 39-31 loss to France in July, which is America's best-ever showing against the Tricolors. Tom Billups finished up his tenure with USA Rugby in April 2006 with 12 wins, including the second largest US national team victory (35-20) to date over rival Canada in 2003.

OPPONENT DATE SCORE W/L
South Africa 12/1/2001 43-20 L
Scotland 6/22/2002 65-23 L
Canada 6/29/2002 29-6 L
Canada 7/13/2002 36-13 L
Chile 8/10/2002 35-22 W
Uruguay 8/15/2002 28-24 W
Chile 8/24/2002 21-13 L
Uruguay 8/31/2002 10-9 L
Spain 4/12/2003 62-13 W
Spain 4/27/2003 58-13 W
Japan 5/17/2003 69-27 W
Canada 6/18/2003 16-11 W
England 6/21/2003 36-10 L
England 6/28/2003 43-6 L
Argentina 8/23/2003 42-8 L
Canada 8/27/2003 35-20 W
Uruguay 8/30/2003 31-17 W
Fiji 10/15/2003 19-18 L
Scotland 10/20/2003 39-15 L
Japan 10/27/2003 39-26 W
France 10/31/2003 41-14 L
Canada 5/27/2004 23-20 L
Russia 5/30/2004 41-11 W
New Zealand Maori 6/12/2004 69-31 L
Canada 6/19/2004 32-29 L
France 7/3/2004 39-31 L
Ireland 11/20/2004 55-6 L
Italy 11/27/2004 43-25 L
Canada 5/25/2005 30-26 L
Romania 5/29/2005 28-22 W
Wales 6/4/2005 77-3 L
Argentina 6/19/2005 30-34 L
Canada 6/26/2005 20-19 W

United States sevens national team

Tom Billups directed the United States 7s National Team program from 2001 to 2006. In 2005, he served as the head coach of the team for the World Games in Germany.

College

Billups was the head coach of USA Rugby's Collegiate All-American Team in 2001 and guided the team to a 2-0 tour of Ireland. From that team came several international players, such as Captain Kort Schubert, Matt Sherman, Kimball Kjar, Mike MacDonald and Paul Emerick.

Billups coached the US Marine Corps to the championship match in 2006, and continued to coach the team throughout 2007.

Billups joined the rugby coaching staff at the University of California, Berkeley in 2000. A certified strength and conditioning specialist, Billups has been in charge of the team's strength and conditioning since 2003. In 2013, Cal Rugby was crowned champions on NBC Sports, winning the sevens Collegiate Rugby Championship (CRC) in Philadelphia. This marked the first sevens championship for the Golden Bears, who have gone on to win five consecutive national titles. Since 2000, Cal Rugby has won 12 National Championships in 15s in addition to the 5 sevens crowns.

Notes

  1. ^ "Tom Billups". its rugby. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Tom Billups". Premiership rugby. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  3. ^ "BILLUPS, TOM". ponty. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  4. ^ "Tom Billups". espnscrum. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  5. ^ Tom Billups player profile ESPN Scrum.com
  6. ^ Pontypridd RFC Personal profile ponty.net
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Duncan Hall
United States National Rugby Union Coach

2001-2006
Succeeded by