Welsh rugby pioneer Glenn Webbe in the spotlight once more

The Voice
 
Welsh rugby pioneer Glenn Webbe in the spotlight once more

RUGBY PIONEER Glenn Webbe will be the centre of attention on Wednesday, February 22.

A brand-new series, Legends of Welsh Sport, looks back on some of the greatest and most inspiring sportsmen and women Wales has ever produced – from the underdogs who defied the odds, to the game changers who helped transform their sports and their country.

In this week’s programme, former rugby union international Glenn Webbe shares his story of how he rebelled against the status quo to carve out his own career in his own way.

Webbe, who grew up in Ely, Cardiff as the only boy of eight children, would go on to become an iconic figure in rugby, and in an era where many of the best black players went “up north” to play rugby league.

Spurning the chance to go professional he would stay and become only the second black player to be capped by Wales.

Though Webbe himself will deny he’s a rebel, the programme showcases key moments from his career where he would deviate from what was expected of him.

As a youth, he was advised that he wouldn’t play for Wales unless he joined a more ‘fashionable’ club, such as Cardiff. Instead, Glenn would join Bridgend RFC at the age of 18 in 1981.

He remained loyal to the club and the blue and white shirt, staying for 14 years and scored a record-breaking amount of tries.

Also in 1981, he joined the Wales Youth side on a tour of South Africa. This was during the Apartheid era and his family had concerns about Webbe going to play there. However, Webbe went on tour and his presence became a point of defiance and protest for the Welsh team themselves – on one notable occasion when he was refused service in a restaurant, his coach and teammates all stood up and walked out in solidarity.

In 1987, Webbe represented Wales at the inaugural Rugby World Cup and would make history against Tonga by becoming the first man to score a hat-trick in the competition – one of which was scored while suffering from concussion after a powerful collision with the opposition earlier in the match. He was also part of an infamous Wales versus England match on his home debut in Cardiff.

It was as a stalwart of Bridgend however that he is best remembered, and the film features interviews with former teammates Gareth Thomas and Geraint Thomas, as well as sister Jacky.

Legends of Welsh Sport: Glenn Webbe airs on Wednesday, 22 February on BBC One Wales, 8pm