Mike Blair

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Mike Blair
Mike Blair cropped.jpg
Birth nameMichael Robert Leighton Blair
Date of birth (1981-04-20) 20 April 1981 (age 43)
Place of birth Edinburgh, Scotland
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Weight85 kg (13 st 5 lb)
School Edinburgh Academy
University Durham University
Edinburgh University
Notable relative(s) David Blair
Alex Blair
Children2
Rugby union career
Position(s) Scrum-half
Amateur team(s)
YearsTeamApps(Points)
- Edinburgh Academicals ()
Boroughmuir ()
Senior career
YearsTeamApps(Points)
2002–2012 Edinburgh 169 (78)
2012–2013 CA Brive 24 (5)
2013–2015 Newcastle Falcons 34 (15)
2015–2016 Glasgow Warriors 12 (0)
International career
YearsTeamApps(Points)
Scotland U19
Scotland U21
Scotland A
2002–2012 Scotland 85 (35)
2009 British & Irish Lions
National sevens team
YearsTeamComps
Scotland
Coaching career
YearsTeam
2014–2015 Ponteland RFC (Asst.)
2016–2019 Glasgow Warriors (Asst.)
2016–2021 Scotland (Asst.)
2021–23 Edinburgh (Head Coach)
2023- Kobe Steelers (Asst.)

Michael Robert Leighton Blair (born 20 April 1981) is a Scottish rugby union coach who was formerly a professional player and the most capped Scottish scrum half in history. He is currently assistant coach of the Kobe Steelers. He was previously the head coach of Edinburgh, and also was an assistant coach with Glasgow Warriors and then an assistant coach of the Scottish national team.

Contents

He played at scrum-half for Glasgow Warriors, Newcastle Falcons, CA Brive and Edinburgh Rugby. He represented the Scotland national side 85 times, as well as the touring with the British & Irish Lions in 2009. He retired from playing on 21 April 2016 aged 35. He was the first Scottish player to be nominated for the title of IRB World Player of the Year.

Rugby Union career

Professional career

Blair spent most of his club career at Edinburgh, and was named in the Pro12 Dream team at the end of the 2007/08 season. [1]

Blair was Edinburgh Player of the year in 2006 and 2008, Scotland Pro Team Player of the Year in 2008, and Scotland Player of the Year in 2008. He was nominated for the IRB Player of the Year in 2008, the first Scot to be nominated for this award. That year he featured in a list of the 50 best rugby players in the world by The Independent newspaper. [2]

Blair spent the 2012–13 season playing in France with Brive helping them to gain promotion back to the Top 14.

Blair then returned to the UK to play for the Newcastle Falcons in the English Premiership. He joined Glasgow Warriors for the 2015/16 season, becoming Glasgow Warrior No. 248 and he finished this playing career at the club.

International career

Blair's international debut came on 15 June 2002 against Canada and scored his first try for his country in the same game.

Blair was a member of Scotland's 2003, 2007 and 2011 World Cup squads.

Blair was injured playing for Edinburgh against the Llanelli Scarlets in January 2007 and required surgery on his shoulder which prevented him from playing in the entire 2007 Six Nations Championship.

Blair was made captain of his country for the first time against Ireland in the 2008 Six Nations Championship and for the next 12 consecutive games. At the 2008 Six Nations, he captained his squad to a 15–9 victory over England at Murrayfield to win the 2008 Calcutta Cup. He captained the national side 14 times in total.

Blair made his 50th appearance against Argentina in 2008 (2nd test).

Having been left out of the original Lions touring squad to South Africa in 2009, Blair was called up as a replacement for the injured Tomás O'Leary on 11 May, starting against The Presidents XV and the Southern Kings and coming off the bench against the Sharks. [3]

Blair was included in Scotland's 2011 Rugby World Cup Squad. He scored the first try in the team's first match against Romania on 10 September, a 34–24 victory to Scotland. He started against England later in the tournament winning his 75th cap. Blair earned his final cap before retirement against South Africa in November 2012.

Blair got 85 caps for his country. He is Scotland's most capped scrum-half of all time.

Coaching career

In the 2014–15 season, Blair became assistant coach of Ponteland Rugby Club.

After finishing playing with Glasgow Warriors, Blair then became an assistant coach at the club, first under Gregor Townsend and then under Dave Rennie.

Townsend brought Blair into the Scotland coaching set-up and he was assistant coach to Scotland.

He moved to become a head coach at Edinburgh. After a relatively successful first season with Edinburgh, his side finished higher than Glasgow Warriors for the first time in over a decade, the second season proved lacklustre. Blair quit Edinburgh as head coach, reasoning that he preferred the more hands on role as an attack coach. [4]

For the 2023-24 season, he will once again team up with his former Glasgow Warriors boss Dave Rennie as assistant coach. Rennie will be the head coach of Kobe Steelers. [5]

Personal life

Blair attended the Edinburgh Academy. He is married with two children.

Blair has an older brother Peter, and two younger brothers, David and Alex. David played fly half for Sale Sharks and Edinburgh Rugby between 2007 and 2011, and Alex, who also played for Edinburgh Rugby from 2010 to 2011.

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References

  1. "Leinster dominate Magners dream team". RTÉ . 27 May 2008. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  2. "The 50 best rugby players in the world 2008". The Independent. 13 January 2009.
  3. "Blair replaces O'Leary for Lions". BBC Sport. 11 May 2009. Retrieved 11 May 2009.
  4. "Mike Blair explains shock decision to leave Edinburgh". www.rugbypass.com. 24 February 2023.
  5. "Blair to join Rennie in Japan with Kobe Steelers". BBC Sport.