Greg Growden

Australian sports journalist (died 2020) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Greg Growden (1959/1960 – 14 November 2020) was an Australian sports journalist, author and biographer.

Life

Growden was born in Adelaide, the son of Port Adelaide Football Club player Kevin Growden.[1] The family moved to a rice farm at Coleambally in the Riverina where Growden spent his teenage years.[2]

He joined the Sydney Morning Herald in early 1978 soon after leaving school.[3] He was chief rugby union correspondent for the paper from 1987 to 2012, and was the Australian rugby union correspondent for ESPN from 2012 to 2018.[4] He is one of just two international rugby writers to cover all of the first eight World Cups.[5]

Growden died of cancer on 14 November 2020, aged 60.[6][7][8]

Books

  • The Wallabies' World Cup! (1991, with Spiro Zavos, Simon Poidevin and Evan Whitton)
  • A Wayward Genius: The Fleetwood-Smith Story (1991)
  • With the Wallabies (1995)
  • Gold, Mud and Guts: The Incredible Tom Richards – Footballer, War Hero, Olympian (2001)
  • Rugby Union for Dummies (2003, 2011)
  • The Snowy Baker Story (2003)
  • My Sporting Hero (2004, editor)
  • It's Not Just a Bloody Game! Timeless Rugby Union Stories (2007)
  • Jack Fingleton: The Man Who Stood Up to Bradman (2008)
  • Inside the Wallabies: The Real Story – the Players, the Politics, the Games from 1908 to Today (2010)
  • More Important than Life or Death: Inside the Best of Australian Sport (2013, co-editor with Peter FitzSimons)
  • Wallaby Warrior: The World War I War Diaries of Tom Richards, Australia's only British Lion (2013, editor)
  • Bowled by a Bullet: The Tragic Life of Claude Tozer (2015)
  • The Wrong 'Un: The Brad Hogg Story (2016, with Brad Hogg)
  • The Wallabies at War (2018)
  • Major Thomas: The Bush Lawyer Who Defended Breaker Morant and Took On the British Empire (2019)
  • Cricketers at War (2019)

References

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