Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Norm Tipping

Norm Tipping
Tipping 1947
Personal information
Full nameNorman Herbert Tipping
Born(1913-01-10)10 January 1913
Hurstville, New South Wales, Australia
Died11 March 2002(2002-03-11) (aged 89)
Cronulla, New South Wales, Australia
Playing information
PositionCentre
Club
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1932–44 St George Dragons 25 1 1 5
Coaching information
Club
Years Team Gms W D L W%
1953 St George Dragons 18 12 1 5 67
1956 St George Dragons 18 12 0 6 67
Total 36 24 1 11 67
Source: Whiticker/Hudson

Norman Herbert Tipping (1913–2002) was an Australian rugby league footballer who played in the 1930s and 1940s. He later became a premiership winning first grade coach for the St George Dragons.

Playing career

Born in Hurstville, New South Wales, Norm Tipping's early football was rugby union played with the St. George Rugby Union Club. His first grade rugby league career was often curtailed by serious injury, although he did complete five seasons with the St George club between 1932 and 1933, 1936, and 1943–1944.

In 1936 he suffered a near career ending spinal injury while playing in an end of season tour match and was in plaster for months. Incredibly, after seven seasons in retirement he returned to first grade football in 1943 and finally retired at the end of the 1944 season.

Norm Tipping, 1933

Premiership winning coach

He then went into coaching in the St George Dragons lower grades before being offered the head coaching job in 1953.[1] The club made the Grand Final that season but lost the game to the South Sydney Rabbitohs 31–12. He lost the job for the next two seasons, but was again made head coach in 1956 and won the premiership, with St. George beating Balmain 18–12 in the Grand Final. This match was the first of eleven straight premierships that St. George would eventually win from 1956 to 1966.[2]

Even though he was now a Grand Final winning coach, Norm Tipping was again dropped as coach in 1957 due to inter-club politics. He accepted the coaching role of St. George's under 21 team for the next decade and never coached first grade again.[3]

Death

Norm Tipping died on 11 March 2002 at his Cronulla, New South Wales home, aged 89.[4]

References

  1. ^ The St.George Call (Kogarah) 22 January 1953 "The Rugby League Coach - NORM TIPPING beats a field of seven" https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/235293432?searchTerm=%22norm%20tipping%22&searchLimits=l-state=New+South+Wales
  2. ^ Alan Whiticker/Glen Hudson:- Encyclopedia of Rugby League Players, 2005 (ISBN 9780732908164)
  3. ^ Ian Heads, "March of the Dragons". 1989 (ISBN 0949853208)
  4. ^ Daily Telegraph, Death Notice: 16/3/2002
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Ken Kearney
1954–1955
Coach

St George

1956
Succeeded by
Ken Kearney
1957–1961
Preceded by
Johnny Hawke
1951–1952
Coach

St George

1953
Succeeded by
Ken Kearney
1954–1955