Richard Tsimba
Personal information | ||||
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Full name | Richard Utete Tsimba | |||
Date of birth | July 9, 1965 | |||
Place of birth | Salisbury, Rhodesia | |||
Date of death | April 30, 2000 34) | (aged|||
School | Peterhouse Boys' School | |||
Club information | ||||
Position | Centre | |||
Current club | -- | |||
Representative teams | ||||
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Richard Utete Tsimba (Salisbury, Rhodesia, 9 July 1965 – 30 April 2000) was a Zimbabwean rugby union player. He played as a centre. He was nicknamed "The Black Diamond".
Tsimba was the first black player to represent his country. He had 5 caps for Zimbabwe, scoring 3 tries, 12 points in aggregate. All his caps came at the 1987 Rugby World Cup, where he played in two games, scoring two tries in the 21-20 loss to Romania, at 23 March 1987, in Auckland, and at the 1991 Rugby World Cup, where he was used in all the three games, scoring a try in the 52-8 loss to Japan, at 14 October 1991, in Belfast.
He died in a car accident, aged only 34 years old.
On 25 October 2012, he was posthumously inducted into the IRB Hall of Fame; his living younger brother and fellow Zimbabwe international Kennedy Tsimba was inducted alongside him.[1]
References
- ↑ "Tsimba brothers enter IRB Hall of Fame" (Press release). International Rugby Board. 25 October 2012. Retrieved 25 October 2012.