Channel: @MrTigerjet
Rugby League Great Noel Kelly was a hard man. In this clip Kelly lands a great left hook on the jaw of Kiwi prop Rob Orchard. Orchard had 'coathangered' Australian five eighth Johnny Gleeson. This is how Rugby League was played in a bygone era.
Born and raised in Ipswich Qld. Kelly began his playing days at Railways in 1957 and then moved to Brothers for the 1958 and 59 season. He represented Ipswich in the Bulimba Cup winning the competition in 58 and 59. He was selected for Qld and Australia in 59 along with his Ipswich front row partners Dud Beattie and Gary Parcell. Kelly returned from the 59 kangaroo tour and signed a lucrative deal with Ayr for 1960 before transferring to Wests in Sydney and becoming a club legend. Noel Kelly was tough.
Touring with the Kangaroos in 1959–60, 1963–64 and 1967–68, Noel Kelly earned the distinction of being the first front-rower to make rugby league's most distinguished journey three times. In all, Kelly played 25 Tests in the Australian engine room at a time rugby league was at its roughest and toughest. Statistics from Kelly's career give a clue to how tough the game was ... and how tough he was. In his career with Wests in Sydney, ''Ned'' was sent off 17 times, though some were for scrum ''wheeling and dealing'' in days when every scrum was a battle. In the second Australia–New Zealand Test of 1967, he and the big Kiwi Robin Orchard were sent off in the first 90 seconds, Ned having rendered Orchard horizontal with a left hook. Events such as that one and plenty more (such as his joyful dive for a try during the record-breaking 50–12 second Test win that claimed the Ashes in 1963) made Kelly one of the most robust and popular players to ever pull on a boot. Originally from the Queensland country, and a hooker, Kelly became a Test prop alongside another hard man from the bush, Ian Walsh, and remained equally effective in both positions. At Wests, he was a natural leader, taking over as captain-coach in 1966. After leaving the Magpies, he played and coached briefly in Wollongong, and then stepped back into the spotlight in the 1970s, as coach of Norths for three lively years. “Rugged and determined, he was one of the best combinations of hooker and player Australia has had.” Tom Goodman Sydney Morning Herald