Ebbo Bastard
Birth nameWilliam Eberhardt Bastard
Date of birth10 February 1912
Place of birthKokstad, Natal, South Africa
Date of death14 February 1949(1949-02-14) (aged 37)
Place of deathCedarville, Cape Province, South Africa
SchoolHilton College
ChildrenBill O'Hagan
Rugby union career
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
Kokstad RFC ()
Provincial / State sides
Years Team Apps (Points)
1932–1946 Natal ()
International career
Years Team Apps (Points)
1937–1938 South Africa 6 (6)

William Eberhardt Bastard, also known as Ebbo Bastard (10 February 1912 – 14 February 1949), was a South African rugby union player from Kokstad, Natal. He predominantly played as a flanker and played for Natal and the South Africa national rugby union team. On 14 February 1949 he was shot dead by his wife's ex-husband.[1]

Personal life

Bastard was educated at Hilton College. After leaving school, he started farming, which was his profession for the rest of his life. During the Second World War he joined the South African Army and was assigned to the Natal Mounted Rifles, where he saw service in the Western Desert Campaign.[2]

Career

Bastard started playing rugby for Kokstad RFC and made it onto the representative team of Natal. He was highly thought of in Natal, but when trials for the 1937 Springboks tour of Australia and New Zealand were announced at Newlands Stadium, Bastard was not invited. The Natal RFU were convinced he should be there, so they sponsored him to attend the trial without an invitation.[3]

Following an impressive performance at the trials, Bastard was called up to the South Africa national rugby team for the tour of Australia and New Zealand, becoming the first and only Kokstad player to play for the Springboks.[3] During his first match, he scored a try in a 9–5 win.[4] He also scored a try against New Zealand in the second test match at Lancaster Park in Christchurch.[5]

During the tour, his surname became a point of contention. At the first banquet of the tour in Australia, he was introduced as "Ebbo Jardine" after the English cricketer Douglas Jardine, who captained England during the infamous "bodyline" series against Australia.[6] During Australian radio match commentaries, he was referred to as "one player who we shall call Smith".[6] Following a match in Brisbane, he was spoken to by a Queensland Police Force constable who followed him, and caught Bastard and three other Springboks climbing a neon sign, which was smashed as a result.[6][7] The policeman had spoken to the other Springbok players before coming to Bastard and asked for his name. Being given the name and thinking it was a joke, the policeman said, "I don't want to know what you are, I want to know who you are".[7] Later in Sydney with Daantjie van de Vyver, a similar incident occurred when they were climbing lampposts. The New South Wales Police Force constable asked for their names; Bastard gave his and spelled it out for the policeman, with van de Vyver saying his surname straight afterward. The policeman replied, "No bastard is going to get a fiver out of me".[3] He also played for the Springboks a year later against the British Lions in his last test match for South Africa.[8]

Test history

No.OpponentsResults
(SA 1st)
PositionTriesDatesVenue
1. Australia9–5Flank126 Jun 1937Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney
2. New Zealand7–13Flank14 Aug 1937Athletic Park, Wellington
3. New Zealand13–6Flank14 Sep 1937Lancaster Park, Christchurch
4. New Zealand17–6Flank25 Sep 1937Eden Park, Auckland
5.United Kingdom British Isles26–12Flank6 Aug 1938Ellis Park Park, Johannesburg
6.United Kingdom British Isles16–21Flank10 Sep 1938Newlands, Cape Town

Death and legacy

When away from rugby, Bastard spent his time farming. He eventually moved to a farm in Cedarville, where he lived next door to Una and Peter Young.[3] During this time, Bastard made open advances toward Una, who later left her husband and married Bastard.

One night at a cocktail party, Bastard and Una had taunted Young, who left and waited for Bastard to arrive home from the party. Once Bastard got out of the car,[9] Young shot him point blank in the chest. The Monday newspapers published the news as: "Ebbo Bastard murdered!".[10] Young also was injured in the shooting, but was arrested.[10]

Following Bastard's death, his wife and son, the future journalist and sausage merchant Bill O'Hagan, adopted her maiden name.[11]

Bastard's name is given to the "Ebbo Bastard Trophy", a rugby trophy contested by regional teams in KwaZulu-Natal.[12]

See also

References

  1. "Ebbo Bastard". ESPN. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  2. Baker, Dr Douglas (2014). "Bernard Notcutt". War, Wine and Valour: Five years fighting the Nazis. eBooks Publishing. ISBN 978-1625690357.
  3. 1 2 3 4 McKinney, Stewart (2011). "Journalist and purveyor of fine sausages". Voices from the Back of the Bus: Tall Tales and Hoary Stories from Rugby's Real Heroes. Random House. ISBN 978-1907195815.
  4. "A quiet start to the tour ... the riots were to follow". ESPN. 1 October 2008. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  5. "Africa's Test". Evening Star. 6 September 1937. Retrieved 5 January 2019 via National Library of New Zealand.
  6. 1 2 3 Opus Media (2015). The Official Springbok Opus. Bookbaby. ISBN 978-0993387838.
  7. 1 2 van der Berg, Wim (2012). "Unfortunate surname". The Extraordinary Book of South African Rugby. Penguin Random House South Africa. ISBN 978-0143529170.
  8. "Wind in the willows". Iol. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  9. "14 Feb 1949 – Former Rugby Star Shot". National Library of Australia. 14 February 1949. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  10. 1 2 "A Life Changing Bullet". The Witness. Retrieved 3 January 2019 via PressReader.com.
  11. "Bill O'Hagan". The Daily Telegraph. 16 May 2013. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  12. "Ebbo Bastard Trophy on the table again". News24. 28 August 2008. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
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