Peter Mulholland

Peter Mulholland
Personal information
Nickname Skull
Born Camden, New South Wales, Australia
Coaching information
Club
Years Team Gms W D L W%
199596 Western Reds 43 17 1 25 40
1997 Paris Saint-Germain 11 2 0 9 18
Total 54 19 1 34 35
Source: Rugby League Project

Peter Mulholland is an Australian[1] former rugby league football coach and has been appointed recruitment manager of the NRL's Canberra Raiders for 2016.[2] He coached ARL premiership expansion club Western Reds in their first two seasons before moving to France to take up the coaching position of Super League expansion team, Paris Saint-Germain. Before moving to the Bulldogs, Mulholland was Assistant Coach from 1999–2001 and Director of Recruitment (2002–2008) at the Penrith Panthers.

Playing career

A clever hooker with an uncanny knack for winning scrum possession, Mulholland had a brief stint for the Canterbury-Bankstown club in 1973. Playing in the Group 6 Rugby League competition, Mulholland had stints at Camden Rams RLFC, Oakdale Workers RLFC, Campbelltown City Kangaroos RLFC and Narellan Jets RLFC. Mulholland was instrumental in the Camden Rams 1978 Group 6 premiership victory over the Campbelltown RSL Warriors.

Schoolboy Coaching Career

While playing in Group 6, Mulholland cut his coaching teeth under the watchful eye of Brother Silverius at St Gregory's College, Campbelltown. Over a period of 14 years from 1979–1993, Mulholland would establish 'St Gregs' as Australia's pre-eminent Rugby League school. Indeed, St Gregory's Campbelltown still hold the record for national schoolboy Rugby League championships with 9 title victories.

Peter Mulholland Schoolboy Rugby League Coaching Record

Mulholland is still regarded as the doyen of schoolboy Rugby League coaches. St Gregs has waned as a schoolboy Rugby League power since 1993. So immediate was the effect of Mulholland's departure upon the school's fortunes, St Gregory's were defeated by local minnows Eaglevale High in the 1st Round of the 1994 Commonwealth Bank Cup, despite boasting a team studded with future NRL players like Trent Barrett, Peter Cusack, Simon Bonnetti, Trent Robinson and Russell Richardson.

Schoolboy Players Coached

During his tenure as Head Coach of St Gregory's 1st XIII, Mulholland coached future NSWRL stars like Jason Taylor, Ivan Henjak and Michael Potter. Mulholland also oversaw the development of many future 1st Graders like Matt Fuller, Michael Francis, Wayne Evans, Tim Horan, Damien Chapman.

Grade coaching career

Mulholland's unrivalled success as a schoolboy mentor soon brought him to the attention of Sydney clubs competing in the NSWRL. Having fielded offers from Canterbury and Parramatta, Mulholland decided to stay local and assume the reins of the Western Suburbs Magpies U-21 team for the 1988 season, under head coach Laurie Freier.

Mulholland would coach lower grades with the Magpies until the end of the 1992 season, achieving mixed success.

Mulholland was poached by the North Sydney Bears to coach that club's Reserve Grade team for the 1993 season. Mulholland would take the next step with this team, winning the 1993 NSWRL Reserve Grade premiership with a narrow 5-4 victory over an Andrew Johns-led Newcastle Knights team.

The Western Reds

At the conclusion of the 1992 season, the NSWRL announced its intention to admit three new clubs to the 1st Grade competition for 1995- the Western Reds, South Queensland Crushers and North Queensland Cowboys.

Mulholland was soon head-hunted by Reds CEO Gordon Allen to be the Western Reds foundation coach. Agreeing to terms midway through the 1993 season, Mulholland launched an audacious recruitment drive, luring Australian Kangaroos Brad Mackay and Mark Geyer to the golden west. With All Black test centre Craig Innes, Norwich Rising Star Matthew Rodwell and emerging test prop Rodney Howe in the depth chart, the Reds set a strong base for their debut season.

The Western Reds would win their first ever ARL match with a 28-16 victory over the St George Dragons in front of a sellout crowd at the WACA Ground. Ironically, former St Gregs prodigy Matt Fuller would score the Reds first try. Mulholland would make the famous quote post match: "we had 18 months to prepare for this game. Now we only have 7 days to prepare for the next." The Skull's words would come back to haunt him in Newcastle a week later when David Waite's Knights buckled the Reds by 48-6, in a battle of the schoolboy master coaches.

Recruitment Manager

Mulholland worked for NRL team, the Penrith Panthers during the period when they won the 2003 NRL Premiership. He started working for the Bulldogs' coaching staff in 2008. In August 2010 it was reported that Mulholland would be leaving Canterbury-Bankstown to spend the 2011 NRL season working as Wayne Bennett's recruitment manager when he moved to Nathan Tinkler's newly acquired Newcastle Knights.[3] He has been recruitment manager at the St. George-Illawarra Dragons during 2014-2015 and is joining the Canberra Raiders in that capacity for the 2016 NRL season.[4]

References

  1. Hadfield, Dave (1997-05-08). "Mulholland pays for the failure of Paris". Independent, The. Retrieved 2009-05-12.
  2. Harris, Bret & Read, Brent (2009-03-11). "NRL shows interest in Beale". Rugby Times. Retrieved 2009-05-12.
  3. AAP (19 August 2011). "Peter Mulholland joins NRL Knights". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  4. Rugby League Week. 15/10/2015
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