Jimmy Giles

Biography

James Leonard Giles (5 January 1910 – 28 March 1967) was an English international rugby union player. Born and raised in Coventry, Giles was educated at South Street School, from where he gained England Schoolboys representative honours. He joined the Coventry RFC club after finishing school and had several seasons as an understudy to scrum-half Albert Gascoigne, before taking over the position in 1933-34, when his rival switched to rugby league. Giles gained six caps for England playing in the Home Nations between 1935 and 1938, which included two matches in their 1937 triple crown-winning campaign. He took part in the 1938 British Lions tour to South Africa, where he featured in two of the three matches against the Springboks. After appearing in the series opener at Ellis Park, Giles missed the next match, then replaced Basil Nicholson for the final fixture at Newlands, playing out of position at centre. He captained Warwickshire to their historic first County Championship title in 1939.

Bio from Wikipedia

Discography

Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Credited work

63 releases · 11 albums · active 1981–2011

  • Performance · 94

Studios: United Sound Systems · The Disc Ltd. · Criteria Recording Studios · Cloudborn Studios

Frequent collaborators

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