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Ian Heads OAM (born 15 February 1943) is an Australian historian, journalist, commentator and author. He is described as "Australia's foremost rugby league historian" by the National Museum of Australia.[1] 

Ian Heads
Heads in 2015
BornIan John Heads
(1943-02-15) 15 February 1943 (age 79)
Rose Bay, Sydney, Australia
Occupationhistorian, journalist, author, sportswriter
LanguageEnglish
EducationSydney Boys High
Website
www.ianheads.com.au

In the reconstruction period following World War II sport was exceptionally prominent in Australian society. Like many of his contemporaries, Heads was a sports-mad preteen and teenager. After completing high school he began work as a copy boy in the early 1960s for the Sydney Daily Telegraph, but soon rose through the ranks to become the main journalist covering rugby league for most of his long career. He also spent some years as editor of the magazine Rugby League Week.

He has written more than 50 books, mostly on rugby league personalities, but also significant books on other sports, and some books of general interest. He has also written a comprehensive history of Australian sport since 1788, histories of rugby league in general, and chronicles of several sporting clubs.

Most of his sport articles and reports on events such as the Olympic Games, Kangaroo and Rugby League World Cup, national and international swimming, Davis Cup and international tennis have been in newspapers and magazines. He has also contributed to other works in collaboration with David Middleton, Gary Lester, Norman Tasker and Geoff Armstrong.


Early life and formative experiences


Ian John Heads was born on 15 February 1943 in Rose Bay, a suburb of Sydney. It was the midst of World War II. He was brought up during the war and in the postwar reconstruction years, a period of recovery, rationing and deprivation. His father, Flight Lieutenant George Heads of the Royal Australian Air Force, was killed in action. His plane crashed over Milne Bay New Guinea on 7 June 1944 while transporting supplies to the troops fighting the Japanese.[2]:22–30/474

In his semi-autobiographical essay "The Accidental Sportswriter", Heads describes how, fathered by his uncles, Ken and Cecil Appleton, the seven-year-old was taken to the Sydney Cricket Ground to watch the deciding test match of the 1950 rugby league "Ashes". To the great joy of the spectators, Australia defeated Great Britain, the first win they had had for 30 years. In this match, Heads witnessed the famous try by Ron Roberts, described as "arguably the most famous try in Australian rugby league history". He recalled the day as an inspiring and memorable event in his young life.[2]

Dave Sands, the indigenous middleweight boxing champion, was a motivating hero to the sports-mad teenager in the years up to Sands' early death on 12 August 1952. The death affected Heads deeply.[2]

In 1951 his uncle Cecil Appleton took his eight-year-old nephew to the Davis Cup, Australia versus America, when the Australian tennis player Frank Sedgman defeated Vic Seixas in the deciding match. When he was thirteen years of age another significant contribution to Ian Heads' sporting orientation occurred. At great financial sacrifice by his mother, he travelled by bus from Sydney to Melbourne for the 1956 Olympic Games. Heads attended Sydney Boys High School where he gained his Leaving Certificate at the end of 1960.[2]


Career


Ian Heads began his sports journalistic career at the Daily Telegraph in the early 1960s. In 1970 he joined the newly established Rugby League Week, a successful magazine which at one stage sold 90,000 copies of each issue. From 1981 to 1987 he occupied the position of editor, a challenge in which he was most successful.[3]

In 2008 he attended the Olympic Games in Beijing in China as editor of A.S.P.I.R.E., the official newsletter of the Australian olympic team. A.S.P.I.R.E. was published daily for the duration of the games.[4]


Honours



Published books


    --- The South Sydney (Rabbitohs) is an original rugby league club which in one era was almost rubbed out of existence.

    --- Jack Gibson was renowned as an Australian Rugby league player and "super" coach. He is credited with bringing rugby league from semi-professionalism to professionalism with innovative training methods.

    --- Sterling was a distinguished rugby league footballer and later a commentator and television personality.

    --- Wayne Pearce played rugby league for the Balmain Tigers and representative matches. He later became a coach and made a positive contribution to rugby league politics during turbulent times.

    --- Mike Whitney is a former cricketer and television personality.

    --- Benny Elias is a Lebanese-born Australian who played rugby league for the Balmain Tigers.

    --- Frank Hyde was an Australian rugby league footballer, coach and radio caller.

    --- Mark Taylor is a former Australian cricketer, Cricket Australia director and television commentator.

    --- Noel Kelly played rugby league for Western Suburbs Magpies, Queensland and Australia.

    --- Ken Arthurson was a player, coach and later an administrator at the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles. He later ran the New South Wales Rugby League, and then the Australian Rugby League during the 1990s' Super League war.                      

    --- Des Renford was an Australian athlete, who took up marathon swimming at the age of 39, and who swam the English Channel 19 times from 19 attempts.

    --- Ian Thorpe is an Australian swimmer who won five Olympic Gold Medals.

    --- Louise Sauvage is regarded as the most renowned disabled sportswoman in Australia.

    --- Paul Featherstone is an ambulance paramedic who has been involved in rescue missions following the Thredbo disaster, the Granville Train Disaster, the Bali Bombings, and the Beaconsfield Mine Rescue.

    --- Arthur Beetson was a Legendary rugby league player and coach. He was the first Indigenous Australian to captain Australia in any sport.                             

    --- Matt Burke played in 23 test matches for the Rugby Union Wallabies and then switched to playing Rugby League. Post football he became a volunteer lifeguard, often appearing on Bondi Rescue.

    --- Betty Cuthbert, known as the "Golden Girl", was an Australian athlete and was a four-time Olympic champion.

    --- Ken Sutcliffe was an Australian sporting journalist and radio and television personality.

    ---The story of Richie Benaud, the Australian cricketer and commentator.[10][11]


References


  1. National Museum, of Australia (2008). League of Legends: 100 years of Rugby League in Australia. Canberra: National Museum of Australia Press. p. 41. ISBN 9781876944643.
  2. Heads, Ian; Tasker, Norman (2019). "The accidental sportswriter" in Great Australian Sporting Stories (eBook ed.). Sydney: PanMacmillan. ISBN 9781760789114.
  3. "Rugby League Week closes: Former RLW editor Ian Heads farewells the iconic magazine". Fox Sports. 9 March 2017.
  4. Heads, Ian, editor, ASPIRE, the official newsletter of the Australian olympic team, Beijing, China, 8 August 2008
  5. Coates, John, Certificate of Appreciation to Ian Heads, issued by the Australian Olympic Committee on 1 April 2005
  6. Document of Award, from Governor-General Quentin Bryce, date of issue: 26 January 2010
  7. Commission, Australian Sports Commission; jurisdiction - Commonwealth of Australia; corporate name - Australian Sports. "Previous winners". Sport Australia. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  8. "Honouring the Past, Inspiring the Future". SCG Media Hall of Honour. Sydney Cricket Ground Trust. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  9. "Lifetime Achievement Awards" (PDF). The Kennedy Awards. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  10. "Books by Ian Heads (Author of The Night the Music Died )". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 15 September 2022.
  11. "Contributor -Ian Heads". Pan Macmillan Australia. Retrieved 15 September 2022.



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