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Ian Millward
Personal information
Born 22 August 1960 (1960-08-22) (age 49)
Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
Coaching information
Club
Years Team Gms W D L W%
1998–00 Leigh Centurions
2000–05 St Helens RLFC 95 71 2 22 75
2005–06 Wigan Warriors 12 3 0 9 25
2008 North Queensland 14 2 0 12 14
Total 121 76 2 43 63
Source: RLP

Ian Millward (born 22 August, 1960), is an Australian rugby league coach and former player. Ian is currently assistant at Canberra Raiders in the NRL but will take the head coach job at Championship side Leigh Centurions from 2010

Millward is the former head coach of Wigan Warriors, St Helens RLFC and Leigh Centurions. He was in charge at Wigan from May 2005, his appointment coming just two weeks after an acrimonious departure from the club's fiercest rivals, St Helens. He was sacked by Wigan on 11 April, 2006 for their poor start to the Super League XI season - having won just one of eight league games. In October 2006 he returned to Australia.

[edit] Biography

Millward was born in Wollongong, New South Wales, and played rugby league for Illawarra Steelers lower grades in his youth, after impressing for the state's schoolboys team. His hopes of a successful playing career were ended, however, when he was forced to retire in 1983 after suffering a serious neck injury.[citation needed]

He turned to coaching, taking up a position with Illawarra Western Suburbs. He also had spells with Wollongong University and as an assistant coach with the Steelers. His first senior appointment came in 1998 when he took charge of struggling English side Leigh Centurions, who had then come close to relegation to the game's third tier. He soon transformed the Centurions from relegation candidates to promotion contenders, catching the eye of a number of Super League clubs in the process. He moved to St Helens after the sacking of Ellery Hanley in 2000.

Under Millward, St Helens retained their Super League title in 2000 and won it again in 2002. They also won the Challenge Cup in 2001 and 2004 and the World Club Challenge in 2001. In 2001 Millward was named Super League Coach of the Year.

His time there was not without controversy, however. His decision to field an under-strength side, due, he said, to injuries, in a Super League match against Bradford Bulls, just a week before the Challenge Cup final backfired badly. The move incurred the wrath of the game's authorities and St Helens were beaten in the final, when all the injured players returned, by Wigan.[citation needed]

He repeated the trick in another match against Bradford over Easter 2004, claiming a heavy fixture burden had taken its toll. St Helens were well beaten in the game at Odsal and the fall-out overshadowed the rest of the club's season. It later emerged that two St Helens players, Sean Long and Martin Gleeson, had bet on their side to lose before the team was announced. Both were later banned and the Rugby Football League (RFL) tightened up rules by insisting squads had to be named 72 hours in advance.[citation needed]

Millward's St Helens career also ended controversially after he was suspended pending a disciplinary hearing in May 2005. He was sacked for gross misconduct a week later, his offences including three incidences of foul and abusive language: to a club employee, the Warrington Wolves' press officer and a fourth official at a match against Bradford. St Helens also claimed that Millward lied to an RFL disciplinary hearing and distorted the truth about the club's sale of Gleeson to Warrington in 2004.[citation needed]

Within a fortnight, Millward was at Wigan as head coach above Denis Betts.[citation needed] He had a difficult start with the Warriors, losing a Super League match 70-0 to Leeds and, more humiliatingly, a Challenge Cup tie at St Helens 75-0. Wigan ended the season seventh in the Super League, missing out on the play-offs for the first time in the competition and club's history.

After a disastrous start to the 2006 Super League, Ian Millward was relieved of his duties as head coach of Wigan Warriors on 11 April, 2006. During this time, a combination of poor performances and injuries to key players had seen the Wigan Warriors slump to bottom of the engage Super League. The Warriors had won just one of eight league games. The club issued this statement:

"Following a meeting of the board of directors the Wigan club can confirm that head coach Ian Millward has been dismissed with immediate effect. Ian will be leaving the club and team affairs will be managed in the short term by the assistant coaches Stuart Wilkinson and Andrew Farrar." He was replaced the following week by then Bradford Bulls coach, Brian Noble.[citation needed]

Ian Millward enjoyed some time away from rugby league after being sacked by Wigan but later in 2006 he returned to the club where he started his English coaching career to become coaching co-ordinator at National League 1 side Leigh Centurions. Millward also worked as a co-presenter on rugby league matches shown on Sky Sports or BBC.[citation needed]

In 2007 Millward was appointed the assistant coach at National Rugby League side North Queensland Cowboys.[1] After Graham Murray resigned in May 2008, Millward took over as a head coach for the remainder of the season.[2]

Millward was appointed as assistant coach to David Furner at the Canberra Raiders on a two-year contract from 2009.[3]

On 30 June 2009 it was announced that Ian would be re-joining Championship side Leigh Centurions in England from 2010. Ian has signed a three-year contract after Canberra agreed to release Ian from his current contract.[4]

[edit] External links

[edit] References

Preceded by
Denis Betts
Coach
Wigan Warriors

2005-2006
Succeeded by
Brian Noble
Preceded by
Ellery Hanley
Coach
St Helens RLFC

2000-2005
Succeeded by
Daniel Anderson
Preceded by
Graham Murray
Coach
North Queensland Cowboys

2008
Succeeded by
Neil Henry



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