Dee Bradbury

Dee Bradbury is a Scottish former rugby union player. She was the 128th President of the Scottish Rugby Union; the 127th person to hold the office; and was the first woman in that role.[1]

Dee Bradbury
Birth nameDee Bradbury
Place of birthDumbarton, Scotland
ChildrenMagnus Bradbury
Fergus Bradbury
Rugby union career
Position(s) Number Eight
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
- Oban Lorne ()
128th President of the Scottish Rugby Union
In office
2018–2020
Preceded byRob Flockhart
Succeeded byIan Barr

Rugby Union career

Amateur career

Bradbury took up rugby union at the age of 38 after her athletics career finished.[2] Watching the Mull Sevens tournament hooked her on the sport.[3] She helped found the women's team of Oban Lorne and played in the team.[4]

Bradbury stated: "Straight away we all had great fun and I will never forget our first tour to the Amsterdam Sevens when we came up against the Canada national side in our first match! The importance of playing rugby is underpinned by the values of discipline and engagement and those ethics can be applied to everyday life – the ethos of the game very important."[5]

She played for a decade but a neck injury ended her playing career.[5]

Administrative career

She became a President of Oban Lorne.[4]

She was voted a Vice-President of the Scottish Rugby Union in 2016.[6]

Bradbury became the 128th President of the Scottish Rugby Union in 2018. Her term in office was from 2018 to 2020.[1]

The 127th person to be SRU president - John Chiene was the 1st and 5th president - Bradbury was the first female President of the SRU; and the first woman to head a Tier 1 rugby union nation in the world.[7]

Outside of rugby union

Bradbury was a Detective Officer with Police Scotland.[6]

She has an athletics background representing Scotland and Great Britain at junior and masters level.[2]

Family

Bradbury is married with two sons who both play rugby union. Magnus Bradbury is a Scotland international player.[2] Fergus Bradbury plays for the Super 6 side Stirling County.

gollark: You don't. God DOES. They are omnipotent. Definitionally, they can do and can know anything.
gollark: (this is a different argument to "does said god actually exist" obviously, but the evidence there seems to be bad too)
gollark: I don't think they should be all-judging, and I don't think eternal torture is right ever.
gollark: The Islamic god is claimed to be omnipotent, I think. Thus, they know *in advance* if someone is going to go to hell or not when they're created or whatever. And then create them/allow them to be created *anyway*, knowing they're bound for eternal torture because a system they created makes them get eternally tortured. Just... why?
gollark: I consider eternal torture unethical *anyway*, but given the situation with god it's even worse.

References

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