Joe Mbu

Joe Mbu (born 11 November 1983), also known by the nickname of "Big Joe", is a Zairean former professional rugby league footballer and coach. Mbu played for the London Broncos/Harlequins RL in the Super League.[1] He is a former coach of the London Skolars.[2]

Joe Mbu
Personal information
Full nameJoseph Mbu
Born (1983-11-11) 11 November 1983
Zaire
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Weight15 st 0 lb (95 kg)
Playing information
PositionSecond-row
Club
Years Team Pld T G FG P
2003–09 London Broncos/Harlequins RL 101 7 0 0 28
2007 Doncaster 10 2 0 0 8
2009–11 London Skolars 10 1 0 0 4
Total 121 10 0 0 40
As of 5 October 2010
Source: [1][2]

Playing career

Joe Mbu's usual position was second-row. He also operated on the loose forward, and prop positions.

He was a product of the London Broncos academy setup, having played his early rugby league at the London Skolars. As a teenager Mbu also played rugby union as well, playing for an extremely successful Finchley RFC youth team in North London.

In 2002, Joe was loaned out by the London Broncos to the Huddersfield Giants to gain experience in their Senior Academy side. He started the 2003 season with a similar loan-out at Leeds Rhinos before being recalled to the London Broncos to make his Super League début.

Mbu played in the Super League for the London Broncos/Harlequins RL from 2003 to 2006. He became a crowd favourite amongst the London Broncos fans for his solid and dependable performances for the club.

Mbu joined the National League One team Doncaster for the 2007 season and was appointed captain.

He rejoined the renamed Harequins RL midway through the 2007 season due to Doncaster's financial difficulties.[3] He remained at the Harequins RL before retiring at the end of the 2009 season.

Coaching career

After retirement, Mbu coached London Skolars Under 16s in 2010. The team finished bottom of the table after winning only two games.

In October 2010 London Skolars appointed Joe Mbu as their head coach.[4] now coaches Staines RFC June 2014

He has coached Nigeria.[5]

gollark: We already have neural networks optimizing parameters for other neural networks, and machine learning systems are able to beat humans at quite a few tasks already with what's arguably blind pattern-matching.
gollark: One interesting (story-wise) path AI could go down is that we continue with what seems to be the current strategy - blindly evolving stuff without a huge amount of intentional design - and eventually reach human-or-better performance on a lot of tasks (including somewhat general-intelligency ones), while working utterly incomprehensibly to humans.I was going to say this after the very short discussion about ad revenue maximizers but left this half written and forgot.
gollark: And probably isn't smart enough to think very long-term, and isn't in charge of demonetization and stuff.
gollark: Which would be very bad.
gollark: An ad revenue maximizer.

References

  1. "Statistics at rugbyleagueproject.org". rugbyleagueproject.org. 31 December 2017. Retrieved 1 January 2018.
  2. "Coach Statistics at rugbyleagueproject.org". rugbyleagueproject.org. 31 December 2017. Retrieved 1 January 2018.
  3. Forward Mbu returns to Harlequins BBC Sport, 22 May 2007
  4. Joe Mbu Takes The Reins At Skolars London Slol ars, 5 October 2010
  5. "Meet Elliot Wallis - The explosive Hull KR winger called up by new Nigerian national team". Daily Mirror. 4 September 2019. Retrieved 1 November 2019.


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