Lars Morrice

Lars Morrice is a rugby union player who plays for the Ayrshire Bulls and Glasgow Warriors. His usual position is at the Lock position.[1] Morrice was born in New Zealand but is Scottish-qualified.[2]

Lars Morrice
Birth nameLars Morrice
Date of birthc. 1996
Place of birthNew Zealand
Height6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
Weight115 kg (18 st 2 lb)
UniversityUniversity of Waikato
Rugby union career
Position(s) Lock
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)

2016
2018-
Te Puke Sports
Hong Kong Scottish
Ayr
()
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
2019- Glasgow Warriors ()
Provincial / State sides
Years Team Apps (Points)
- Bay of Plenty Steamers ()
Super Rugby
Years Team Apps (Points)
- Chiefs ()

Rugby Union career

Amateur career

Morrice played for Te Puke Sports Club in the Bay of Plenty province in New Zealand.[3]

As part of a deal between the Chiefs and the Hong Kong side, Morrice played for Hong Kong Scottish.[4]

Morrice joined Ayr in November 2018.[5] In the 2018-19 Ayr won the Scottish Premiership and the Scottish Cup.[6]

Ayr now play in the Super 6 league as the Ayrshire Bulls. Ayr's Head Coach Peter Murchie stated: "It is great news that Lars is signed up for the Ayrshire Bulls. Lars made a big impact for Ayr RFC last season and it is great to see another Scottish-qualified talent want to stay in Scotland.

"Lars is training with Glasgow Warriors at the moment, which is great for his development and I am sure we will see the benefits of that this coming season."[7]

Professional career

After impressing at Te Puke, Morrice played for Bay of Plenty Steamers.[4]

While with the Steamers, Morrice was signed to the Chiefs development squad.[3]

Morrice joined Glasgow Warriors in the 2019-20 preseason; having trained with club over the summer.[4][8]

He made his debut for Glasgow Warriors against Ulster Rugby on 7 September 2019, coming off the bench in a pre-season match at the Kingspan Stadium. Ulster won the match 50 - 19.[9]

Outside of rugby

Morrice has a Bachelor of Business Analysis from the University of Waikato.[10]

gollark: Er, my point is that there are bad things they can do with it which don't necessarily involve selling it to other companies.
gollark: Google also had that whole thing with tracking locations even when that was disabled.
gollark: So you're just hoping that evil governments will also be incompetent?
gollark: Also, you live in Turkey, which has a kind of evil government, right? If Google cooperated with them, they could probably use that data to track down and/or identify dissidents.
gollark: I think they already use location data to "help" investigate crimes, in ways which tend to implicate innocent people randomly.

References

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