Paul Khan

Paul Khan (born 23 June 1953) is an Australian former rugby league footballer who played in the 1970s and 1980s. He was a state representative for both New South Wales and Queensland with his first grade club career played with the Cronulla Sharks.

Paul Khan
Personal information
Born (1951-06-23) 23 June 1951
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Playing information
PositionProp
Club
Years Team Pld T G FG P
19??–?? Easts (Brisbane)
1974–75 Norths (Brisbane)
1976–77 Castleford
1975–81 Cronulla-Sutherland 120 14 0 0 42
1982–?? Easts (Brisbane)
Total 120 14 0 0 42
Representative
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1973 Queensland 1 0 0 0 0
1978 New South Wales 1 0 0 0 0
1981–82 Queensland Maroons 4 0 0 0 0
As of 15 November 2010
Source: [1][2]
A player who represented both Queensland & NSW

Club & representative career

While playing for Queensland Colts, in 1973 Khan was selected for Queensland in the interstate series against New South Wales. He was graded in 1974 with Brisbane Norths whose coach Tommy Bishop recommended him to the Cronulla Sharks in Sydney where he spent the 1975 season. He had a stint in England with Castleford in 1976-1977 and returned to Cronulla for the 1978 season and played in that year's Grand Final and the Grand Final Replay. He played further seasons with Cronulla up till the end of 1981 totalling 120 appearances for the club. Khan was a major player in the Sharks' 26-5 smashing of Combined Brisbane in the 1979 Amco Cup - Cronulla's only piece of silverware to this point.

The ball-playing Khan returned to Brisbane in 1982 for a season with Brisbane Easts where he was part of the club's 23-15 Winfield State League Final win over Redcliffe at Lang Park. He moved to the John Barber-coached Redcliffe Dolphins the following season where he ended up playing in a losing BRL Grand Final side (Easts beating Redcliffe 14-6).

He was first selected for NSW in 1978 under the residential criteria. In the single 1981 State of Origin match played under the new Origin selection criteria he was one of four New South Wales based players called on by Queensland. He played in all three games of the 1982 series.

He is one of the relatively rare number of players to have represented both Queensland and New South Wales and one of the rare foundation Origin representatives whose NSW appearance was bookended by selections for Queensland.

gollark: I've made my website (static-site-generated), a really slow search engine thing, dice roller, automatic music player thing which just runs from a directory of metadata-tagged music files, a Discord bot for something, Meme Economy Autotrader, a moderately popular browser extension for automating some specific task in an online game, various random "experiments" on my website, a virus for computers in a Minecraft computer mod (and many, many other things for that), and probably other random stuff.
gollark: I do programming myself, but I really only make random projects either for personal use, mild evil, or fun. They're basically all released as open source.
gollark: Also working but very slowly, buggily, inefficiently, badly or whatever else.
gollark: In general, I mean, there's such a thing as technical debt.
gollark: It does matter.

References

  1. Yesterday's Hero Archived 9 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  2. RLP
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