Stephanie White de Goede

Stephanie White was the first captain of the Canada women's national rugby union team in 1987, co-captained the national team at the first Women's Rugby World Cup in 1991, captained the team at the second World Cup in 1994,[1] and also captained the first participating Canada women's national rugby sevens team in the Hong Kong Sevens invitational tournament in 1997.[2]

Stephanie White de Goede
SpouseHans de Goede
ChildrenSophie de Goede
Thyssen de Goede
Jacobus de Goede
Rugby union career
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1987-1997 Canada 17
National sevens team(s)
Years Team Comps
1997 Canada

Rugby career

Between 1987 and 1997, she earned a total of 17 caps for the national team. She also served her community by building women's rugby in Canada alongside being a director of the Alberta Women's Rugby Union and a director of Women's Rugby on the Board of Directors for Alberta Rugby Football Union in the late 1980s. She also sat on the British Columbia Rugby Union Board of Directors, bringing the West Coast Women's Rugby Association into the BCRU in the early 2000s. As well, White was the Women's Players representative at the Rugby Canada Strategic Planning session in 1996 and served on the Rugby Canada Board of Directors from 2007–2013. White is also the Chairperson of the Monty Heald Fund which aimed to eliminate Pay to play for the senior women's team.[3]

Honours

She is recognized in the player category as a 2018 inductee of the Rugby Canada Hall of Fame alongside Ruth Hellerud-Brown (builder) and Maria Gallo (player). In 2017, she was given an Honorary Life Member award at the 2017 Rugby Canada Hall of Fame.[4]

Personal

Her husband Hans de Goede and their children, Sophie and Thyssen, have represented Canada at the national level. Her 2nd son Jacobus also plays rugby.[5][1]

gollark: It would of course still contain TOML.
gollark: What do you want me to do instead, use Nim‽
gollark: It probably has linked lists in it.
gollark: I REFUSE to use C-based parsing code.
gollark: (I jest, it would of course use some nice binary protocol over unix domain sockets)

References


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