Jump to content

Tony O'Reilly: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
D6 (talk | contribs)
data from IRFU site, plus reorganisation
Line 2: Line 2:


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
Tony O'Reilly was born in Dublin. He was educated at [[Belvedere College]] and went on to study law at [[University College, Dublin]]. An excellent [[rugby union]] player, he played for [[Leicester Tigers]] and [[London Irish]] in England. He gained 28 caps for [[Ireland national rugby union team|Ireland]] between [[1955]] and [[1963]], with a surprise 29th cap in [[1970]]. He also toured twice with the [[British Lions]], in 1955 to [[South Africa]] and in [[1959]] to [[Australia]] and [[New Zealand]].
Tony O'Reilly was born in Dublin. He was educated at [[Belvedere College]] and went on to study law at [[University College, Dublin]].

===Rugby Union===

An excellent [[rugby union]] player, he played for [[Leicester Tigers]] and [[London Irish]] in England. He made his international debut as an 18 year old in the centre against France on 22nd January 1955 and went on to gained 28 caps for [[Ireland national rugby union team|Ireland]] between [[1955]] and [[1963]], with a surprise 29th cap in [[1970]] against England at Twickenham.

He also toured twice with the [[British Lions]], in 1955 to [[South Africa]] and in [[1959]] to [[Australia]] and [[New Zealand]]. In 1955 he was the youngest player to earn Lions selection at 19 years of age. O'Reilly made his test debut on the right wing before a then world record crowd of 95,000, at [[Ellis Park]], Johannesburg on 6th August 1955. He scored a try in the Lions 23-22 victory. He played in all four tests and scored a try in the fourth in a series that was drawn 2-2. He scored a record 16 tries in all games on the tour.

In 1959 and he played in all six tests, two against Australia and four against New Zeland. He scored tries in the two test wins against Australia and in the first and fourth tests against New Zealand, thus bringing his total to a Lion's record of six in test matches. He also set a try scoring record on that tour by scoring 22 tries. His total of 38 tries for the Lions on two tours, set a mark that has not been equalled.

He is a member of the [[IRFU]] Commercial Committee.

===Business===


He went to work for a consultancy company and then an Irish firm selling agricultural products. He joined ''An Bord Bainne'' (the Irish Dairy Board) in 1962 as CEO, where he developed the ''[[Kerrygold]]'' brand. In 1966 he became head of the [[Irish Sugar Company]].
He went to work for a consultancy company and then an Irish firm selling agricultural products. He joined ''An Bord Bainne'' (the Irish Dairy Board) in 1962 as CEO, where he developed the ''[[Kerrygold]]'' brand. In 1966 he became head of the [[Irish Sugar Company]].

Revision as of 13:57, 7 February 2006

Sir Anthony Joseph Francis "Tony" O'Reilly (born 7 May 1936) is an Irish businessman and one of the richest men in Ireland. He is most well known through his chairmanship of the Dublin-based Independent News & Media Group (INM), but was also previously an international rugby union player.

Biography

Tony O'Reilly was born in Dublin. He was educated at Belvedere College and went on to study law at University College, Dublin.

Rugby Union

An excellent rugby union player, he played for Leicester Tigers and London Irish in England. He made his international debut as an 18 year old in the centre against France on 22nd January 1955 and went on to gained 28 caps for Ireland between 1955 and 1963, with a surprise 29th cap in 1970 against England at Twickenham.

He also toured twice with the British Lions, in 1955 to South Africa and in 1959 to Australia and New Zealand. In 1955 he was the youngest player to earn Lions selection at 19 years of age. O'Reilly made his test debut on the right wing before a then world record crowd of 95,000, at Ellis Park, Johannesburg on 6th August 1955. He scored a try in the Lions 23-22 victory. He played in all four tests and scored a try in the fourth in a series that was drawn 2-2. He scored a record 16 tries in all games on the tour.

In 1959 and he played in all six tests, two against Australia and four against New Zeland. He scored tries in the two test wins against Australia and in the first and fourth tests against New Zealand, thus bringing his total to a Lion's record of six in test matches. He also set a try scoring record on that tour by scoring 22 tries. His total of 38 tries for the Lions on two tours, set a mark that has not been equalled.

He is a member of the IRFU Commercial Committee.

Business

He went to work for a consultancy company and then an Irish firm selling agricultural products. He joined An Bord Bainne (the Irish Dairy Board) in 1962 as CEO, where he developed the Kerrygold brand. In 1966 he became head of the Irish Sugar Company.

O'Reilly made his name in international business at H. J. Heinz & Co. He joined the company in 1969 to become MD of the Heinz subsidiary in England. He moved to the company HQ in Pittsburgh in 1971 when he was promoted to Senior Vice President. In 1973, he became COO and President. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Bradford in agricultural marketing in 1980. He continued his rise and became CEO in 1979 and Chairman in 1987 succeeding Henry John Heinz II, the first non-Heinz family member to hold that post. His guidance helped transform the company into an major international competitor, increasing the company's value fifteen fold. O'Reilly left Heinz in 1998 in response to shareholder pressure; he was replaced with William R. Johnson. It is reported that O'Reilly still has a 2% shareholding in Heinz.

O'Reilly had bought into Independent News & Media, a Dublin-based company, in 1973; he currently holds a 29% stake. He pushed the company to expand into other national markets and to increase its reach in Ireland. Throughout the 1990s INM bought into South Africa (from 1994), Australia (from 1987) and New Zealand (from 1995), acquiring 38 newspaper titles, over 70 radio stations, cable and telecoms interests at a cost of around €1.3 billion. In Britain, INM expanded its interests, taking control of the national broadsheet The Independent in 1995, edging out MGN and Prisa. The company has around 200 national and regional titles in total. In 2002 INM had revenues of €1.3 billion and profits of €223.2 million. The group has debts in the region of €1 billion.

O'Reilly also has interests in Fitzwilton, a holding company, with a 40% share in Waterford Wedgewood. He is also part of the Valentia consortium, which bought into Eircom in 2001.

He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in the 2001 New Year's Honours, with the approval of the Irish Government, in recognition for his work as head of The Ireland Funds charity. As O'Reilly is also a British subject due to his pre-1948 Irish birth, he can validly style himself "Sir", as he has done; see British honours system.

He is married to Chryss, Lady O'Reilly (née Goulandris), a Greek shipping heiress.

The O'Reilly Foundation

The O'Reilly Foundation contributes to various projects, with an emphasis on the education sector. The John and Aileen O`Reilly Library in Dublin City University was named in honour of his parents as The O`Reilly Foundation contributed a substantial sum to the libraries capital costs in 2000 - he has also contributed to other university projects in Ireland.

See also