Jump to Main ContentJump to Primary Navigation
leicestertigers.comMattioli Woods Welford RoadContact UsTopps Tiles
Club News

Hall of Fame | A legend and leader by example

Figure image

A giant of the game in every sense, Martin Johnson spent his entire professional club career at Leicester Tigers, winning every prize in rugby, and is now among the inaugural inductees to the club’s Hall of Fame.

England’s Rugby World Cup-winning captain and twice leader of the Lions, Johnson’s place in history is assured at the very highest level, but his achievements in international colours still do not diminish his stature in Tigers colours.

Born in Solihull, but more closely associated with Leicester, Johnson’s feats in rugby stand comparison with anyone in the sport’s history.

After playing junior rugby at Wigston, Martin joined the youth team at Tigers and gained England 18-Group selection in 1987. He then had a spell in New Zealand in 1989, playing so well at King Country that he earned a call-up to the national colts’ team.

He was not about to be lost to the English cause, though, returning to make his Leicester debut in a fixture against the Royal Air Force in February 1989 and launching the phenomenon that became ‘Johnno’.

At that stage, he combined a career at Midland Bank with his rugby, making his way through the ranks as a generation of John Player Cup winners reached the end of their playing days and a new breed – led by the likes of Johnson, Graham Rowntree and Matt Poole – emerged from the Tigers youth team alongside key signings of similar age and experience in Neil Back, Darren Garforth and Richard Cockerill.

By 1991/92, he was firmly established in the team alongside fellow tyros and they celebrated their first silverware a year later with a win over Harlequins in the Cup when Johnson scored the crucial second try at Twickenham.

The league title followed in 1994/95 but that was a mere taster of what was to follow as the team matured together.

As the game entered the open era, Tigers won four successive league titles from 1999 and back-to-back European Cups in 2001 and ’02 with Johnson as captain and former incumbent Dean Richards as director of rugby.

Johnno was a fixture in the second row, first with Poole and later with fellow World Cup winner Ben Kay until his retirement in 2005 after 361 games for Tigers, putting him 13th on the club’s all-time appearance list, a remarkable number for a man who also played so many games at Test level.

His younger brother Will, a versatile back-row unlucky with injury, topped 200 appearances for the club in the same era, while mum and dad Hilary and David acted as houseparents for young arrivals at the club, including an unknown Irish teenager Geordan Murphy.

At 6ft 7in tall, Johnson was an uncompromising presence in the engine room of the forward pack but he was also an athlete with a sharp rugby brain.

“When all the statistics have been recorded, it was his presence that made him a truly great player,” wrote David Hands in the pages of the Tigers History Book.

“His physical presence as a lock, but also his mental presence, his ability to control the ebb and flow of a game, to intimidate not only opponents but his own players with a look or a word.”

It was a point of honour, too, that Johnson’s effectiveness was identical in any game for club or country, no matter what was at stake. Taking a back-seat was never his style.

After age-group honours, he made his England debut against France in the 1993 Five Nations at just 24 hours’ notice and just five months later he joined the Lions squad in New Zealand.

Johnson quickly became an automatic selection at the highest level.

He was a Grand Slam winner in 1995 and again in 2003, played in 10 Home Nations Championships, winning five, and then in 2003 provided inspirational leadership as England celebrated Rugby World Cup victory in Australia. He was made a CBE in the honour’s list that year.

Johnson also became the first man to captain the British & Irish tourists in two Test series.

After his playing retirement, the RFU appointed him as England team manager in 2008, winning the Six Nations in 2011, the same year he was inducted into the World Rugby Hall of Fame.

Martin is also a life member of Tigers where a life-sized portrait hangs at the main entrance to Mattioli Woods Welford Road, marking the home turf of a genuine rugby legend.