Schooners & Stories

with Gordon Bray

Grab a schooner, pull up a seat, and settle in for a cracking yarn with the one and only Gordon Bray.

Get ready for a laid-back evening at Schooners & Stories, where you’ll hear from the “Voice of Rugby” himself. With over 400 international games under his belt and a lifetime of tales from the sideline to the barstool, Gordon’s got a story (or ten) that’ll have you hooked. So, order at the bar, kick back, and enjoy a yarn with this Aussie Legend.

Where and When

Windsor Hotel, Dalby

Saturday 8 March
6.30–8.30pm

The Windsor Hotel, Dalby

Cost: $20

Ticket includes admission to the presentation. Food and drinks not included. Customers are invited to order meals from the menu.

About our guest speaker

Gordon Bray was renowned throughout Australia for more than four decades as the ‘Voice of Rugby’. He is one of our longest serving sports commentators having started with ABC Sport in 1969 as a specialist trainee. His name is still synonymous with televised rugby union and his distinctive commentary style remains as much a part of the Australian game as a George Gregan tackle or a David Campese goose-step. 

A talented schoolboy scrum-half, Bray spent three seasons in the first XV at Homebush Boys’ High, captaining the side to a premiership in his final year and represented Combined High Schools before joining Eastern Suburbs DRUFC. Later, as an accomplished referee, he was appointed to 199 games by the NSW Rugby Referees Association. Gordon called his first rugby test match on radio for the ABC in Bordeaux in 1976 and is still adamant Australia was robbed of a famous victory over France that day by a tardy Scottish referee who found himself ‘a mile behind the play’. Since then Bray has called more than 400 test matches. In 1980 he succeeded the legendary Norman May as the ABC’s rugby union commentator on television and called every milestone victory by the Wallabies over the next 40 years, including the 1984 Grand Slam and both Rugby World Cup triumphs. He was also at Brighton, England behind the ITV microphone in 2015 when minnow Japan downed two-time World Cup champions South Africa in one of the biggest boilovers in sporting history.

After 25 years with ABC Sport he moved to commercial television and spent 16 years at the Seven Network and 10 years at Ten. Renowned for his versatility, Gordon covered 12 Summer and Winter Olympics after making his Commonwealth Games debut at Christchurch in 1974. Bray is the author and editor of seven books on Rugby Union including best sellers From The Ruck and The Australian Rugby Companion. His latest book The immortals of Australian Rugby Union has gone to a second print run. He was made a Member of the Order of Australia in 2005, is a past recipient of the prestigious Penguin Award for best TV sports presenter, a member of the SCG Media Hall of Honour and is an ambassador for Legacy Australia. Prolific author and newspaper columnist Peter FitzSimons has described Bray as ‘more than a sporting icon, Gordon is no less than the soundtrack of our sporting lives.