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・ Steve Walford
・ Steve Walker
・ Steve Walker (soccer)
・ Steve Walklate
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・ Steve Wallace
・ Steve Wallace (American football)
・ Steve Wallace (racing driver)
・ Steve Wallach
・ Steve Waller
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・ Steve Walsh (musician)
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Steve Walters
・ Steve Walters (footballer)
・ Steve Walters (rugby league played 1988)
・ Steve Walwyn
・ Steve Wang
・ Steve Wapnick
・ Steve Ward
・ Steve Ward (businessman)
・ Steve Ward (Colorado legislator)
・ Steve Ward (computer scientist)
・ Steve Ward (ice hockey)
・ Steve Wariner
・ Steve Wariner (album)
・ Steve Wariner discography
・ Steve Warne


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Steve Walters : ウィキペディア英語版
Steve Walters

Steve Walters (born in Ipswich, Queensland) is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer of the 1980s and '90s who at the peak of his career was considered the best hooker in the game. An Australian Kangaroos and Queensland Maroons representative, he played in the Canberra Raiders' 1st, 2nd and 3rd grand final victories. Steve is the eldest of the three Walters brothers, but was the last of them to gain Australian Test selection honours.
==Playing career==

After playing in the Ipswich Rugby League for the Booval Swifts club where his brothers Kevin and Kerrod also played, Walters joined the Brisbane Rugby League premiership and played for the Norths Devils club. He then moved to play in the New South Wales Rugby League premiership for the Canberra Raiders and achieved back-to-back grand final wins in 1989 and 1990. In the 1989 post season he travelled with the Raiders to England for the 1989 World Club Challenge, playing at hooker in the loss to Widnes.
Test selection came belatedly to Walters in the 1991 Trans-Tasman Test series. But this was at the expense of his brother Kerrod who lost his representative position due to being suspended. Steve Walters out-pointed New South Wales captain Ben Elias on the scores of consistency and reliability in the open and was one of Australia's best players in the series win against the Kiwis. He was also named man-of-the-match in the second game of the 1991 State of Origin series. Despite Canberra's loss in that year's grand final, Walters was named the Raiders' player of the year and also earned a place on the Australian Tour of Papua New Guinea, but did not play a match as he was injured at training.
During the 1992 Great Britain Lions tour of Australia and New Zealand, Walters helped Australia retain The Ashes. The Walters brothers had already become the first trio to play for Queensland and Australia when, that year, they achieved another milestone when all three were selected to tour with the winning World Cup squad. In 1993 Walters was named as ''Rugby League Weeks player of the year.
Canberra's win in the 1994 grand final, and Walters' performances for Queensland and Australia, confirmed his reputation as the best dummy-half runner in the world. Despite the good form of Ben Elias in New South Wales' State of Origin wins in 1993–94, Walters retained his place on the 1994 Kangaroo tour and produced a man-of-the-match effort in the deciding Test of the Ashes series.
After a decade with the Raiders, Walters joined former coach Tim Sheens at the North Queensland Cowboys but despite representing Queensland and Australia during 1997's Super League competition, his two seasons at Townsville were hampered by a career-threatening back injury.
In the 1997 post season, Walters was selected to play for Australia at hooker in all three matches of the Super League Test series against Great Britain.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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