Robert Iain Wainwright is a former rugby union football player who was capped 37 times for Scotland and once for the British and Irish Lions.
Background
Wainwright was born in Perth, Scotland, the only son of five children. He was educated at Glenalmond College, where his father Jim was a long-serving teacher and former Warden (Headmaster), and read medicine at Magdalene College, Cambridge on an Army bursary.
Career
He played flanker. While at Cambridge he earned full blues in rugby and boxing. He received his first cap in 1992, as a reserve against Ireland. He could play all back row positions, including flanker and number 8.
Wainwright came to prominence in the 1994 Five Nations Championship with a try against England, and also scored a try against France in the final pool match of the 1995 Rugby World Cup.
He became Scotland"s first professional Captain following the retirement of Gavin Hastings after the Rugby World Cup in 1995, and led Scotland to a surprise second place behind England in the 1996 Five Nations Championship. Richard Bath wrote of him that he had a
"quiet and urbane manner belies a steely resolve that led Jim Telfer to eventually appoint the utility back-row man as skipper after Gavin Hastings" retirement in 1995.. he was forced to wait until the famous back row of Jeffrey, Calder and White called it a day after the 1991 World Cup before he could force his way into the Scottish squad.
An unshowy player who does so much of the unseen work, Wainwright is a useful tail of the line jumper and a consistently good tackler."
When he was injured in 1996, Gregor Townsend took on the position of national captain. A doctor by profession, he was commissioned into the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1987 and was promoted to Lieutenant in 1990, Captain on the completion of his medical training in 1991 and Major in 1996.
He was due to be deployed to Bosnia with North Atlantic Treaty Organization peacekeeping troops but was given a reprieve and captained the Scotland team at the 1997 Five Nations Championship.
He retired in 1999. In 1999 Wainwright and his family moved to the Isle of College in the Inner Hebrides where they own a farm and a bed and breakfast.