Dougie Morkel
Full names: Douglas Francis Theodore
Date of birth: 26 Oct 1885
Place of birth: Kimberley
School: Marist Brothers Linmeyer
Springbok no: 106
Springbok debut province: Transvaal
Physical: 1.83m, 92.1kg
Date of death: 20 Feb 1950 (Age 64)
Test summary: Tests: 9 Tries: 3
First Test: 24 Nov 1906 Age 21 - Forward against Ireland at Ravenhill Grounds, Belfast
Last Test: 11 Jan 1913 Age 27 - Forward against France at Le Bouscat, Bordeaux
Test history:
DateAgePositionOpponentVenueResultScoreProvince
24 Nov 1906 21Forward Ireland Ravenhill Grounds, Belfast Win: 15-12  Tvl
08 Dec 1906 21Forward England Crystal Palace, London Draw: 3-3  Tvl
06 Aug 1910 24Forward (C) Britain Wanderers (Old Wanderers), Johannesburg Win: 14-101 try, 1 conversion Tvl
03 Sep 1910 24Forward Britain Newlands, Cape Town Win: 21-53 conversions, 1 penalty Tvl
23 Nov 1912 27Forward Scotland Inverleith, Edinburgh Win: 16-01 conversion Tvl
30 Nov 1912 27Forward Ireland Aviva Stadium (Lansdowne Road), Dublin Win: 38-0  Tvl
14 Dec 1912 27Forward Wales Millenium Stadium (Cardiff Arms Park), Cardiff Win: 3-01 penalty Tvl
04 Jan 1913 27Forward (C) England Twickenham, London Win: 9-32 penalties Tvl
11 Jan 1913 27Forward France Le Bouscat, Bordeaux Win: 38-52 tries, 2 conversions, 1 penalty Tvl

Dougie who played for such a long time and with so much distinction for South Africa, was a great kicker-and especially so at place kicking.

He was one of the first "Springbokken" (Springboks) being a member of Paul Roos' side in 1906/07 which toured the UK and France and where, for the first time, the name Springbok was termed.

When the Springboks played against France at Bordeaux in 1912/13 it was the . first time the two countries had met in an international. Dougie scored two tries; one in each half. During the second half a penalty was awarded to South Africa in their own half of the field. Thinking that it was an unfair decision, the captain, Billy Millar, told Dougie to kick the ball away.

Instead of punting Dougie drop-kicked at goal. It soared through the posts, the crowd roared and they all poured onto the field, wanting to touch this miraculous man.

Many stories, some true, some probably not, are told about that kick. The one which probably has the best foundation is that, after the match, his boots were stripped off and taken to a museum for display purposes.

As a forward pure and simple, Dougie had his moments of versatility. He played as fullback against North of England on the 1912/13 tour.