Gillian Florence is a Canadian rugby union player who has participated in five world cups (1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, and 2010). Starting out as a prop on the national team, she became one of Canada's top flankers.
Florence first started playing rugby in high school (1987–1992) in Grade ten[1] and John Abbott College (1992–1994).[2] Her first cap was at the 1994 Women's Rugby World Cup, at the age of 18, and retired in 2011.[3] She represented Quebec for eighteen years and played for Ste. Anne de Bellevue for twenty-two years.
Having played one season with McGill University in 1995–1996, her national schedule conflicted with the university team's schedule.[4]
Florence became an assistant coach for the McGill Marlets in 2008, a decade after graduating.[2]
In 2011, Florence, along with Brooke Hilditch and Megan Gibbs protested Canada's "pay-to-play" system for women in non-World Cup years by refusing to pay the $2,900 to play in the 2011 Nations Cup.[5] After retiring, she coached her club, Ste Anne de Bellevue, in 2012 and 2013.[1] She is now on the Monty Heald Fund committee which aims to eliminate the "pay to play" experience.[6]
She returned to the rugby pitch in 2017 and suited up for the Nova Scotia Keltics.[7]
Honours
1995 CIS All-Conference honours
1998 named one of McGill's top 20 athletes of all time (McGill Tribune)[8]
In 1998, she graduated from McGill University with a bachelor's degree in Education. In Montreal she worked for Caterpillar, for Ultra Electronics in Nova Scotia, and now Kinduct in Halifax.[4] She moved to rural Nova Scotia when she was eight months pregnant. She lives with her partner, firefighter Aaron Graham, is mother of two children.[1]
^ abc"Gillian Florence". Rugby Canada Annual Awards & Hall of Fame Inductions. Archived from the original on October 17, 2018. Retrieved December 2, 2018.