Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
NZ NZ

Five ways Colin Meads changed rugby as we know it

By Jamie Wall
A man who towered over the game of rugby

New Zealand and the rugby world is in mourning after the passing of the iconic Sir Colin Meads, a man who transcended both the sport he played and the society he lived in.

ADVERTISEMENT

A 14 year international career: 55 tests, 133 games. Let’s take a look back at the moments that not only made him so legendary, but also had a relevance to the game today:

  • The broken arm – Eastern Transvaal have never been up to much as a provincial union. But what they lack in the trophy cabinet they make up for in the famous footy stories category, for they were the team that broke Colin Meads’ arm in 1970. The culprit may never be known, but a kick on a prone Meads managed to cause a clean break in his radius bone. The rest is history: Meads shrugged it off and played not only the rest of the game, but the entire test series too. The legacy of playing through pain has carried on throughout the All Blacks ever since – Richie winning the World Cup on a broken foot, Jonah battling kidney disease to simply make the field, Norm Hewitt in the 2000 NPC final, finishing the match with a broken arm of his own.
  • The Cavaliers tour – This probably isn’t the fondest memory that people will have of Meads, but it’s important for the somewhat inadvertent role it had in an iconic moment in World Cup history. For those of you who don’t know, the All Blacks were scheduled to tour the then apartheid South Africa in 1985, however that was stopped by court action. The majority of the All Blacks went anyway the following season, on an initially secret, unsanctioned tour as ‘the Cavaliers’. Meads was the coach, and therefore implicitly involved in a series that ended up a loss on and off the field. The team were banned once they returned home, with many playing their last ever games for the All Blacks. Meads himself was sacked as an All Black selector. The effect snowballed into the inaugural World Cup in 1987, where the two players who refused to join Meads with the Cavaliers, John Kirwan and David Kirk, ended up being the tournament’s top tryscorer and the winning captain respectively.

  • A forward playing like a back – If there’s one thing that sets the All Blacks apart from other teams, it’s the level of skill that all members of the team possess. Meads was the most notable exponent of the running game, in an era when forwards generally spent their time waiting for the next lineout or scrum to happen. The sight of Meads barrelling down the field with the ball in his hand like a pinecone was a precursor to the likes of Michael Jones, Zinzan Brooke and even Jonah Lomu. Even on Saturday night, the performance of hard man with a surprising turn of pace Liam Squire could best be described as ‘Meads-like’.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHt1G0W_O_o

  • Creating mythology – As well as the aforementioned broken arm tour story, Meads is at the heart of the sort of legends that the All Black brand is built on. The more long winded ones are of him and brother Stan supposedly training in the off season by running up and down the hills of their farm with a sheep under each arm, or during a Ranfurly Shield match when the touch judge asked the ref to count the opposition players because ‘Meads may have eaten one’. But it’s the more than just the club room tall tales, the real stories of how his humility and laconic nature have set the tone for the way the All Blacks not only play, but even behave in front of an audience. It hasn’t made for exactly riveting interviews or press conferences, but that’s the standard that Meads set.
  • Ruthless will to win – Let’s get one thing straight: Colin Meads didn’t become a legendary player by playing nice, or in the spirit or even rules of the game. He was an enforcer to his teammates, a thug to his opposition and downright lethal to anyone who he could wrap his hands around on the field. Wallaby halfback Ken Catchpole found that out the hard way, after Meads’ manhandling of him a ruck ended up in with his groin muscles being torn off his pelvic bone. The dark arts were the forte of Meads, which have carried on and, admittedly, been a large reason for the dominance of the team.

 

ADVERTISEMENT

Join free

Fresh Starts | Episode 1 | Will Skelton

ABBIE WARD: A BUMP IN THE ROAD

Aotearoa Rugby Podcast | Episode 8

James Cook | The Big Jim Show | Full Episode

New Zealand victorious in TENSE final | Cathay/HSBC Sevens Day Three Men's Highlights

New Zealand crowned BACK-TO-BACK champions | Cathay/HSBC Sevens Day Three Women's Highlights

Japan Rugby League One | Steelers v Sungoliath | Full Match Replay

Rugby Europe Women's Championship | Netherlands v Spain

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

M
Mzilikazi 1 hours ago
Swashbuckling Hurricanes and Harlequins show scrum still matters

I always enjoy a good scrum based article. Thanks, Nick. The Hurricanes are looking more and more the team to beat down here in Australasia. They are a very well balanced team. And though there are far fewer scrums in the game these days, destructive power in that area is a serious weapon, especially an attacking scrum within in the red zone. Aumua looked very good as a young first year player, but then seemed to fade. He sure is back now right in the picture for the AB’s. And I would judge that Taukei’aho is in a bit of a slump currently. Watching him at Suncorp a few weeks ago, I thought he was not as dominant in the game as I would have expected. I am going to raise an issue in that scrum at around the 13 min mark. I see a high level of danger there for the TH lifted off the ground. He is trapped between the opposition LH and his own powerful SR. His neck is being put under potentially dangerous pressure. The LH has, in law , no right to use his superior scrummaging skill….getting his head right in on the breastbone of the TH…..to force him up and off the ground. Had the TH popped out of the scrum, head up and free, there is no danger, that is a clear penalty to the dominant scrum. The law is quite clear on this issue: Law 37 Dangerous play and restricted practices in a scrum. C:Intentionally lifting an opponent off their feet or forcing them upwards out of the scrum. Sanction: Penalty. Few ,if any, referees seem to be aware of this law, and/or the dangers of the situation. Matthew Carly, refereeing Clermont v Munster in 2021, penalised the Munster scrum, when LH Wycherly was lifted very high, and in my view very dangerously, by TH Slimani. Lifting was coached in the late ‘60’s/70’s. Both Lions props, Ray McLouglin, and “Mighty Mouse” McLauchlan, were expert and highly successful at this technique. I have seen a photo, which I can’t find online atm, of MM with a NZ TH(not an AB) on his head, MM standing upright as the scrum disintegrates.

3 Go to comments
FEATURE
FEATURE How are Australian sides faring in Super Rugby Pacific? How are Australian sides faring in Super Rugby Pacific?
Search