Twenty years on, Tommy Raudonikis remembers ‘Cattledog’ like it was yesterday
Looking back on one of State of Origin’s most infamous fights – and the larger than life character who takes credit for it.
“Oh, he’s landed a right, right on the pecker!” – Ray Warren
If true blue New South Welshman Tommy Raudonikis wasn’t still very much alive and kicking, he would for sure be turning in his grave this week.
Just days out from Game 1 of State of Origin, New South Wales prop Aaron Woods has described Queensland as “a great bunch of fellas” and admitted he “got along really well” with the likes of Cameron Smith and Johnathan Thurston in Kangaroos camp last year.
Queensland great Mal Meninga has apparently brokered peace between the bitter rival states since taking over as coach of the national side last year. It’s good news for the Kangaroos, who haven’t been beaten with Big Mal at the helm, but has it taken the sting out of Origin?
It’s certainly a far cry from twenty years ago when Raudonikis was in charge of the Blues. 1997 was the year of the infamous ‘Cattledog’ call – and the Western Suburbs hard man has hardly stopped going on about it since.
He explained the method behind his signature move for the hundredth time during a Footy Show segment called ‘Tommy’s Timewarp’ earlier this year. He was wearing what has for him become a kind of uniform – a sky blue t-shirt with the word ‘CATTLEDOG’ and a dangerous looking cartoon canine on the front.
“I wanted a name for us to come to arms, to put a blue on,” he said, smacking his fist into his hand and grinning like a maniac. “Would we call it ANZAC? Would we call it Gallipoli? Jimmy Dymock put his hand up and said ‘coach, let’s call it the Cattledog’.”
The call was an instruction to his players to initiate an all-in brawl. “What it meant was to put a stink on when we’re in trouble,” he explained in a prior interview. “Spud [Mark] Carroll loved it.”
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The most famous ‘Cattledog’ came in Game 3 of the series – a dead rubber after New South Wales won the first two. Raudonikis remembers screaming it from the sidelines like it was yesterday. “The scrum packed down and Steve Menzies put his head up and said oh no not the dreaded Cattledog,” he laughed. “Poor old Steve Menzies couldn’t crush a grape.”
Menzies got the stuffing beaten out of him by Spud Carroll, and things quickly, inevitably, escalated. Somewhere in the melee Queensland hooker Jamie Goddard got hold of his opposite number Andrew Johns and delivered “about ten” brutal blows to the face.
After eventually being split up by the referee, Johns decided he would go back for more. He elegantly sidestepped the ref and took a swing at Goddard, who then – as Raudonikis tells it – “hit him with the best right hand you’ve ever seen and put him on his backside.”
“Johns has got blood streaming from a mouth wound” is how commentator Ray Warren called it. Johns himself only remembers coming to in the sheds with a medic’s needle in his mouth. He got 26 stitches in his lip before being ordered by his coach to “harden up” and get back out on the paddock.
There will still be flare-ups and maybe even a couple of haymakers thrown in this year’s State of Origin, but the days of calls like ‘Cattledog’ are well and truly in the past. It’s not all Mal Meninga’s fault – even Tommy Raudonikis accepts that’s the way it is. “You can’t do it today, but today’s today,” he shrugged in one interview.
Still, having a beer with the cockroaches after the game? That will go down about as well with Tommy Raudonikis as a plate of sushi or a cappuccino or any of the other things he denounces in his 2014 single ‘Harden Up’, performed here with his band – you guessed it – The Cattledogs.
Comments on RugbyPass
Je suis sûr que Farrell est impatient de jouer avec Lopez et Machenaud et d’être entraîné par Collazo… 🤭
1 Go to commentsAn on field red (aka a full red) in SRP must surely carry a bigger suspension than a red card given by the bunker as that carries a 20 minute team punishment. Had Damon Murphy abdicated his responsibility as a ref and issued both Drua players a yellow, which would have been upgraded to a 20 minute red by the bunker, that would have killed Australia and New Zealand’s push for the 20 minute red to be trialled globally from July this year.
11 Go to commentsEver so often you all post a Danny Care story that isn’t the announcement that he has finally re-signed for one more, victory tour season at Quins and I’m just like, “well you fooled me again!” My absolute favorite player ever, we need to make his final year at the Stoop (and Twickers) official already. I know he supposedly snubbed France but I won’t feel better until he signs.
1 Go to commentslate hit what late hit it wasn’t at all late and can clearly see he was committed before the tackle
1 Go to commentsChristian Lio -Willies 2 try perfomance was a standout. As was captain Scott Barrett. Up front was where the boys won it.They are a great team and players. Fantastic Crusades , you can keep going.
1 Go to commentsI don't know how the locals feel about that? I guess if you call yourselves the Worcester Wasps that might be appease. But really we need more teams in the Premiership in my view so they are not padding it out as they are at the moment. It might curtail so many players going abroad as well
5 Go to commentsNZ 😭😭😭is certainly rivaling England for best whingers cup!😭😭😭 !!!
25 Go to commentsYup. New Zealand won 3 out of 10 world cups played. SA 4 out of 8 attempts 30 Vs 50 per cent.🤔🤔
25 Go to commentsShould've done this years ago. Change Saturday kick off times to around 11am. Up and off and back home before 3pm, limit travel time too. Allows players to actually do something else with their Saturday that's family oriented or being rugby fans they could ‘watch’ pro rugby. Increases crowds etc. How can anyone that enjoys grassroots and pro rugby have to choose between the two on Saturdays?
9 Go to commentsI bet he inspired those supporters just as much.
1 Go to commentsBen Smith Springboks living rent free in his head 😊😂
67 Go to commentsGood to hear he would like to play the game at the highest level, I hadn’t been to sure how much of a motivator that was before now. Sadly he’s probably chosen the rugby club to go to. Try not to worry about all the input about how you should play rugby Joey and just try to emulate what you do on the league field and have fun. You’ll limit your game too much (well not really because he’s a standard athlete like SBW and he’ll still have enough) if you’re trying to make sure you can recycle the ball back etc. On the other hard, you can totally just try and recycle by looking to offload any and everywhere if you’re going to ground 😋
1 Go to commentsThis just proves that theres always a stat and a metric to use to justify your abilities and your success. Ben did it last week by creating an imaginary competition and now you did the same to counter his argument and espouse a new yardstick for success. Why not just use the current one and lets say the Boks have won 4 world cups making them the most successful world cup team. Outside of the world cup the All Blacks are the most successful team winning countless rugby championships and dominating the rankings with high win percentages. Over the last 4 years statistically the Irish are the best having the highest win rate and also having positive records against every tier 1 side. The most successful Northern team in the game has been England with a world cup title and the most six nations titles in history. The AB’s are the most dominant team in history with the highest win rate and 3 world cups. Lets not try to reinvent the wheel. Just be honest about the actual stats and what each team has been good at doing and that will be enough to define their level of success.
25 Go to commentsHow is 7’s played there? I’m surprised 10 or 11 man rugby hasn’t taken off. 7 just doesn’t fit the 15s dynamics (rules n field etc) but these other versions do.
9 Go to commentsPick Swinton at your peril A liability just like JWH from the Roosters Skelton ??? went missing at RWC
14 Go to commentsLike tennis, who have a ranking system, and I believe rugby too, just measure over each period preceding a world cup event who was the longest number one and that would be it. In tennis the number one player frequently is not the grand slam winner. I love and adore the All Blacks since the days of Ian Kirkpatrick when I was a kid in SA. And still do because they are the masters of running rugby and are gentleman on and off the field - in general. And in my opinion they have been the majority of the time the best rugby team in the world.
25 Go to commentsHaving overseas possessions in 2024 is absurd. These Frenchies should have to give the New Caledonians their freedom.
21 Go to commentsBell injured his foot didn’t he? Bring Tupou in he’ll deliver when it counts. Agree mostly but I would switch in the Reds number 8 Harry Wilson for Swinton and move Rob Valentini to 6 instead. Wilson is a clever player who reads the play, you can’t outmuscle the AB’s and Springboks, if you have any chance it’s by playing clever. Same goes for Paisami, he’s a little guy who doesn’t really trouble the likes of De Allende and Jordie Barrett. I’d rather play Carter Gordon at 12 and put Michael Lynagh’s boy at 10. That way you get a BMT type goalkicker at 10 and a playmaker at 12. Anyways, just my two cents as a Bok supporter.
14 Go to commentsThanks Brett, love your articles which are alway pertinent. It’s a difficult topic trying to have a panel adjudicating consistently penalties for red card issues. Many of the mitigating reasons raised are judged subjectively, hence the different outcomes. How to take away subjective opinions?
11 Go to commentsYes Sir! Surprising, just like Fraser would also have escaped sanction if he was a few inches lower, even if it was by accident that he missed! Has there really been talk about those sanctions or is this just sensational journalism? I stopped reading, so might have missed any notations.
11 Go to comments