Tana Umaga
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Tana Umaga | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Ionatana Falefasa Umaga | ||
Date of birth | May 27, 1973 (age 33) | ||
Place of birth | Lower Hutt, New Zealand | ||
Height | 1.88 m | ||
Weight | 102 kg | ||
Nickname | T | ||
Rugby union career | |||
Position | Centre | ||
Professional clubs | Caps | (points) | |
2006-2007 | Toulon | 9 | (10) |
correct as of 20 January 2007. | |||
Provincial/State sides | |||
1994- | Wellington | 84 | (260) |
correct as of 27 Sept 2006. | |||
Super Rugby | |||
1996-present | Hurricanes | 91 | (200) |
Current local club: | Petone | ||
correct as of 20 January 2007. | |||
National team(s) | |||
1997-2005 | New Zealand | 79 | (185) |
correct as of 27 Sept 2006. | |||
Other Information | |||
School attended | Parkway College |
Ionatana Falefasa "Tana" Umaga, ONZM, (IPA: [tɑːnə 'uːmʌŋə], born May 27, 1973) is a New Zealand rugby union footballer and former captain of the national team, the All Blacks. He was capped 74 times for his country.
Born in Lower Hutt to Samoan immigrant parents, Tana Umaga was originally a rugby league player (and an Under 19's New Zealand representative in that sport for two years) playing alongside future Kiwi league captain, Ruben Wiki in the centres. In 1992 aged 18 he had trials with NRL side Newcastle Knights but returned to New Zealand because of homesickness. He switched to union after being persuaded by his elder brother Mike, a Samoan rugby union international. The brothers met in one test match, in 1999 which the All Blacks won 71-13, with Tana scoring two tries.
He first played for Wellington in the NPC in 1994 (and was captain of the Lions between 2001-2005), has played for the Hurricanes in Super Rugby since the tournament's inception in 1996 (captaining them in the 2003-05 seasons), and was first picked for the All Blacks in 1997. Long established as a winger, he moved to playing as an outside centre at the end of 2000 and inside centre in 2002. Critics point to his move closer to the scrum as evidence of his loss of pace whilst others say that he has become more creative over time. He is acknowledged as one of the hardest tacklers in the game.
Umaga is also respected for his sportsmanship. In a test match against Wales on June 21, 2003, Welsh captain Colin Charvis was knocked out by a tackle from All Blacks forward Jerry Collins, and Umaga stopped playing (despite his team being in an attacking position) to check that Charvis had not swallowed his mouthguard, and place him in the recovery position. For this act, the International Committee for Fair Play awarded Umaga the Pierre de Coubertin Trophy, an award for outstanding sportsmanship (named for Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the modern Olympic Games). The Welsh Rugby Union also presented him with a figurine to honour this display of sportsmanship.
"When I got knocked out Tana was brilliant - I was unconscious but he rolled me over and ensured I didn't swallow my gum-shield," Charvis said.
Umaga missed virtually the entire 2003 Rugby World Cup after being injured in a freak collision with teammate Carlos Spencer in the opening match against Italy. He suffered a damaged posterior cruciate ligament in his left knee, and was forced to leave the field, not returning for the remainder of the tournament, which saw the All Blacks eliminated in the semi-finals by the Wallabies.
However, his next outing for the All Blacks was as their captain, after he was selected to replace Reuben Thorne, becoming the first New Zealander of Polynesian heritage to captain the All Blacks. Umaga's captaincy began well, with victory in the first six tests, including two against World Cup holders England (a 36-3 win in Dunedin was at that time the heaviest loss ever by a World Cup holding team), and a successful defence of the Bledisloe Cup. Unfortunately, these victories were followed by losses in away games against Australia and South Africa, putting the All Blacks out of contention for the 2004 Tri Nations Series.
Umaga's reputation for sportsmanship was questioned by Lions supporters because of an incident in the first Test of the Lions tour to New Zealand on June 25, 2005. In the first minute of the Test, Umaga, along with hooker Keven Mealamu, combined to upend Lions captain Brian O'Driscoll in a controversial post-ruck clean-out. The clean-out resulted in O'Driscoll dislocating his shoulder, necessitating surgery and causing him to miss the rest of the tour. The British and Irish media accused Umaga of foul play, largely disregarding Mealamu, who had initiated the clean-out; O'Driscoll and Lions management characterized the incident as a "deliberate spear tackle".[1] The independent citing commissioner found that neither Umaga nor Mealamu had a case to answer at the time due to inconclusive evidence,[2] but after viewing new amateur footage of the incident, Greg Thomas, communications manager for the sport's governing body, the International Rugby Board (IRB), described the tackle as "unacceptably dangerous" and stated that IRB was instructing referees to suspend players for three to six months for such offenses.[3]
After the controversy, Umaga's reputation was reinforced by his exceptional play during the remainder of the Lions tour and New Zealand's triumphant 2005 Tri-Nations campaign, which included retention of the Bledisloe Cup. The IRB was so impressed that they shortlisted him for their 2005 International Player of the Year award (an honour eventually won by fellow All Black Dan Carter). European commentators have often compared Umaga to the captain of England's world cup winning team, Martin Johnson. In a 2006 RUPA survey, Australian Super 14 players named Umaga as their most respected opponent.[4]
Umaga led the All Blacks to only their second ever Northern Hemisphere Grand Slam (victories away against England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales). After playing 79 matches for the All Blacks, including 74 Tests (21 of those as captain) Tana Umaga confirmed his retirement from international rugby at a press conference on January 10, 2006. His main reason for retiring was to spend more time with his family. Umaga continues to play rugby for the Hurricanes in the Super 14 and Wellington in the revamped Air New Zealand Cup. He was reported to be on the wish lists of many top European clubs; his former All Blacks teammate Andrew Mehrtens was forced to publicly deny rumours that Umaga was on the wish list of Mehrtens' current English club, Harlequins.[5]
He would eventually sign for a European club, but it was, surprisingly, Toulon, a club newly relegated from France's top level, although it is a three-time French champion. His contract allowed him to play the entire 2006 Air New Zealand Cup season for Wellington before arriving in France, which means he was originally scheduled to play only eight matches in that country, since Wellington made it to the final —but nonetheless will make roughly €350,000 (USD 438,000/GBP 250,000). Toulon's co-presidents reportedly paid for his salary out of their own pockets.[6] On October 29, 2006, Umaga started in his first game three days after arriving in Toulon and lifted his team to a 22-16 victory against Lyon, scoring his team's only (and decisive) try. He commented after the match how the crowd had been fantastic. He was also surprised to see how close to the players the fans were and how... noisy the atmosphere was. [7]
The day before, he had been awarded the medal of honour of the city of Toulon (médaille d'or de la ville) by Mayor Hubert Falco.
Umaga returned to New Zealand at the end of his contract with Toulon following their January 7, 2007 win over Grenoble. When he came to Toulon, they were ninth in the Rugby Pro D2 table; when he left, they had risen to third, one spot behind the promotion places. Toulon won eight of nine matches with Umaga on the roster, with the only loss coming when he was out injured.[8]
After the 2006 Super 14 Final, in which his team, the Hurricanes, lost to the Crusaders, Umaga was seen hitting team mate Chris Masoe with a woman's handbag, in what was latter dubbed by the media as the handbag incident. Umaga was made to replace the woman's cell phone, which he broke.
In the 2006 Queen's Birthday Honours Umaga was made an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit in recognition of his dedicated service to rugby.[9]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Henry defends duo over O'Driscoll. BBC Sport (28 June, 2005). Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ Orlovac, Mark and Jim Stokes (25 October 2005). No action on new O'Driscoll video. BBC Sport. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
- ^ "NZ want O'Driscoll injury laid to rest", Independent Online, October 26 2005. Retrieved on 2006-04-01.
- ^ "Bok Barry is the 'dirtiest player'", RugbyRugby, 2006-02-15. Retrieved on 2006-04-01.
- ^ "Mehrtens to take on S African citizenship", The Sunday Star-Times, 2006-01-08. Retrieved on 2006-04-06.
- ^ "Umaga signs with lowly Toulon", Planet-Rugby.com, 2006-06-29. Retrieved on 2006-06-29.
- ^ "Umaga déjà en vedette (Umaga stars immediately)", Eurosport.fr, 2006-06-29. Retrieved on 2006-06-29. (in French)
- ^ "Umaga heads for home", Planet-Rugby.com, 2007-01-08. Retrieved on 2007-01-08.
- ^ The Queen's Birthday Honours 2006 on the Governor-General of New Zealand's website
[edit] External links
New Zealand squad - 2003 Rugby World Cup | ||
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Forwards: | Braid • Collins • Flynn • Hammett • Hewett • Hoeft • Holah • Jack • McCaw • Mealamu • Meeuws • Somerville • So'oialo • Thorn • Thorne (c) • Williams | |
Backs: | Blair • Carter • Devine • Howlett • Kelleher • MacDonald • Marshall • Mauger • Muliaina • Nonu • Ralph • Rokocoko • Spencer • Umaga | |
Coach: | Mitchell |
Persondata | |
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NAME | Umaga, Ionatana Falefasa |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Umaga, Tana |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | New Zealand rugby union footballer, former All Blacks captain |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 27, 1973 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Lower Hutt, New Zealand |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |