It’s a very young Jonah Lomu enjoying the last few days of anonymity that life was to ever offer him, the last time he was ever a sideshow. I wandered over with my notebook and pen and there was a vague stirring of recognition from the big man. I had interviewed Jonah during both the 1994 and 1995 Hong Kong Sevens when it was quite obvious to anybody paying attention – and, let’s be honest, the majority weren’t – that a very special player was moving amongst us. Yet here he was, alone and unnoticed, at the four-yearly gathering of rugby’s great and good.
Life had already thrown up a few challenges for Jonah. He had bombed, along with the All Blacks generally, when making his senior debut against France in 1994 and was ruthlessly cut from the squad after their humiliating 2-0 home series defeat. He was the youngest ever All Black but that appeared to offer no mitigation or reprieve. And he was only here in South Africa after a late reintroduction to the training squad following a run of injuries to others. Believe it or not, on the eve of the tournament Jonah Lomu, was just another promising young Kiwi. There have been scores of such prospects over the years.
The memory, however, of him dismissing defenders from his presence in Hong Kong, either with raw strength or a blazing outside arc of unexpected pace and beauty was still seared in my mind. And the words of his great friend and New Zealand Sevens captain Eric Rush at that first Hong Kong tournament were still ringing my ears. “Jonah is bigger, faster, stronger and better than Inga. Or he will be.” Rush has been around the block and was not given to hyperbole.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Four-try David calls the shots for Bears
MILLIE David helped Bristol blow Leicester away after scoring four of their 10 tries at Welford Road.
Scott-Young keen to follow his father
TYPICAL of most Australians, Scott-Young Angus has fairly sunny disposition and the loose forward is confident that Saints can soon start to turn things around on the road.
When value for money is not part of the deal
ENGLAND'S bench strategy against New Zealand - goodbye \"bomb squad\", hello \"squib squad\"-has been investigated, psychoanalysed, convicted on all charges and mercilessly sentenced by the entire rugby world and its maiden aunt, so there is no earthly point in returning to the scene of the crime.
'I want to prove my worth to Bath'
OUT-OF-FAVOUR winger RuBath aridh McConnochie is hoping to use the Premiership Cup to lay down a challenge to Johann van Graan and make his selection claims impossible to ignore.
Townsend: We'll have to be at our very best
GREGOR Townsend may have several wins over South Africa on his CV as a player, and one as an assistant coach.
Gatland's a facing big day at the office
WARREN Gatland has known plenty of huge fixtures during his coaching Grand Slam career games, Six Nations title-clinchers, Lions series deciders and World Cup semi-finals, plus European and Premiership finals.
Ireland all at sea as McKenzie pulls the strings
SOME games live up to their billing and others don’t. This fits firmly into the second territory with a subdued Ireland falling a long way short of their world No.1 status while New Zealand, you sense, were often struggling to engage top gear themselves for long periods of the match.
More heartache for England as Aussies steal it at the death third attempt the odds
THE Wallabies had the last waltz in a match of extraordinary ebb-and-flow drama at the Old Cabbage Patch, snatching victory from the jaws of defeat with an audacious, blistering injury time try by winger Max Jorgensen.
Cunningham-South gunning for Boks
CHANDLER Cunningham-South is aiming to be a big hit against the Springboks on Saturday after adding New Zealand to his highlights reel.
Baxter backing Slade to adapt to changes
EXETER are confident that the decision to change their defensive system will not jeopardise Henry Slade's place in the England side.