Pirates were one hell of a club to be at for so long
The Rugby Paper|June 16, 2024
BEATING Saracens when we hadn't played for almost a year was probably the most memorable moment of my Pirates career, which has now come to an end after nearly 200 appearances for the club.
MARLEN WALKER
Pirates were one hell of a club to be at for so long

It's such a shame that we had to play the game behind closed doors because of Covid restrictions because it would have been one hell of a party. But even so, it was an iconic day for Cornish rugby and for all of us involved. On a personal level. I was up against World Cup winner Vincent Koch that day. Whenever we won a scrum penalty, and there were quite a few, the euphoria was off the scale. As a forward pack, we had a good day and never relaxed for one minute. We knew we couldn't go off-task and risk letting a big victory slip from the palm of our hands so, although we were all knackered about 60 minutes in, we managed to dig deep and get the result we, and I think the Championship as a whole, wanted. Personally, I think they under-estimated us a little bit.

As a Rugby League fan growing up the things I loved about rugby was running hard and hitting people hard. The set-piece side of the game was only really a focus when I moved to the UK. I went to Mount Albert Grammar School in Auckland, which I think is one of the top five schools for producing All Blacks. Sonny Bill Williams and Steven Luatua are two of the most high-profile examples. Sadly, we were always the bridesmaid and never the bride having finished runners-up in the three main competitions without actually winning one. The year we played an Australian Schools team featuring Quade Cooper and Kurtley Beale was the year I was converted from the back row to prop. I think my diet changed my position for me! My nickname from all the boys is Tucky, which is short for Kentucky Fried Chicken. It's a guilty pleasure of Islands or, in my case, Maori Hawaiians.

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