NZRL Inducts 12 New Members To Its Legends Of League, Including Inaugural Kiwi Ferns
June 24, 2022
New Zealand Rugby League (NZRL) has inducted, for the first time in its history, four Kiwi Ferns to its prestigious Legends of League. Congratulations to Kiwi Fern legends, Luisa Avaiki, Nadene Conlon, Trish Hina and Leah Witehira who now join the esteemed Legends' Club.
Also receiving the top New Zealand Rugby League
honour are Kevin Iro
Stacey Jones, James Leuluai.
Sir Graham Lowe, Dane O’Hara, Quentin Pongia, Howie Tamati
and Ruben Wiki.
Expanding the NZRL Legends of League further has been a long time coming – and the return of the Kiwis and Kiwi Ferns to the Test arena after a three-year, COVID-enforced hiatus seems the perfect juncture to honour a new batch of inductees.
A six-strong
panel made up of NZRL President, NZRL Life Member and former
Kiwis captain and coach Howie Tamati, NZRL Life Member and
1994-2000 Kiwis coach Frank Endacott, 1990s Kiwi and 2008
Legends of League inductee Tawera Nikau, 1995 Kiwi Ferns
original and long-serving NZRL Kiwis and National Teams
Manager Nadene Conlon, former NZRL Director Elizabeth
Richards, and rugby league journalist, author and NZRL
historian Will Evans heeded the call in recent months to run
the rule over dozens of worthy
candidates.
Building on the recent work to
recognise and celebrate the New Zealand women’s team’s
history, the historic decision was made to induct an initial
group of four Kiwi Ferns to the Legends of League, along
with eight new Kiwis selections.
The key
criteria set down for Legends of League recognition were:
longevity, leadership, achievement and performance at
international level (first and foremost) as well as club and
provincial level; enhancing rugby league’s standing in New
Zealand; and post-playing contribution to the game. Having
been retired for at least five years – a directive since
the establishment of the Legends of League in 1995 –
remains a requirement.
Ruben Wiki
and Stacey Jones narrowly missed
the five-year retirement cut-off when the last batch of
Legends of League were inducted in 2013 – and their
inclusion this time around was essentially a fait
accompli.
The Auckland juniors and long-time
Kiwis teammates, who played 101 Test matches between them in
the 1990s and 2000s, were the only New Zealand Team of the
Century selections yet to receive Legends of League
recognition. In 2019, Wiki and Jones – both esteemed Kiwi
captains and universally admired for their impact on the
Australian premiership – joined Mark Graham as the only
New Zealanders in the NRL Hall of Fame in
2019.
The outpouring of emotional tributes for
35-Test Kiwi Quentin Pongia from every
corner of the rugby league world following his death in 2019
from cancer, aged just 48, reflected the esteem in which he
is held in the game. Widely revered as one of the toughest
and most durable and uncompromising forwards of any era, the
West Coast-bred, Canterbury provincial rep and Canberra
Raiders premiership winner was a Kiwis engine-room
cornerstone from 1992-2000 and captained New Zealand to Test
series glory in Great Britain in 1998.
‘The
Beast’ moniker illustrated the powerful impact
Kevin Iro had as a blockbusting centre or
winger in the Kiwi jersey for more than a decade, and on the
British and Australian club scenes for 15 seasons.
Aucklander Iro scored 16 tries in 34 Tests from 1987-98 and
starred in a host of Challenge Cup final and Super League
grand finals with Wigan, Leeds and St
Helens.
The remaining four Kiwis Legends of
League places went to key figures of the Kiwis’ halcyon
1980s era that featured so many ground-breaking
victories.
The ultra-versatile James
Leuluai played Tests in four different backline
positions – but it is as brilliant, elusive centre that he
is chiefly remembered. A breath-taking sidestep and blinding
acceleration garnered 14 tries in 29
Tests.
Leuluai also produced some unforgettable
Challenge Cup moments at Wembley with Hull FC, where he
played alongside Auckland and Kiwis teammate and fellow 2022
Legends of League inductee Dane
O’Hara.
Dubbed the ‘Rolls Royce of
wingers’, O’Hara was a prolific try-scorer – including
14 touchdowns in a then-record-equalling 36 Test appearances
for New Zealand – but was equally revered for his
professionalism, dedication and leadership. He captained the
Kiwis against Australia in 1980, a rare feat for a
winger.
Taranaki hooker Howie
Tamati was another vital component of New
Zealand’s international rugby league renaissance, playing
the last 19 of his 24 Tests for the Kiwis in succession,
captaining his country against Papua New Guinea in 1983 and
featuring prominently in watershed triumphs over Australia
and Great Britain. Tamati, one of the game’s great
servants, later coached the Kiwis in 1992-93 and began a
long tenure as NZRL President – a post he continues to
hold with pride and enthusiasm – in
2013.
Previous inductees such as Scotty
McClymont, Lory Blanchard and Ces Mountford enhanced their
case for inclusion by coupling esteemed playing careers with
outstanding tenures as coach of the Kiwis. But Sir
Graham Lowe has broken new Legends of League ground
as the first inductee (aside from referee John Percival)
without a prominent playing background.
After
cutting his teeth at Ellerslie in the 1970s, Lowe became one
of the most influential and revolutionary figures in the
code’s history in New Zealand. The national team’s
outstanding results under Lowe’s tutelage from 1983-86
heralded a turning point for the Kiwis, while his
achievements and status as a club coach at Norths Devils,
Wigan and Manly Sea Eagles, as well as State of Origin level
with Queensland, are virtually unmatched by a New
Zealander.
Luisa Avaiki’s
inclusion as one of the first four Kiwi Ferns Legends of
League was never in doubt. One of just three players to
feature in New Zealand’s first three World Cup triumphs,
Avaiki was the only 1995 original still playing when the
Kiwi Ferns carried off the 2008 title. Meanwhile, the
front-row powerhouse’s role as captain of the 2003 and
’08 World Cup successes underline her status as one of
women’s rugby league’s finest leaders, and she has gone
on to carve out a highly successful career in coaching and
development post-playing.
Another 1995
original, Nadene Conlon’s distinguished
standing as a women’s rugby league pioneer and
long-serving, high-achieving Kiwi Ferns leader is matched
only by her towering off-field contributions to the game.
The 2000 World Cup-winning co-captain – admired for her
tireless performances as a backbone of the Kiwi Ferns’
pack – has spent more than two decades working in rugby
league coaching, development, administration and management
with Auckland Rugby League, the Warriors and NZRL, while few
have done as much to drive women’s rugby league’s
progress.
Trish Hina has been
described as one of New Zealand’s greatest sportswomen,
representing her country in rugby league, rugby union, touch
football and softball. But the Wellington five-eighth
undoubtedly made her biggest impact in the 13-a-side game.
Arguably women’s rugby league’s first genuine superstar,
Hina’s Kiwi Ferns tenure spanned 13 years and her linchpin
role in three World Cup triumphs included two player of the
tournament nods. The record-breaking try-scorer and
goalkicker boasted a game-breaking kitbag of skill, vision
and pace unmatched among her
contemporaries.
Leach Witehira
was a prominent figure on New Zealand’s
trail-blazing tour of Australia in 1995 and later formed a
stellar halves combination with Hina as the Kiwi Ferns won
the first two World Cups. Witehira was a prolific try-scorer
at international level, a steady playmaking influence and
key leader as the Ferns cemented their status as the
dominant force in women’s rugby league.
New
Zealand Rugby League congratulates the 12 new members of the
Legends
of League – a richly-deserved honour for some of the
Kiwis’ and Kiwi Ferns’ best
ever.
2022 NZRL LEGENDS OF LEAGUE
INDUCTEES
Kiwis
Kevin
Iro
Stacey Jones
James Leuluai
Sir Graham
Lowe
Dane O’Hara
Quentin Pongia
Howie
Tamati
Ruben Wiki
Kiwi
Ferns
Luisa Avaiki
Nadene Conlon
Trish
Hina
Leah
Witehira