Player bios
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Aside from Cully, JC will always be my second favourite Hurricane. An absolute brute on the field but such a humble and class act off it.
If anyone hasn't listened to the story below, it really does sum up the man. RIP JC.
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@Canes4life said in Player bios:
Aside from Cully, JC will always be my second favourite Hurricane. An absolute brute on the field but such a humble and class act off it.
If anyone hasn't listened to the story below, it really does sum up the man. RIP JC.
Like I said earlier I saw him loads of times on the piss in Welly, always looking like he was having a great time and always friendly. I spoke to him briefly once or twice. Nice fella.
A guy I know who knew him quite well said he'd often go to the gym at 3/4am after a night on the hammer and sweat out the booze by hitting the heavy bag. From what I remember he always appeared in peak physical condition so it obviously worked for him.
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Kaino v JC is an interesting comparison, i think a little difficult given rugby changed a lot between their eras.
Both could hit.
Memory says JC was better with the ball, but Kaino had pretty good hands as well as a good carry. JK version 1 was nimble on his feet though (remember him embarrassing Mat Rogers in that Baabaas game?). JK version 2 was a truck.I would give it to JK as he was a bit more accurate and an excellent lineout forward. But there's not much in it, and shit imagine having both in a test 23.
I re
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@mariner4life yeah not much in it for me. Kaino’s lineout work was excellent and part of a very successful AB lineout period, but Jerry was also used at the back of the lineout to great effect for both the Canes and ABs.
Ball in hand in close exchanges, Jerry would just bury his shoulder into would be tacklers ribs.. Had very good body height. Jerry also developed that step whereas I remember JK 1 having more a swerve.
On the defensive side both very good. Ruck work they had different strengths. I would say Jerry went harder for the ball than Kaino but Kaino would drive through the ruck.
In terms of them playing together, it’s crazy that they never featured in the same 22/23. There were certainly opportunities before Jerry stopped internationals after the 07 RWC. Kaino featured in the Ireland tests in 06 that Jerry didn’t play in. Jerry came back after those tests for the Argies test and then the 06 3Ns. We didn’t see Kaino in black again until 2008.
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Christian Cullen’s story in New Zealand rugby doesn’t begin with fanfare or fireworks—it begins quietly, in 1994, with Horowhenua-Kapiti. A wiry kid with speed that looked almost supernatural, he was the kind of player who didn’t just run past defenders; he seemed to glide through them, like water around stones. By 1996, that blur of movement had found its stage. The first-ever Super 12 game—Hurricanes versus Blues—opened a new chapter in professional rugby, and Cullen, just 20, was right there at the dawn of it all. That season he scored seven tries in nine matches. People were starting to whisper his name with a kind of disbelief, as if they’d stumbled upon a secret the rest of the world hadn’t yet noticed.
Then came Hong Kong. The 1996 World Sevens tournament was supposed to be a showcase of flair; instead, it became the Christian Cullen show. Eighteen tries in one competition—seven in a single game. The crowd roared every time he touched the ball, sensing that something electric was about to happen. That same year, the All Black selectors couldn’t ignore him any longer. On debut against Samoa, Cullen scored a hat-trick. The next Test, against Scotland, he added four more. Seven tries in two matches—numbers that didn’t just impress, they stunned. But rugby has a cruel balance to brilliance, and on the tour to South Africa later that year, his knee gave way. Cartilage damage. For a moment, everything he’d built teetered.
When he returned in 1997, he did it with quiet vengeance. Eleven tries in ten games for the Hurricanes, and twelve in twelve Tests for the All Blacks. Every step looked like it had meaning again. Yet even a player as mesmerizing as Cullen couldn’t lift a struggling side forever. In 1998, New Zealand endured five straight defeats—a dark stretch for the team—but Cullen still crossed the line four times in seven Tests. Then came redemption of a different kind. At the Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur, wearing the black jersey for rugby sevens, Cullen scored nine tries, kicked 23 conversions, and walked away with a gold medal. You could almost feel the pride pulsing through New Zealand that day.
But rugby, like life, doesn’t freeze in its golden moments. The 1999 World Cup should’ve been Cullen’s stage. Instead, it was a frustrating campaign—six matches, five of them out of position at centre. The tournament ended in disappointment, both for the All Blacks and for a player who felt boxed in by tactical choices that dulled his brilliance. By 2000, though, he was flying again—ten tries in eleven Super 12 games, seven in four Tri Nations Tests, including three consecutive doubles. He was unstoppable, the kind of player who could make a stadium inhale all at once when the ball reached his hands.
Then came the knee again. In 2001, it betrayed him. Surgery, long days of rehab, and the lonely grind of recovery followed. Cullen stepped away from the All Blacks’ end-of-year tour to focus on healing, only to hear at a press conference that he had been “dropped” by new coach John Mitchell. Their relationship never recovered. The tension lingered, shaping the twilight of Cullen’s international career. In 2002 he was in and out of the squad, a star dimmed but not gone. Four tries in five Tests reminded everyone just how dangerous he still was.
By 2003, he was chasing something simpler—joy. Eight tries in twelve games for the Hurricanes took his Super Rugby tally to a then-record 56. For a brief, strange moment, he was even named to the Māori rugby team—despite having, as his father admitted, barely a trace of Māori ancestry. It caused a stir, but Cullen stayed composed, as always. That same year, he missed out on the World Cup squad. Wellington fans gave him one last ovation during the NPC final, standing to their feet as he walked off. They knew, and he knew, that this was the end of something special.
Christian Cullen’s career was never just about numbers—it was about feeling. The quicksilver runs, the sense of anticipation every time he stepped onto the field, the way he made rugby look like art. Injuries came, critics circled, selections stung—but when you close your eyes and think of him, you don’t remember the setbacks. You remember the blur of motion, the sudden gasp of the crowd, and the unmistakable magic of the “Paekākāriki Express.” #ChristianCullen #AllBlacks #RugbyLegend #PaekakarikiExpress
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I'll just jump on and join the Cullen echo chamber. Incredible and very HUMBLE player especially compared to the way Jeff Wilson sometimes carried on.
He was like a cat in that he looked half asleep and then BOOM, sprang into ridiculously athletic action. That swerve in open spaces must have been a nightmare for defenders.
These (obviously AI written
) bios make me realise how much more I loved players back in the day than I do now. Better players ? bigger characters ? or have I just grown up a bit ? -
@MN5 said in Player bios:
I'll just jump on and join the Cullen echo chamber. Incredible and very HUMBLE player especially compared to the way Jeff Wilson sometimes carried on.
He was like a cat in that he looked half asleep and then BOOM, sprang into ridiculously athletic action. That swerve in open spaces must have been a nightmare for defenders.
These (obviously AI written
) bios make me realise how much more I loved players back in the day than I do now. Better players ? bigger characters ? or have I just grown up a bit ?I think it highlights how things have changed how the game has changed.
Along with Cullen there was also Carlos Spencer cut from the same fabric. Mercurial in their approach and insanely talented.
With every second of a players time on a field analyzed, tracked and picked apart by coaches and opponents i think its harder for them to play the way guys like Cullen, Spencer and others did back in the 90's and early 2000's. -
@Virgil said in Player bios:
@MN5 said in Player bios:
I'll just jump on and join the Cullen echo chamber. Incredible and very HUMBLE player especially compared to the way Jeff Wilson sometimes carried on.
He was like a cat in that he looked half asleep and then BOOM, sprang into ridiculously athletic action. That swerve in open spaces must have been a nightmare for defenders.
These (obviously AI written
) bios make me realise how much more I loved players back in the day than I do now. Better players ? bigger characters ? or have I just grown up a bit ?I think it highlights how things have changed how the game has changed.
Along with Cullen there was also Carlos Spencer cut from the same fabric. Mercurial in their approach and insanely talented.
With every second of a players time on a field analyzed, tracked and picked apart by coaches and opponents i think its harder for them to play the way guys like Cullen, Spencer and others did back in the 90's and early 2000's.Theres still room for mavericks. Finn Russell is cut from that Spencer cloth ( still feels weird writing this about a Scotsman ) Beauden Barrett when he still had pace ?
Jonah and Cully would still carve up today, maybe to a slightly lesser extent. Jeff Wilson with his kicking game might be even more of a force in todays game than he was in his playing days. Joeli Vidiri if he'd qualified earlier and with rotation would have played a heap more tests than he did.......
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@MN5 said in Player bios:
@Virgil said in Player bios:
@MN5 said in Player bios:
I'll just jump on and join the Cullen echo chamber. Incredible and very HUMBLE player especially compared to the way Jeff Wilson sometimes carried on.
He was like a cat in that he looked half asleep and then BOOM, sprang into ridiculously athletic action. That swerve in open spaces must have been a nightmare for defenders.
These (obviously AI written
) bios make me realise how much more I loved players back in the day than I do now. Better players ? bigger characters ? or have I just grown up a bit ?I think it highlights how things have changed how the game has changed.
Along with Cullen there was also Carlos Spencer cut from the same fabric. Mercurial in their approach and insanely talented.
With every second of a players time on a field analyzed, tracked and picked apart by coaches and opponents i think its harder for them to play the way guys like Cullen, Spencer and others did back in the 90's and early 2000's.Theres still room for mavericks. Finn Russell is cut from that Spencer cloth ( still feels weird writing this about a Scotsman ) Beauden Barrett when he still had pace ?
Jonah and Cully would still carve up today, maybe to a slightly lesser extent. Jeff Wilson with his kicking game might be even more of a force in todays game than he was in his playing days. Joeli Vidiri if he'd qualified earlier and with rotation would have played a heap more tests than he did.......
If the current Aussie outside backs can carve up WC champs best team in the world Boks, and those Boks can carve us up to our worst defeat ever, then I find any speculation that Cullen wouldn't absolutely kill it today absurd. Jeff Wilson was a useless flog by comparison.
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@reprobate said in Player bios:
@MN5 said in Player bios:
@Virgil said in Player bios:
@MN5 said in Player bios:
I'll just jump on and join the Cullen echo chamber. Incredible and very HUMBLE player especially compared to the way Jeff Wilson sometimes carried on.
He was like a cat in that he looked half asleep and then BOOM, sprang into ridiculously athletic action. That swerve in open spaces must have been a nightmare for defenders.
These (obviously AI written
) bios make me realise how much more I loved players back in the day than I do now. Better players ? bigger characters ? or have I just grown up a bit ?I think it highlights how things have changed how the game has changed.
Along with Cullen there was also Carlos Spencer cut from the same fabric. Mercurial in their approach and insanely talented.
With every second of a players time on a field analyzed, tracked and picked apart by coaches and opponents i think its harder for them to play the way guys like Cullen, Spencer and others did back in the 90's and early 2000's.Theres still room for mavericks. Finn Russell is cut from that Spencer cloth ( still feels weird writing this about a Scotsman ) Beauden Barrett when he still had pace ?
Jonah and Cully would still carve up today, maybe to a slightly lesser extent. Jeff Wilson with his kicking game might be even more of a force in todays game than he was in his playing days. Joeli Vidiri if he'd qualified earlier and with rotation would have played a heap more tests than he did.......
If the current Aussie outside backs can carve up WC champs best team in the world Boks, and those Boks can carve us up to our worst defeat ever, then I find any speculation that Cullen wouldn't absolutely kill it today absurd. Jeff Wilson was a useless flog by comparison.
That's why I said MAYBE to a lesser extent.
Wilson had more skill than Jonah and Cully but less freakish athleticism. No one could chip and chase like he could.
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For me Cully is that quintessential player that represented everything great about the pre-professional era but playing in a ‘new age’.
Natural ability off the charts.
Not much too him - 5’10-5’11 and just a touch over 80kgs. I think I read he wasn’t much of a gym guy.
Hit angles and space using pace.
And played at a time when scoring a try was no longer just about business and running back to halfway, but you could express a bit of emotion and joy.Does he make my all-time XV? Maybe at centre……
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@ACT-Crusader said in Player bios:
For me Cully is that quintessential player that represented everything great about the pre-professional era but playing in a ‘new age’.
Natural ability off the charts.
Not much too him - 5’10-5’11 and just a touch over 80kgs. I think I read he wasn’t much of a gym guy.
Hit angles and space using pace.
And played at a time when scoring a try was no longer just about business and running back to halfway, but you could express a bit of emotion and joy.Does he make my all-time XV? Maybe at centre……
Got that right. Weak as piss. Definitely preferred playing centre too, he could have kissed John Hart when he switched him.
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@mariner4life well, it may be a touch harsh. but so is having to listen to him.
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@reprobate said in Player bios:
@mariner4life well, it may be a touch harsh. but so is having to listen to him.
oh you'll get no disagreement from me there, but Wilson was a freak of a winger. To have him, Jonah and Cully at the same time was frankly ridiculous.
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@mariner4life said in Player bios:
@reprobate said in Player bios:
@mariner4life well, it may be a touch harsh. but so is having to listen to him.
oh you'll get no disagreement from me there, but Wilson was a freak of a winger. To have him, Jonah and Cully at the same time was frankly ridiculous.
We didnt know how good we had it

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@mariner4life said in Player bios:
@reprobate said in Player bios:
@mariner4life well, it may be a touch harsh. but so is having to listen to him.
oh you'll get no disagreement from me there, but Wilson was a freak of a winger. To have him, Jonah and Cully at the same time was frankly ridiculous.
Except for when Cully is at centre and Wilson is at fullback, which is disastrous. Which partly happened because Tana was so good that year he too had to be selected.
