Does Rugby have a Superstar?
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I think Rugby being a team sport in the truest sense makes this hard.
Lomu was right man right time (freak athlete compared to a lot of skinny white guys at the time).
In other sports, Curry can go lights out from 3, Messi can get a hat trick on his own, Stokes can smash a ton, or Boult can clean up your top order.
Too many moving pieces in Rugby for one player to dominate. The closest I can think of other than Lomu is DC against the Lions.
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@foobaNZ said in Does Rugby have a Superstar?:
The closest I can think of other than Lomu is DC against the Lions
but even then, a lot of the NH said Wilkinson was the bigger star.
Lomu was a singular phenomenon because the whole rugby world and a sizeable part of the general public took one look and went Fuck Sake
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@dogmeat said in Does Rugby have a Superstar?:
@foobaNZ said in Does Rugby have a Superstar?:
The closest I can think of other than Lomu is DC against the Lions
but even then, a lot of the NH said Wilkinson was the bigger star.
Lomu was a singular phenomenon because the whole rugby world and a sizeable part of the general public took one look and went Fuck Sake
Truly larger than life
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Would Jonah still have been considered a rugby superstar if he had been able to play longer and we would have seen his decline (which inevitably comes, especially with wingers)?
If Julian Savea had stopped, for whatever reason, at the top of his career. Or Beaudy. Would we have seen them as rugby superstars?
To me, Dan Carter is a real rugby superstar, even more so than Jonah, because he went to great heights, and hardly fell before he retired.
Not sure about present players.
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@Stargazer said in Does Rugby have a Superstar?:
Would Jonah still have been considered a rugby superstar if he had been able to play longer and we would have seen his decline (which inevitably comes, especially with wingers)?
If Julian Savea had stopped, for whatever reason, at the top of his career. Or Beaudy. Would we have seen them as rugby superstars?
To me, Dan Carter is a real rugby superstar, even more so than Jonah, because he went to great heights, and hardly fell before he retired.
Not sure about present players.
Jonah was a superstar because people who didn't know Rugby knew who he was. He's pretty unique in that regard.
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@Stargazer said in Does Rugby have a Superstar?:
@Kirwan I guess it depends on the definition of superstar ...
"an extremely famous and successful performer or sports player."
I think you are confusing it with best rugby player, think Kim Kardasian - fame is unrelated to actual talent and achievements in many cases.
In Jonah's case, he had good timing as the game had just gone professional and he scored super unusual trys just as the game was gaining popularity.
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@mariner4life said in Does Rugby have a Superstar?:
Is modern elite rugby fundamentally geared against individual stardom? Look ahead to a RWC, are the chances of any main contender built around flair players? or game plans and workhorses?
It's similar in the NHL - the playoffs are geared towards grinding and workhorses and so the best player in the world (Conor McDavid) and the best regular season team (this year the Boston Bruins) couldn't sniff the Stanley Cup Final.
Having said that - this World Cup does feel like it has the ability to put some players on a serious pedestal if they have a big tournament - Will Jordan, Dupont, the gun new Bok 10 Lubbok etc
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Rugby creates many fewer global stars than football. Mainly because the focus in Rugby is so much on the team and the individual’s role within it.
Jonah Lomu was a global Rugby star. He still has a waxwork in London Madame Tussaud’s.
Dan Carter was probably nearest to that in terms of impact since. He won the BBC overseas sports personality of the year in 1995.
I suspect Jonny Wilkinson and Brian O’Driscoll would be known to many people who don’t follow Rugby outside their own countries
Francois Pineaar was played in a Hollywood film by Matt Damon.
Mike Tindall is quite well known because he is married to a member of the British Royal Family.
Gavin Henson used to appear in lots of the women’s magazines and tabloids when he dated Charlotte Church.
Sonny Bill Williams and James Haskell have a big social media presence.
Beauden Barrett and Antoine Dupont would probably be the two most well known current players, but have nothing like the profile of football stars.
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I was going to throw SBW's name in the mix. For us aficionados, we're aware of his limitations and can easily discredit some of the accolades he's accumulated by being in the right teams at the right time. But for the casual fan or even non-rugby fan he had a wider appeal.
The argument of style over substance in an interesting one. Messi and Verstappen don't have celeb quality but their pure GOATness make them superstars. Rugby, as a sport, isn't big enough globally for a GOAT (like Dan Carter) to have universal cut through.
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There was a bit of talk around Siya Kolisi after the 2019 RWC become the poster boy for rugby. He had an incredible backstory, an easy way with the media and stood for impressive values. He was even signed to Jay-Z's agency. But his feats on the field weren't really highlight reel stuff.
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@No-Quarter said in Does Rugby have a Superstar?:
@Kirwan yep he even had a Big Mac named after him!
As a measure of superstardom I'm not sure what can top this, brilliant benchmark.
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No one has come close to the impact that Jonah made on the game IMO. Even in an era that had no social media etc his highlight reels went viral, to the point where teams like the Dallas Cowboys were firing contract offers through.
Dan Carter is probably the next biggest star but his form was a bit up and down in his last years before he finished with a bang.
If Anton Du Pont wins the WC this year he’s probably the next global rugby star if he isn’t already.
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On the eve of a RWC, Habana called a fellow winger (an AB that wasn't Lomu) a superstar once, that probably didn't age well.
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@sparky said in Does Rugby have a Superstar?:
Not necessary a superstar, but Sébastien Chabal built up his brand well and has clearly made a ton of money from advertising since he hung up his boots.
He should be in medical books for having the longest wingspan in the world too. Apparently he could scratch his ankles without bending over.
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@Canes4life said in Does Rugby have a Superstar?:
Dan Carter is probably the next biggest star but his form was a bit up and down in his last years before he finished with a bang.
DC has stories in autobiography of him and his wife being invited by Elton John to his Oscars after-party and being introduced to lots of Hollywood types who had no idea who he was.
Similarly. Rory McIlroy saw him in the gym at Augusta and wanted a photo together.