100 greatest All Blacks ever: 60 to 51

By abnutta / Roar Guru

Part five of our ten part series looking at the greatest All Blacks of all time, ranked in order from 100 to 1. This instalment is counting down from 60 to 51.

60. Joe Rokocoko (2003-2010 – 69 matches)
He made such a sensational start to his All Black career that after just two seasons of international rugby he had amassed 27 tries in just 23 tests, a phenomenal strike rate placing him above even Christian Cullen statistically, who scored 21 tries in 21 tests in his debut seasons of 1996-97. Scored a world record 17 tries in a calendar year in 2003.

He played in an era of intense competition among New Zealand wingers, for also in their prime were the experienced Doug Howlett, Sitiveni Sivivatu and Rico Gear. A powerful wing at 1.89m and 104kg, he had astonishing pace, especially in his early days, and a flair for the unorthodox.

59. Frank Bunce (1992-1997 – 69 matches)
Forged a fine reputation as the near-perfect midfield back. his partnership with Walter Little, on defence and attack, became a formidable one. Could read the game well and run his outsides into scoring positions with fine distribution. Renowned for his crushing tackling technique and ability to offload.

Was probably at his best in the 1995-97 seasons when as the oldest back in All Black history he was instrumental in a rare All Black victory against the Springboks at Ellis Park.

58. Ian MacRae (1963-1970 – 45 matches)
Labelled a “barger” by some critics, his contribution to one of the finest periods in the All Blacks’s long history, in which he seldom tasted the bitterness of defeat, has been subsequently underestimated. At 1.87m and nearly 90kg he was much bigger than most backs of the era, even in the midfield.

His size and strength made him an outstanding player and his power in going in to the tackle to create rucks and second phase became an invaluable All Black tactic. He was a star of what was a golden period for Hawkes Bay and among many notable feats was scoring four tries in a 1967 shield defence against Waikato.

57. Chris Laidlaw (1963-1970 – 57 matches)
Sir Terry McLean once described a Chris Laidlaw game as the greatest passing exhibition he’d ever witnessed from a halfback since Danie Craven in 1937. Laidlaw’s powerful build allowed him to throw long, accurate passes that gave his first five-eighths the proverbial armchair ride.

He also possessed a clever reverse pass and a fine tactical kick behind the scrum or lineout, was a courageous defender and an excellent captain at provincial level.

56. Has Catley (1946-1949 – 21 matches)
Played provincial rugby for Waikato for an astonishing 20 years. On the 1947 tour to Australia, Catley established himself as first choice hooker and retained that ranking during the 1949 tour of South Africa. In Africa he was part of perhaps the best front row New Zealand had then fielded under the 3-4-1 scrum formation.

He himself was one of the best All Black hookers, using a technique which allowed him to annihilate almost every hooker he opposed. A pure hooker who saw the game through a hooker’s eyes – describing match outcomes by tightheads, not by trivial things such as points scored.

55. Ian Jones (1989-1999 – 105 matches)
Long and lanky, Ian Jones overcame constant carping, especially in his early years, about his perceived lack of bulk to become one of New Zealand rugby’s greatest ever locks. From 1990 through to 1997, other than the odd glitch, Jones was an automatic selection.

From 1992 and into the latter years of the decade he and Robin Brooke formed one of the most enduring locking partnerships in international rugby. They were an ideal complement with one commanding the front of lineouts and the other the middle. And whereas Brooke was a hardnosed grinder, Jones had the ball skills in the open.

54. Jerome Kaino (2004-2011 – 49 matches)
Kaino was supposed to be the next All Black superstar after his stunning debut game against the Barbarians at Twickenham in 2004. Yet just two years later he looked set for the scrap heap. When he returned to the All Black fold in 2008 his defensive weakness had become a strength. Many opposition attacks floundered on a thundering Kaino tackle in the years to come.

Kaino’s game has developed past that of just a physically imposing presence. He also became a useful lineout option, showed good ability to time a pass and coupled that with a low mistake rate. Nominated for the 2011 IRB player of the year award and won the Kelvin Tremain memorial trophy for the New Zealand player of 2011.

53. Johnny Simpson (1947-1950 – 30 matches)
Known throughout his career and for some time afterwards as “the Iron Man.” It was highly appropriate for few props have been as durable and as rugged as this Auckland and All Black of the mid to late 1940s. Immensely strong with a definite physical presence around the field.

Broadcaster and author Winston McCarthy said “everything about him betokened strength – and he was strong.” Bob Scott later said of him: “I came to respect JG Simpson as the finest forward I ever played with.” Simpson suffered a serious knee injury against the touring Lions in 1950 that brought a sudden end to his career. He was only 28 and clearly still had plenty left to offer at the highest level.

52. Keven Mealamu (2002-2012 – 102 matches)
An accurate lineout thrower and strong scrummager, Mealamu is equally comfortable in the running game, where his skill and speed make him almost a fourth loose forward. A durable and consistent performer. Few hookers in All Black history have shown his all round ability in both tight and loose exchanges.

51. Fred Roberts (1905-1910 – 52 matches)
As New Zealand’s first halfback of note, Wellington’s Fred Roberts was one of the key players and tactical lynchpins of the wonderfully successful “Original” All Blacks team which swept through Europe and North America, amassing 976 points and conceding just 59.

Described as having “a rugged physique and a tremendous capacity for taking punishment” Roberts’ performance of playing, in a demanding position, in 29 of the 32 matches in Britain in 1905/6 remains one of the great feats of early New Zealand rugby.

The Crowd Says:

2012-11-24T15:13:21+00:00

JustinB

Guest


Fantastic list. Your analysis is shrewd and insightful although Frank Bunce being so low on this list is highly questionable. The All Blacks collapsed in '98 because of Zinny, Fitzy and Bunce's retirement His influence was immense.

2012-11-23T23:46:15+00:00

harryonthecoast

Guest


You are most proably right, Roddo12 but this history lesson has been great. Makes for better reading than the incessant carping about Cooper and Deans

2012-11-22T02:53:11+00:00

Roddo12

Guest


These lists are always subjective and very difficult to properly compare players from different eras, rules, pace of game, fitness levels etc etc and therefore a little pointless to entertain. I mean I don't think that a player (as good as he was then) from the 40's can be ranked higher than someone from the current era...as the game and players and conditioning and skills and rules etc etc etc have progressed so much and players from that era were smaller on average, didn't have close to the same speed, strength, fitness and skills etc (but certainly had alot of heart)..so if a time machine were invented they would not have been close to AB of today standard. Period. Quite simply the best players of all time were from the 70's onwards and top heavy over the last 25 years. And the number one Allblack of all time can only be judged on his achievements, and NO Allblack in history can match the accolades of first Mccaw and 2nd Carter, as both have re-written the record books and have been the most successful players, part of the most successful Allblacks teams and are undisputed best ever in their positions.

2012-11-22T02:25:25+00:00

katzilla

Roar Guru


I believe Roko dented his legacy a bit in the last year or two. His strike rate in his prime was unmatched and it wasn't just on the end of team plays, he scored some unbelievable solo tries. Especially in that 03 shellacking of the Wallabies. The spin move against Italy. The rampage through the Boks ruck and through 4-5 players. Letting a cross field kick bounce off his chest then catching it with one hand. I'm youngish but Rokocoko has supplied a couple of my enduring All Black memories. My opinion is that had he left NZ rugby earlier he might have been remembered as one of the top 2-3 NZ wingers of all time instead of bomb dropping butterfingers.

2012-11-22T02:18:09+00:00

katzilla

Roar Guru


If I were to hazard a guess I'd say you have him around the 18-19 mark. Rather then not at all.

2012-11-22T01:38:37+00:00

dr evil

Guest


I agree. I think think Frank Bunce should be higher up. I used to love watching him smash people - great stuff.

AUTHOR

2012-11-21T23:46:35+00:00

abnutta

Roar Guru


"set your faces to stunned" You're gonna be shocked ;)

AUTHOR

2012-11-21T23:45:34+00:00

abnutta

Roar Guru


It's not been easy... I put Mealamu there because in the early part of his career he played and has often played since like Ron Hemi, who revolutionised the hooking role. Fitzpatrick was lauded for turning the hooker into a fourth loose forward and Mealamu looked as though he might turn into a third midfield back. Secondly, I rate durability and longevity as a strong indicator. I believe him one of NZs finest ever hookers above Catley who was a 'striker' first and last. The panel of the 2001 ranking had Catley, Bunce, Olo Brown and MacDowall in about the same ranking positions they are now.

2012-11-21T20:54:50+00:00

katzilla

Roar Guru


Is big Brad Thorn going to sneak into your list at some point? I'm guessing he's going to show up on the mysterious missing list. I'd be shocked if he was missed, but equally shocked if he made your top 20.

2012-11-21T15:42:35+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


ab, needed a separate commet - why is Kev here? Other front rowers like Brown and McDowell are way lower than they should be if this is where Kev sits - that group should be a lot closer. But admitting I've compared props to hookers then lets look just at rakes. Where is Hore? I refuse to rate him higher and think that he isn't that far behnd - did I miss him on the names so far or has he been omitted?

2012-11-21T15:39:35+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Controversial! Bunce is way too low. ab, I criticised you on Jack - have to say I think I. Jones is in about the right spot.

AUTHOR

2012-11-21T13:36:10+00:00

abnutta

Roar Guru


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