Rocks, diamonds and Craig Dimond: Rugby league’s greatest Craigs

By Redcap / Roar Guru

Apropos of nothing, the name Craig derives from the Gaelic word for rock. A very suitable name for rugby league.

If you had listened to rugby league on ABC radio recently, you might have heard a crazy person (me) ring in with a Craig-related trivia question. I’ll pose it again here.

There are four former New South Wales State of Origin players who each have a brother who also played first-grade rugby league, albeit less successfully. There are no representative players among them and nothing much of note in their respective careers.

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All four of the brothers share the name Craig. Can you name them all?

None of the four Craigs in question has made it into the team of greatest Craigs.

1. Jim Craig – Balmain, University, Ipswich and Wests
Craig was one of the greats of the early game and is part of the Australian and international halls of fame. A nine-time Kangaroo, he won five premierships with Balmain between 1915 and 1920. After a brief stint at University in 1922, Craig moved to Queensland where he captained the Maroons to multiple interstate series victories.

Upon his return to Sydney in 1929 he joined Wests as captain-coach and led the club to victory in the first official ‘grand final’ in 1930, his sixth premiership won a remarkable 15 years after his first.

2. Craig Smith – Norths and Melbourne
Smith played only 22 games between the Bears and Storm. The last of them – the 1999 grand final – still haunts me. Smith was the player hit high by the Dragons’ Jamie Ainscough and awarded the penalty try that clinched Melbourne’s first premiership.

3. Craig Innes – Western Reds and Manly
Innes was a burly centre and former All Black who was part of Manly’s 1996 grand final victory. He was denied the opportunity to represent New Zealand due to the Super League war but did represent the Rest of the World in 1997.

4. Owen Craigie – Newcastle, Wests Tigers and Souths
Craigie was a versatile player who made 153 first-grade appearances between 1995 and 2004. He was part of Newcastle’s famous grand final victory in 1997 and Souths NRL rebirth in 2002.

5. Craig Hancock – Manly and Balmain
An underrated winger who played 192 first-grade games, Hancock was part of Manly’s 1996 premiership victory. Hancock played on the wing for New South Wales in their famous 0-2 defeat in Game 1 of the 1995 Origin series.

6. Craig Polla-Mounter – Canterbury
Polla-Mounter was a loyal servant of Canterbury for ten years and 192 games. He steered the Bulldogs to victory in the 1995 grand final and played a starring role in the great escape against Parramatta in 1998.

Craig Polla-Mounter (Nick Laham/ALLSPORT)

7. Craig Gower – Penrith and Newcastle
Gower had a really interesting career. He played 238 games for Penrith and captained them to a premiership in 2003, played for winning New South Wales teams in State of Origin and the Super League tri-series and played 24 Tests for Australia.

Then things spun in unexpected directions. He joined French rugby union club Bayonne for four seasons and played 14 Test matches for Italy. He returned to rugby league with the London Broncos in 2012 before a six-game stint at Newcastle in 2013. But for injury, he’d have played for Italy at the 2013 rugby league World Cup.

8. Craig Salvatori – Easts and Souths
Due to injuries in the latter part of his career, Salvatori never quite fulfilled his potential. He did manage two Tests for Australia and five State of Origin appearances on top of 139 games for Easts and Souths between 1986 and 1996.

9. Craig Wing – Souths and Easts
After Wing’s acting career didn’t take off, he turned to rugby league and did well, playing 256 NRL games, winning a premiership in 2002 and playing 12 Origins and 16 Test matches. He also played 11 rugby union Test matches for Japan.

10. Craig Young – St George
Young turned his back on a potential career in football to become a Dragons legend. Over the course of 12 seasons and 234 games he won two premierships and was captain in St George’s 1979 grand final victory and 1988 Panasonic Cup victory.

Young also managed 21 Tests for Australia, including two Kangaroos tours and five Origins for New South Wales, including the inaugural game in 1980.

11. Craig Fitzgibbon – Illawarra, St George Illawarra and Easts
For a guy who played 18 Tests, 11 Origins and 263 NRL games and is the 16th highest point-scorer in rugby league history, Fitzgibbon was a little unlucky. He played in five grand finals and four defeats, including a couple of heartbreakers in 1999 and 2004. He did have his moment of glory with Easts in 2002.

(Nick Laham/Allsport)

12. Bob Craig – Balmain
Bob Craig is Australia’s answer to CB Fry, though it’s not clear if, like Fry, he was ever offered the throne of Albania. But he did almost everything else. Craig was a champion footballer, swimmer and water polo player and won a gold medal in rugby union at the 1908 Olympics. Then he turned his hand to rugby league, where he won four premierships with Balmain between 1915 and 1919 and played seven Tests for Australia.

13. Craig Greenhill – Cronulla and Penrith
Greenhill made an unwanted piece of history in 1996 when he was the first player ever sent off in a State of Origin game. But he had a good career, playing 166 first grade games, six Origins and three games for Australia in 1997.

Bench
Craig Teitzel, Craig Stapleton, Craig Dimond and Craig Teevan

The Crowd Says:

2021-12-04T04:47:39+00:00

Larry1950

Guest


Correction, Harry Cameron won consecutive premierships with Wests after winning one with the roosters, should have checked it before posting. I was still around the club at the time & he definitely had a crooked nose.

2021-12-04T04:41:27+00:00

Larry1950

Guest


Could we stretch as far as the ex-rooster centre Harry Cameron who moved to Brisbane, joined the mighty Wests Panthers, won a premiership & represented QLD pre-origin?

AUTHOR

2021-12-04T04:06:14+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


Yeah, fair call.

2021-12-04T03:26:47+00:00

Larry1950

Guest


Yeah, sorry AMD, looked it up & realised I am going dotty. From memory, and the fact that they didn’t play for a club I followed closely, they were similar style players but I defer to more knowledgeable scribes. Anyway, I think you were generous to ex bronco reserve Craig Teevan in giving him a bench spot in your squad, maybe Polla-Mounter on the bench & Coleman at half would be fairer, and the on field yapping would step up about 20 decibels. Wouldn’t need referee microphones to follow the chatter with Coleman there.

AUTHOR

2021-12-04T02:52:41+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


It was Noel Goldthorpe: https://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/matches/super-league-tri-series-1997/grand-final/new-south-wales--sl--vs-queensland--sl-/summary.html

2021-12-04T02:39:14+00:00

Larry1950

Guest


Didn’t Polla-Mounter kick the winning field goal in that unlimited extra time Super League state of origin game that went more than 100 minutes or am I getting dotty in my old age?

2021-12-04T01:05:13+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


Then imagine how I felt having to listen to TB banging on about how Michael Lichaa was a good hooker and a decent first-grader even after I kept telling him he as neither of the aforementioned. Look at the history, TB was claiming that Lichaa would play Origin before Damien Cook! :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

2021-12-04T00:45:11+00:00

Slammin_Sam

Roar Rookie


agree...have had more than enough conversation about two halves that werent in the top 5 in their position for their careers!

2021-12-04T00:40:56+00:00

Slammin_Sam

Roar Rookie


john tobin and les mara

2021-12-02T20:26:13+00:00

Dogs Of War

Roar Guru


I remember that one. Turned off the radio as we were up 17-0. Thought the game was over. Just one of those days. It's on Kayo now as an old goodie. Can't bring myself to watch it though.

2021-12-01T02:58:03+00:00

Dionysus

Guest


deleted

AUTHOR

2021-12-01T02:38:06+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


Nice one - didn't remember it at all and can't find surviving footage on the tube.

2021-12-01T02:06:04+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Don’t remember that one mate (conveniently?) Sounds like a good game and two pretty impressive lineups…

2021-12-01T01:21:31+00:00

Sammy

Guest


This infamous match featured three (3) Craigs. https://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/seasons/nswrl-1993/round-13/canterbury-vs-north-sydney/summary.html Craig Makepeace was the hero that day, while Craig Polla-Mounter was definitely the villain, elbowing David Hall to give away a potential 8-point try on full-time. The funny thing was that Craig Makepeace only kicked 1/5 that afternoon - he missed the conversion (taken from where the try was scored) but then kicked the penalty goal.

2021-12-01T01:19:03+00:00

Sammy

Guest


@The Barry - do you remember this match: https://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/seasons/nswrl-1993/round-13/canterbury-vs-north-sydney/summary.html It featured three Craigs - Craig Makepeace was the hero that day, while Craig Polla-Mounter was definitely the villain, elbowing David Hall to give away a potential 8-point try on full-time. The funny thing was that Craig Makepeace actually missed the conversion (taken from where the try was scored) but then kicked the penalty goal. He actually only kicked 1/5 that afternoon.

AUTHOR

2021-11-30T08:19:33+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


Polla-Mounter is one. Is Teevan the other?

2021-11-30T06:47:29+00:00

no one in particular

Roar Guru


Paul Hayward captain

AUTHOR

2021-11-30T06:43:25+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


Hi GB, "Even so, he was clearly respected by Sterlo and Vautin during that era" The problem with this argument is that it's less about Coleman and more about appealing to somebody else's authority. I respect Sterling and Vautin as judges, but I'm not going to base my own opinion solely on theirs. "how Coleman was a tough, skillful and underestimated player." He was. I remember him from his time at Souths, the GC and Wests. That's a very apt description of CPM as well, with the addendum that he was much more successful.

2021-11-30T06:35:45+00:00

Glory Bound

Roar Rookie


We have to agree to disagree yet again TB. Like you said; "Neither Coleman or Polla-Mounter were close to being the gun halfbacks off their era". Let's just leave it at that.

2021-11-30T06:31:49+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


It’s a furphy that Coleman spent a career playing for struggling sides. Souths made the semis four times in six seasons between 84 and 89, including 2nd in 86 and 1st in 89 He had players like Ian Roberts, Davidson, Boyle, Fenech, Blake, Andrews, Paul Roberts, Tony Rampling, Wayne Chisholm, Paul Roberts, etc through that run… they weren’t a struggling team at all Even with all those players Coleman won 2 of 8 semi finals he played Polls-Mounter wasn’t just a passenger in the semi finals series he played in. He was an active contributor in 95 and carried the Dogs in the 98 series, especially the win against Parramatta. To suggest he only won because of the team around him is at best simplistic Also, the Dogs teams in 95 and 98 finished 6th and 9th respectively so they weren’t star studded sides any more than the Souths teams that finished 5th in 84 or 87 and bombed out

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