Tonga squad: Taumalolo, AFB, Keaon and Haumole to lead stacked squad on pioneering tour of England

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

Tonga are in a notably different spot to most of the other nations we have covered, not least because they are travelling to England rather than playing close to home. 

Mate Ma’a Tonga have been granted A-side status on a tour of the Northern Hemisphere for the first time, billed equally with the Kangaroos and Kiwis, which is a huge win before they even step on the plane. This is pioneering stuff for the Pacific island nation.

Moreover, they have a settled coaching staff, with Kristian Woolf remaining in post, and don’t have that many participants in the finals, giving a relatively injury-free list to choose from. If anything, their boys might be rusty.

There could be a plan to look towards the next World Cup now, especially in moving on from some of the older players, but that doesn’t seem likely. 

With top billing and having underperformed by only making the quarters at the last World Cup, they’ll want to come home with a win.

It’s a huge ask going to England, who will have home crowds and are used to what might be cold and wet conditions, but Tonga will be, as they generally are, absolutely stacked, especially in the forwards and outside backs. Let’s get into it.

Certainties

The list of Tongans to go around again is pretty long, as well as being fearsome in quality. 

As ever, that starts with the pack: Addin Fonua-Blake, one of the best in the NRL in 2023, and stalwart Jason Taumalolo will be the leaders, with Tevita Tatola and Mo Fotuaika also in the rotation.

The back row features Haumole Olakauatu and Keaon Koloamatangi, great mates off the field who love playing together, and both Felise Kaufusi and Siosifa Talakai to fit in somewhere.

Siliva Havili loves playing for Tonga and should be in the 9 jumper, with Soni Luke the other option either on the bench or to start.

Halfback will be Isaiya Katoa, who was good enough to make last year’s World Cup without playing an NRL game, and Junior Amone. 

His Dragons teammate Moses Suli will be a centre, likely with Will Penisini. The fullback role is up for grabs, but the frontrunner is Tolu Koula, who impressed there last year and latterly for Manly at the end of 2023. 

His clubmate Christian Tuipulotu will be on one wing, with Sharks flyer Sione Katoa on the other.

Isaiya Katoa. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

Probably out

A few familiar faces will struggle to make this year’s team. 

Daniel Tupou has been out long term for the Roosters and it would be a surprise if he was risked. Siosiua Taukeiaho has barely played in the Super League for the Catalans and won’t make the squad.

Kotoni Staggs has been a fairly consistent pick going back to the 2019 series, but with the Kangaroos so stacked for centres, it’s possible that he opts to go with them instead. 

From the UK, there’s Konrad Hurrell, too old now, and Will Hopoate, who hasn’t played since late July with an injury, though he is ready for the back end of the season with St Helens.

(Photo by Fiona Goodall/Getty Images)

Probably in

David Fifita is out of the Kangaroos squad and will probably go around for Tonga, but nothing is certain at this stage. 

Stefano Utoikamanu was good enough for a NSW Blues jumper earlier this year and will be high in Woolf’s thoughts for international honours, if they can find a spot for him in that packed middle rotation.

Tesi Niu has been reborn at the Dolphins and the coach, who is Wayne Bennett’s assistant and successor there, will have seen it firsthand. He can cover fullback and wing, and will be there for depth.

There’s a few things in life that are certain: death, taxes and Tui Lolohea getting picked for Tonga squads. He’s a halfback, which they don’t have many of, covers a lot of positions and brings a lot of experience.

Possibles

Joe Ofahengaue has had a troubled season with injury but was fit by the back of Parramatta’s campaign, so will be available. He’s next off the middle forward conveyor belt. 

In a similar situation could be Eliesa Katoa, who finds himself behind a lot of other backrowers, and one wonders how they would fit him in. He will likely travel but might not play.

Ben Murdoch-Masila, who has played a lot before but would be an outside choice now, and Hame Sele, who also falls victim to the 700 other middle forwards available.

Albert Hopoate, Brenko Lee and George Jennings could also do a job out wide, but are down the pecking order.

Likely squad of 21

  1. Tolu Koula
  2. Sione Katoa
  3. Moses Suli
  4. Will Penisini
  5. Christian Tuipulotu
  6. Junior Amone
  7. Isaiya Katoa
  8. Moeaki Fotuaika
  9. Siliva Havili
  10. Addin Fonua-Blake
  11. Haumole Olakauatu
  12. David Fifita
  13. Keaon Koloamatangi
  14. Soni Luke
  15. Tevita Tatola
  16. Felise Kaufusi
  17. Jason Taumalolo
  18. Stefano Utoikamanu
  19. Tesi Niu
  20. Tui Lolohea
  21. Siosifa Talakai

The Crowd Says:

2023-09-23T08:52:07+00:00

Panthers

Roar Rookie


Lolohea at halfback & Isaiya Katoa given a roving commission at 5/8 . That’s when Katoa is at his best.

2023-09-23T08:25:10+00:00

Mick P

Roar Rookie


Thanks for the explanation Mike, appreciated.

2023-09-23T08:22:53+00:00

Maddi Davis

Roar Rookie


I think we both know that will never happen until actual Tongans know what Rugby League is Ton

AUTHOR

2023-09-23T08:03:13+00:00

Mike Meehall Wood

Editor


No just means that they're the the main event of a tour, just like Aus or NZ in terms of hotels, pay etc. Doesn't have anything to do with eligibility. They're still T2 and pretty much always will be. Tiers are more about development in country, infrastructure, all that. How good your men's team is would be fairly low down a list of factors.

2023-09-23T02:10:05+00:00

Dumbo

Roar Rookie


Mate Ma’a Tonga have been granted A-side status ” Mike, what is the significance of that statement? Does it mean that anyone who plays for Tonga loses eligibility to be selected for Australia, GB or NZ in the future? Does it affect voting rights or anything related to the development of the international game?

2023-09-22T23:56:31+00:00

Bill

Roar Rookie


If Taumalolo was a few years younger amongst these other fellas it would have to be one of the most destructive forward packs I’ve seen. Very exciting

2023-09-22T22:59:33+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


I would be starting Lolohea. I’ve always had wraps on him even with a bit of age now. I reckon he has the maturity, mongrel and authority to guide this big team around. Otherwise it’s a cracking team but the Poms are not too shabby themselves. (I’m watching the Leigh v Wigan replay as I type).

2023-09-22T21:05:49+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


That's one great forward pack. The spine looks a bit weak but they will be on the front foot with that pack. Poms l be worried.

2023-09-22T20:09:50+00:00

Tony Dargon

Roar Guru


I'm looking forward to the next series when the Lions tour Tonga.

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