Kieran Read

Kieran Read
Birth name Kieran James Read
Date of birth (1985-10-26) 26 October 1985
Place of birth Papakura, New Zealand
Height 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in)
Weight 111 kg (17 st 7 lb; 245 lb)
School Rosehill College
University University of Canterbury
Rugby union career
Position(s) Number 8, Blindside Flanker
All Black No. 1083
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
2006–16
2017–
Canterbury
Counties Manukau
37 (50)
Correct as of 24 May 2017
Super Rugby
Years Team Apps (Points)
2007– Crusaders 133 (105)
Correct as of 23 July 2016
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
2008– New Zealand 113 (120)
Correct as of 25 September 2018

Kieran Read (born 26 October 1985) is the current captain of the All Blacks, New Zealand's national rugby union team. He also plays for the Crusaders in the Super Rugby competition as a number 8. He is one of the most-capped rugby players in history, was the IRB Player of the Year in 2013 and a key member of 2011 and 2015 Rugby World Cup winning teams, becoming one of only 20 dual Rugby World Cup winners. Read has been captain of the All Blacks since 2016, succeeding flanker Richie McCaw.

Read is considered by many to be the best number 8 currently active in World Rugby and is arguably one of the greatest rugby players of all time.

Early life

Read played his childhood rugby in the small town of Drury in the Counties Manukau region, just south of Auckland. He attended Opaheke Primary where his mother taught and Rosehill College, with a one-year interlude at Saint Kentigern College in 2000. Read excelled in all aspects of school life, but especially on the sports field. He gained excellent marks through to the end of seventh form. He was Head Boy of the 2000-student Rosehill College, as well as Sportsman of the Year and Sports All-rounder of the Year. Read was a talented cricketer, representing Northern District age-group teams and being selected for the New Zealand Under-17 tournament side in 2002.[1]

Rugby career

Provincial

Despite his age-group success as a cricket batsman, Read focused his efforts on rugby. One year after leaving school, he began his professional career in the Canterbury development squad. Read played his first National Provincial Championship game in 2006, his second year out of college.

Super Rugby

Read played for the Crusaders in the Super 14 in 2007 as a blindside flanker. He moved to number 8 during the 2008[2] season, culminating in the squad winning the Super Rugby title.[3]

He first captained the side in 2011, standing in for an injured Richie McCaw.[4] In 2012, Read led the team for their first 10 matches while McCaw was rested.[5] In 2013, another extended rest for McCaw saw Read named captain, although he missed six consecutive games with a toe injury.[6]

Read was captain of the Crusaders from 2014-2016, but disappointingly the team did not make the 2015 playoffs. Read was relieved of captaincy when new coach Scott Robertson took over for the 2017 season, with Read missing the first half of the season due to wrist surgery. Sam Whitelock succeeded Read as captain, with Matt Todd and Ryan Crotty as vice captains. Read only played in 7 matches for the Crusaders that year, including starting in the final which was a 25-17 win over the Lions. Read scored 6 tries for the Crusaders that year, including two doubles.

Read missed many Super Rugby games again in the 2018 Super Rugby season, struggling with injury. Read returned to professional rugby from injury following the Steinlager series against France. This saw Read start for the Crusaders in the 2018 Super Rugby Final on 4th August that year. Read produced a high-level performance in the game and helped his team beat the Lions once again in the final, with the Crusaders winning 37-18. This was the first time in 10 years that the Crusaders won a Super Rugby final at home and Read was the only remaining player from the 2008 Super 14 season's final left.

All Blacks

Early Years

Read scoring a try at the 2011 Rugby World Cup

Read was first selected for the All Blacks for the end-of-season tour in 2008, making his debut against Scotland on 8 November. Read started at blindside flanker and played the full 80 minutes that match, which the All Blacks won 32-8. Read came off the bench for another three fixtures on the tour.

In 2009 he was retained for the All Blacks' two-test series against France, starting in the first test which was lost by the All Blacks 22-27. Read started against France the following week at number 8, his preferred position and finished off the All Blacks' 14-10 win having played every minute of the series. Read started in tandem with Jerome Kaino as blindside flanker- this was a combination the All Blacks would continue to use for the better part of a decade. Read started another seven times in 2009 and became the All Blacks' first-choice number 8 that year, displacing the now retired 62-test veteran and former stand-in captain Rodney So'oialo from the starting team.[7]

Read scored his first international try for the All Blacks on 12 June 2010 when the team beat Ireland 66-28. Read's opposite Jamie Heaslip was red-carded, while Read ran rampant on the Irish defence. Read carried a heavy workload that year and started in all 14 tests for the All Blacks in 2010, being one of only two players to do so, with captain Richie McCaw also playing in all 14 tests. Read was the second-to-highest try-scoring All Black in 2010 and, second only to fullback Mils Muliaina who scored 7 tries in 2010. Read scored another 5 tries in 2010, scoring tries in wins against South Africa, Australia and England. Read finished his 2010 season with world-class performances against Ireland and Wales, scoring the first double of his career in a 38-18 win over Ireland. Read was named New Zealand Rugby Player of the Year, being chosen over Richie McCaw who was named World Rugby's Player of the Year for the third time and second year running.[8]

Read was named in the All Blacks' 30-man squad for the 2011 Rugby World Cup, which was hosted by New Zealand. He played in four of the team's seven matches – the pool game against Canada, the quarter-final against Argentina, the semi-final against Australia, and the final against France.[9] The All Blacks became world champions for the second time by beating France 8-7 in the final.[10]

2012-2015

Read had another big year for the All Blacks in 2012 and played 12 tests that year. On 17 November 2012, Read became the 66th All Blacks captain when he led the team for the first time, against Italy at Rome's Olympic Stadium in 2012, scoring a try to help the All Blacks win the match 42–10.[11]

Following Richie McCaw's decision to take a sabbatical for the first half of 2013, Read was named captain of the All Blacks for the three-test series against France in McCaw's absence. On 15 June 2013, Read captained the team for the third time in his 50th test, which coincided with All Blacks' 500th test match, in the second game of the series between New Zealand and France at AMI Stadium. The All Blacks won 30–0.[12] Read captained the All Blacks another three times in the year, scoring two tries against South Africa in the first 20 minutes of the game, but missed out on the chance to score a third after being yellow-carded with six minutes to go.

Read won the 2013 IRB Player of the Year title after playing in of 13 of the 14 All Black tests that year, becoming the third New Zealander to win the award after team mates Dan Carter and Richie McCaw. He also won the top national rugby player award.[13] Read was not subbed off all year, only missing 20 minutes of the 13 tests he played due to yellow cards against South Africa and England.

Read missed the first two tests of 2014 due to concussion, with Jerome Kaino starting at number 8 in his absence. Read made his return to international rugby from injury on 21 June 2014 when the All Blacks beat England 36-13. Read only played for 40 minutes against England, with Liam Messam replacing him at half-time. Read scored two tries in 2014, assisting the All Blacks to get through Australia 51-20 on 23 August 2014 and finishing the 2014 All Blacks season, scoring the final try against Wales on 22 November 2014. Read captained the All Blacks for the eighth time in his career earlier that year on 1 November 2014, leading the team to a 74-6 win against the United States in Chicago.

On 17 June 2015, against Argentina at Christchurch, Kieran Read scored his 18th try and moved past former All Black Zinzan Brooke as the most prolific try-scoring New Zealand Number 8 at test level.[14]

Read played in all seven All Blacks matches in the 2015 Rugby World Cup, which was held in England and ultimately won by New Zealand. He captained the side to a 47-9 win against Tonga during the Pool rounds of the competition when Richie McCaw was rested.[15] Read started in all three knockout rounds of the World Cup, scoring his third try of the 2015 season and second of the competition when the All Blacks thrashed France 62-13 in the quarter-final. Read continued to play an important part in the 2015 World Cup, playing the full 80 minutes of the semi-final's narrow 20-18 win over South Africa and the All Blacks' historic 34-17 victory over Australia in the final on 31 October 2015. With vice-captain Conrad Smith replaced by Sonny Bill Williams at halftime and Richie McCaw replaced by Sam Cane with only a minute left, Read captained the All Blacks for the final few seconds of the final before earning his second World Cup victors' medal, becoming one of only 20 players to win multiple Rugby World Cups.

2016-2017

In 2016, Read was promoted to Captain of the All Blacks, succeeding the long-serving McCaw who announced his retirement at the end of the 2015 Rugby World Cup.[16] Read carried a heavy workload in 2016, starting as captain in every test but one. Read was only subbed off once that year, being replaced with four minutes to go in the second test against Argentina by Highlanders flanker Elliot Dixon.

Read returned from a broken thumb to captain the All Blacks against the British and Irish Lions in 2017, making worldwide headlines with a performance that won him the Man of The Match award and included a bone-crushing tackle on Lions first-five and three-time World Rugby Player of the Year nominee Owen Farrell. Read was replaced by Scott Barrett with four minutes left of the first test, with the All Blacks winning 30-15. Read captained the team in his 100th test, becoming only the eighth All Black to do so, in the third test of the Lions series, on 8th July 2017, ending in a drawn series to the two sides after the third test was a 15-15 draw.

Read continued as captain of the All Blacks for the rest of 2017, scoring two tries in the second test against Argentina on October 1st 2017, bringing his career tally to 23 after being set up for his first try by Waisake Naholo and set up by newcomer Damian McKenzie for a second. Due to All Blacks Vice-Captain Ben Smith taking a sabattical, Julian Savea being dropped at the end of the Lions series after poor performances internationally and in Super Rugby, as well as Israel Dagg's season-ending knee injury, this meant Read had now extended his lead as the most prolific try-scorer of any player in New Zealand's 2017 Rugby Championship squad. Despite this, Read was surpassed as the highest try-scorer in the current team by 2016 and 2017 World Rugby Player of the Year, Beauden Barrett, later in the year when New Zealand beat Scotland 22-17 at Murrayfield. This was also Read's 100th start in the number 8 jersey and his last test for the 2017 season, due to his need for back surgery to relieve chronic pain in his leg. Crusaders captain Sam Whitelock captained the All Blacks for the year's final test, against Wales, in Read's absence.

2018 Season

Read did not play in the All Blacks' three-test series against France during June 2018, having only recovered from injury in May. The current All Blacks squad is captained by Sam Whitelock in Read's absence, with Ben Smith and Sam Cane as Vice-Captains. Read returned to Super Rugby following the end of the French tour, having made his debut for Counties Manukau the week after the series finished. Read is scheduled to be available as All Black captain for the 2018 Rugby Championship.

References

  1. "Drury Rugby Club". druryrugby.co.nz. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  2. "Crusaders Player Profile". crusaders.co.nz. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  3. "Defining Moments". crusaders.co.nz. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  4. "Crusaders team to play Blues named". 3 News. 8 June 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  5. "McCaw back starting and leading Crusaders". 9 May 2012. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  6. Richens, Matt (16 May 2013). "Captain Kieran Read back to lead Crusaders". Fairfax Media (stuff.co.nz). Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  7. "All Blacks Player Profile". allblacks.com. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  8. "Read takes NZ rugby player of the year award". The New Zealand Herald. APN. NZPA. 16 December 2010.
  9. "The squad for the 2011 Rugby World Cup". allblacks.com. Retrieved 11 August 2011.
  10. "The squad for the 2011 Rugby World Cup". BBC. Retrieved 23 October 2011.
  11. "Read to skipper All Blacks against Italy". espn.com.au/rugby. Retrieved 15 November 2012.
  12. "All Blacks Thump France in 500th Test". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  13. "All Black Kieran named IRB Player of the Year for 2013". rugbydump.com. Retrieved 4 December 2013.
  14. "New Zealand vs Argentina – five things we learned from Rugby Championship opener". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 17 July 2015.
  15. "The All Blacks squad for Rugby World Cup 2015". allblacks.com. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  16. "All Blacks squad named for 2016 Steinlager Series". allblacks.com. Retrieved 29 May 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.