'He was electrifying': Roger Tuivasa-Sheck's ex-rugby coach reveals which position he should play for Blues
One of Roger Tuivasa-Sheck's former rugby coaches is excited to see how the New Zealand Warriors skipper fits back into rugby union.
Tuivasa-Sheck, who has spent the last nine seasons in the NRL with the Sydney Roosters and Warriors, is reportedly set to leave the 13-man code at the end of 2021 following the conclusion of his contract.
Rumours connecting the 27-year-old with a code switch have long been documented, and you can be forgiven for feeling the latest surfacing is another flog of a dead horse. However, sources confirmed to the Herald there are ongoing discussions, with an agreement potentially being reached within the next week.
Andrew Douglas coached the New Zealand secondary schools rugby team 10 years ago that Tuivasa-Sheck was a part of. He's also previously mentored the St Peter's Cambridge 1st XV, and is in the United States heading Old Glory DC in Major League Rugby.
Tuivasa-Sheck's desire to leave will create a gaping hole in many Warriors' fans hearts, but Douglas reckons he doesn't owe the club – or New Zealand Rugby League – anything.
"It's up for him and his family to decide what he wants to do with his [next] career step. I think most New Zealanders who appreciate what he's done would put his thoughts first and wish him all the best.
"He's a fairly strong family man; he sacrificed a lot last season for the Warriors and New Zealand Rugby League. He's given that club a fair bit over the last few years, he's been their leader and I think he's done that really really well."
Douglas described the mooted switch as exciting for rugby.
Tuivasa-Sheck is no stranger to New Zealand's national game, having played for Otahuhu College 1st XV as well playing for the Blues development squad as a teenager. In the New Zealand secondary schools team he played alongside All Blacks Ardie Savea and Ngani Laumape.
It has been a decade since Douglas mentored Tuivasa-Sheck on field, but he knows how good he can be.
"He was electrifying quick over 10 metres, amazing footwork and the ability to do that at full pace was certainly something that stood out then. Defensively was very aware.
"He's obviously physically a lot more mature now; he understands his game pretty well. It'll be fitting into how the defensive patterns of rugby work these days in that back three, if that's where he plays."
What position he does play nowadays is a completely different kettle of fish. New Zealand rugby is always deep across park, but right now outside backs are arguably the country's richest commodity, particularly considering Damian McKenzie struggles to nail a place on the All Blacks' bench.
Thus playing somewhere else in the 15 may be the way to go for Tuivasa-Sheck - a typical fullback.
"Wing could be the place to start that, and then mould him back to fullback. I could actually see him at centre long term. Defensively reads really well… his ability to straighten up on attack and put others in space could be a real asset there too," Douglas says.
"My one concern with fullback for him would be his kicking game. The way teams are playing these days… they don't want to give away a lot of penalties; they tend to want to play the game in certain parts of the field. I'm not saying Roger can't kick… but that would be my one reservation.
"You want a big voice back there so it means someone who understands the game very well. To be fair to him you want to give him time to settle in to rugby. He will, but it's not going to happen overnight."
By contrast, Douglas believes it is clear which Super Rugby club Tuivasa-Sheck will line up for.
"The Blues is obviously the logical fit for him," he says.
"He lives in Auckland, his family's all there, that's where he grew up, it's where he played his first franchise-type rugby."
Should the move be confirmed, Tuivasa-Sheck will leave behind a fruitful rugby league career. He joined the Warriors in 2016 - following four seasons with the Roosters where he won a Premiership - and took over the club's captaincy a year later from Simon Mannering. He helped guide them to a drought-breaking finals berth in 2018, a year in which he also won the Dally M medal – the first Warrior to do so in NRL history.
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Thats exactly the criticism Ed, that it has already been done for generations. A strong SA, in many respects, should certainly help African rugby develop. You'd have to think they'd acclimatize much better being drawn to a pro SA club than say a European. Hopefully the fact theyve gone private (is that right Graham?) should enable this sort of change.
Go to commentsPerofeta came back and was available for the eoyt right? Or was that why Love was in the squad (but got injured in the last week)?
It was such a frustrating year. Perofeta looked a service stop gap until Jordan was fit, but then got injured. Plummer was selected because of Pero's injury and dmac shat the bed in the second half in Australia but Clarke (?) got himself binned at the 65 min mark so Plummer couldn't come on (at least with the risk adverse Razors thinking) when he was planned to.
So many other exciting opportunities that could have happened without injuries, but then theyre probably balanced by knowing Sititi probably wouldn't have been given a chance without multiple injuries happened.
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