Wales star 'grabbed' All Blacks scrumhalf Justin Marshall by the throat in tunnel altercation
New Zealand Herald: Former All Black halfback Justin Marshall has revealed the moment a years-long feud with a Welsh player spilled over - resulting in a bust-up in the players' tunnel of the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff in 2007.
Marshall, who spent two seasons at Ospreys following his a stellar test career, and former Wales international Mike Phillips clashed during an EDF Energy Cup semifinal match between Phillips' Cardiff Blues and Marshall's Ospreys back in 2007.
Speaking to BBC Sport's Scrum V podcast, Marshall revealed how the pair almost came to blows after Phillips refused to shake his hand after the encounter, won 27-10 by Ospreys and during which the 81-test former All Black got the better of his younger counterpart.
"He grabbed me by the throat after the game when I tried to shake his hand," Marshall said. "That's how wound up he was. He was angry."
According to Marshall, an earlier off-field incident had fuelled the rivalry before the clash.
"What he did that annoyed me was that he approached me one night in a pub in Swansea and had another go, with the same sort of stuff. 'You're rubbish. I'm a better player than you and all that'," Marshall said.
"That's stepping out of the boundaries and you probably deserve to be pulled in a little bit."
Marshall, who spent ten seasons with the Crusaders before joining Leeds in 2006, left Ospreys in 2008 after Phillips joined the club. He retired from playing in 2010 before taking up commentary."
"I'd never met him before and with the greatest of respect to him, I didn't know who he was. He was a young player and I'd just arrived in the country.
"By God he disliked me. A lot of it was really personal. 'You're rubbish. What are you doing out here?' Blah, blah, blah.
"At this stage I'd played 81 tests for the All Blacks so I thought I was okay!"
This article first appeared in the New Zealand Herald and is republished here with full permission.
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Which people exactly?
Go to commentsWas anything but fine margins, the scoreline was flattering for that game. They were beat in every margin but most emphatically be effort of Argentina. They were slow and likely arrogant in their prep following the England series. You can see the effect on the selection and poor messaging all the playmakers started receiving from the coaching setup there after.
Otherwise though there was also a lot of really good stuff that can too easily be labelled as lucky by people intent on making a point. The team was far from certain and clinical though and the best that can be said of their losses was that they were largely due to some atrocious decisions with cards twice against SA and the neckroll last weekend (you can't take away the 14 point try, that is typical French rugby and to be expected).
This team is good enough to be able to cope with those sorts of difficulties if they could just execute a bit better (but only as well as they have traditionally mind you). Sound selections aside. Some good positivity in this article but we know it's not going to be easy as the ABs have just been trying to return to their DNA after Fosters control but countries like Aussie have a much bigger task in that respect and SA is even trying to change their DNA (again). Those two opponents (along with France obviously) are going to provide some tough competition in seeing who can lead into the 2027 RWC with the best prospects and form behind them.
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