Dubai Telegraph - Oh brother! A fourth Barrett could have made All Blacks

EUR -
AED 4.204786
AFN 72.131522
ALL 95.999785
AMD 432.40092
ANG 2.049533
AOA 1049.907549
ARS 1600.516512
AUD 1.633909
AWG 2.060887
AZN 1.943184
BAM 1.955796
BBD 2.309895
BDT 140.729685
BGN 1.957052
BHD 0.433001
BIF 3404.692377
BMD 1.144937
BND 1.467597
BOB 7.924982
BRL 6.10469
BSD 1.146897
BTN 105.862225
BWP 15.628033
BYN 3.393492
BYR 22440.773758
BZD 2.306495
CAD 1.569761
CDF 2584.123556
CHF 0.90381
CLF 0.026697
CLP 1054.13247
CNY 7.896174
CNH 7.904373
COP 4228.895119
CRC 539.601148
CUC 1.144937
CUP 30.340842
CVE 110.265235
CZK 24.466209
DJF 204.229543
DKK 7.471896
DOP 70.46015
DZD 153.144657
EGP 60.431974
ERN 17.174062
ETB 179.018681
FJD 2.551715
FKP 0.860737
GBP 0.863673
GEL 3.12551
GGP 0.860737
GHS 12.454972
GIP 0.860737
GMD 84.152708
GNF 10054.767863
GTQ 8.795019
GYD 239.939463
HKD 8.963452
HNL 30.358065
HRK 7.534712
HTG 150.375066
HUF 392.446831
IDR 19449.052236
ILS 3.600072
IMP 0.860737
INR 105.821702
IQD 1502.403197
IRR 1513292.432889
ISK 144.20515
JEP 0.860737
JMD 179.950383
JOD 0.811718
JPY 182.703386
KES 148.337757
KGS 100.124438
KHR 4598.96962
KMF 493.468258
KPW 1030.44363
KRW 1715.448554
KWD 0.351988
KYD 0.955702
KZT 561.461195
LAK 24574.94498
LBP 102700.170069
LKR 356.927642
LRD 209.870447
LSL 19.262157
LTL 3.380703
LVL 0.692561
LYD 7.317984
MAD 10.801676
MDL 20.006955
MGA 4762.010134
MKD 61.639593
MMK 2403.69357
MNT 4086.255615
MOP 9.24532
MRU 45.885897
MUR 53.251062
MVR 17.689468
MWK 1988.604232
MXN 20.439555
MYR 4.503092
MZN 73.172957
NAD 19.262241
NGN 1589.046972
NIO 42.20009
NOK 11.164686
NPR 169.37936
NZD 1.970105
OMR 0.443929
PAB 1.146797
PEN 3.954991
PGK 5.014989
PHP 68.684226
PKR 320.228483
PLN 4.271887
PYG 7398.983435
QAR 4.169009
RON 5.095425
RSD 117.37025
RUB 92.411407
RWF 1673.603562
SAR 4.29649
SBD 9.218713
SCR 17.510961
SDG 688.107329
SEK 10.803727
SGD 1.467125
SHP 0.859
SLE 28.107741
SLL 24008.777972
SOS 654.301392
SRD 42.990121
STD 23697.893319
STN 24.499945
SVC 10.035021
SYP 126.544188
SZL 19.255957
THB 37.130895
TJS 10.992623
TMT 4.007281
TND 3.391707
TOP 2.756734
TRY 50.576236
TTD 7.778017
TWD 36.716884
TZS 2982.257478
UAH 50.575008
UGX 4311.990346
USD 1.144937
UYU 46.070098
UZS 13847.908522
VES 506.869099
VND 30103.267553
VUV 135.392596
WST 3.13165
XAF 655.958396
XAG 0.014405
XAU 0.000229
XCD 3.094251
XCG 2.066904
XDR 0.815802
XOF 655.955531
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.125117
ZAR 19.293513
ZMK 10305.812598
ZMW 22.32295
ZWL 368.669387
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.99

    -0.48%

  • BCC

    0.3800

    70

    +0.54%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    34.14

    -0.12%

  • BP

    0.5100

    42.67

    +1.2%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    90.9

    +0.1%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    59.93

    +0.07%

  • GSK

    -0.8900

    53.39

    -1.67%

  • CMSC

    -0.1500

    22.99

    -0.65%

  • RIO

    -2.8700

    87.83

    -3.27%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    25.57

    -0.43%

  • AZN

    -2.6000

    189.9

    -1.37%

  • JRI

    -0.2300

    12.59

    -1.83%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    14.41

    +0.69%

  • RYCEF

    -1.1300

    16.12

    -7.01%

Oh brother! A fourth Barrett could have made All Blacks
Oh brother! A fourth Barrett could have made All Blacks / Photo: CHARLY TRIBALLEAU - AFP/File

Oh brother! A fourth Barrett could have made All Blacks

A trio of Barrett brothers will play for New Zealand at the Rugby World Cup, but according to Beauden Barrett, a fourth sibling had also been on course to wear the famous All Blacks jersey until injury prematurely ended his career.

Text size:

The Barretts are the only trio of brothers to have started a Test rugby match together for New Zealand.

Playmaker Beauden, 32, is the full-back or outside-half with a razor-sharp eye for a gap, who has twice been named World Player of the Year.

Jordie, 26, has nailed down a starting berth at centre after switching from full-back.

Lock Scott, 29, was having an outstanding season until he was sent off for two yellow cards in the record 35-7 defeat to South Africa in a warm-up game.

They are three of eight siblings -- five boys, three girls -- who grew up on the family's dairy farm near Rahotu in the North Island's Taranaki province.

Beauden Barrett says their eldest sibling Kane was paving a path to the All Blacks until he suffered a career-ending concussion in 2014.

As a teenager, Kane, now 33, achieved the rare feat of making the New Zealand Secondary Schools team a year early and was then made captain the following season.

As a loose forward or lock, he went on to play Super Rugby for the Auckland Blues until his career was halted by a concussion during a training session. Kane now runs a successful agriculture business.

"I was lucky to play all my rugby growing up with Kane," Beauden Barrett told AFP. "He had to give it up due to concussion. Goodness knows where he could have ended up."

- Sporting genes -

Beauden is adamant his elder brother could have made the All Blacks. "No question, because I know how skillful and talented he was."

A fifth brother, Blake, also made more than 100 appearances for their local rugby club Coastal.

Strong sports genes run through the family.

Mum Robyn shone at basketball and netball in her youth. Dad Kevin played provincial rugby for Taranaki and the Wellington Hurricanes in the early years of Super Rugby.

When he hung up his boots in the 1990s, Kevin Barrett said he wanted to breed some All Blacks. He was true to his word.

Between them, Beauden, Jordie and Scott Barrett have played more than 200 Tests for New Zealand.

What on earth did their parents feed them growing up?

"Lots of organic dairy milk," laughed Beauden.

"Quite a lot of what we ate was off the farm, but mum's supermarket trolleys were always stacked."

The home-grown talent ensured impromptu games in the Barretts' backyard had a competitive edge.

"It was a lot of fun, playing tackle rugby with cousins, siblings or friends," said Beauden.

"We had a floodlit back lawn. We were always out there kicking a ball around."

Beauden is diplomatic about who was the most skillful.

"Everyone had their own little array of skills, whether it was a funky step or a razzly pass."

He appreciates having Scott and Jordie alongside him in the All Blacks lineup.

"The moments after the game are probably the most satisfying," he said.

"When everything goes according to plan, enjoying a beer with my brothers is the ultimate.

"But also being able to travel with your siblings, for so-called work, is a privileged position and being able to see different parts of the world."

The brothers have different ways of coping with pre-Test nerves.

"I know Scott gets super tense 24 hours before a game. As opposed to Jordie, who is very rarely worked up about anything," said Beauden.

"I do like to have my own space, but it's good to have some company as well."

- Role models -

Back in Taranaki, Tim Stuck is the principal at Francis Douglas Memorial College, where all five Barrett brothers attended school.

He agrees with Beauden that Kane could have made the All Blacks.

"He certainly had the skill set to be able go further. I wouldn't have counted him out, that's for sure," Stuck told AFP.

Stuck coached all five siblings in the school rugby team.

"Beauden was an amazingly gifted footballer, even back then," said Stuck.

"Just about every move we had was designed to enable him to score as many tries as possible.

"Scott Barrett was kicking goals as a lock, then you have Jordie, who at 15 or so, was sending cross-field kicks to guys in the corner."

Stuck was also head coach of the Taranaki side which held the provincial Ranfurly Shield trophy in 2020 with Jordie and Beauden in the team.

The brothers regularly return to the school to coach rugby, Stuck said.

"Having those guys walk our school halls and muck around with a ball in our yard is great role-modelling for our students."

H.Pradhan--DT