Otago Daily Times

Tough little halfback never held back — on the field or off it

- TOMMY RAUDONIKIS

Rugby league great

TOMMY RAUDONIKIS completely lacked political correctnes­s, and was habitually irreverent and unfailing in his honesty and compassion.

He was also one of the mostloved and bestperfor­med figures of his era in rugby league, a game in which he was the model for toughness and commitment.

As a rival player once testified: ‘‘If he couldn't beat ya, he'd belt ya.’’

Which isn't as bad as it might sound, because Raudonikis wasn't often beaten.

Raudonikis, who died on April 7, aged 70, was ‘‘Tom Terrific’’, a halfback who played like a frontrower, a rugged, uncompromi­sing and brilliant footballer who lived his life just as he played and coached the game he professed to love ‘‘like a fat kid loves cake’’.

Born in Bathurst, NSW, Raudonikis was the son of an immigrant Lithuanian father and a Swiss mother.

After beginning his senior football career at Cowra, he continued it at Wagga Wagga, where he joined the RAAF as an engineerin­g apprentice.

In 1969, he moved to Sydney and played the first of 201 games with Western Suburbs in the Sydney first division.

In almost every sense, Raudonikis was a perfect fit at Wests, a club whose workingcla­ss demographi­c was reflected in its nickname ‘‘the fibros’’, and one with a long history of battling against adversity and producing nononsense players.

His time at Wests correspond­ed with one of the club's greatest periods.

Although they didn't manage a premiershi­p, the Magpies of the Raudonikis era included John

Dorahy, Les Boyd, John

Donnelly and Graeme O'Grady.

Among such an illustriou­s group, Raudonikis was voted the league's best and fairest for 1972 and awarded the Rothman's Medal.

He won selection for NSW and Australia in 1971 and was an almost automatic choice as

Blues and Kangaroos halfback for the next decade.

More recently, Raudonikis was inducted into the Wests Magpies' Hall of Fame and was named one of Australian rugby league's 100 greatest players.

After 11 seasons at Wests, nine of them as club captain, Raudonikis, reluctantl­y, moved to Newtown in 1980, playing 37 games over three seasons at the club.

After the Jets, which included a grand final as captain in 1981, he went to Queensland, where he was captaincoa­ch of the Brothers club in Brisbane in

1983 and also coached at Norths in Brisbane and at Ipswich, returning to Sydney for two forgettabl­e seasons as coach of his former club Wests.

His twoyear spell as NSW State of Origin coach included a series win in 1997 in which his infamous ‘‘cattle dog’’ war cry — an instructio­n to his players to start a brawl — was born.

As notorious and celebrated as Raudonikis' efforts at club level may have been, it was his role as a NSW representa­tive, ‘‘Origin Original’’ and Australian internatio­nal that gave more illustriou­s definition to his football career.

Having played for NSW in the old interstate series for 10 years, Raudonikis captained the Blues in the inaugural State of Origin match in 1980.

That fixture was actually the third game of that year's interstate series in which the state a player represente­d was determined by where he played club football, and had long resulted in lopsided NSW victories.

This time Queensland won 2010 with Raudonikis, in his oneandonly Origin appearance, getting knocked out early and scoring a late try for the losers.

His recollecti­on of the match was lessthande­tailed, but typically erudite: ‘‘There was a blue, I went over to it, I went down like a bucket of s...’’

Both his interstate and internatio­nal careers ran from 1971 to 1980 and involved 24 games for NSW and 29 for Australia.

He embarked on a postfootba­ll media career highlighte­d by his ‘‘Raudonikis Report’’ segment on the Footy Show.

While irreverenc­e and confrontat­ion may have characteri­sed the Raudonikis image, his longterm friend and former coach at Wests, Roy Masters, provided another insight into a man he loved and respected.

In 2017, when Raudonikis was found to have a cancerous tumour in his neck, Masters, also one of Australia's finest sporting journalist­s, wrote: ‘‘It should be no mystery why Tommy is universall­y loved.

‘‘His twin defining characteri­stics are a searing honesty and a commitment to hard work. He is incapable of telling a lie.’’

At the time of Raudonikis' heart surgery, Masters observed: ‘‘Who could believe the very object that identified him would give him his biggest problem? At least the doctors will have plenty to work with.’’ — AAP

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? So long, Tommy . . . A tribute is displayed on the big screen as the teams and spectators observe a minute’s silence for the late Tommy Raudonikis before the NRL game between the Sydney Roosters and the Cronulla Sharks at the Sydney Cricket Ground last Saturday.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES So long, Tommy . . . A tribute is displayed on the big screen as the teams and spectators observe a minute’s silence for the late Tommy Raudonikis before the NRL game between the Sydney Roosters and the Cronulla Sharks at the Sydney Cricket Ground last Saturday.

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