The New Zealand Herald

All Black Sandy McNicol not afraid to take

- Dylan Cleaver

A few days before the nation stopped on April 25 to remember and celebrate our brave, an All Black died by his own hand.

They'll never commission a statue of Sandy McNicol for any future New Zealand rugby hall of fame. In the continuum of All Black props, his is a small, easily forgotten entry. McNicol, at 107kg a full 30kg lighter than Charlie Faumuina, played just five matches in the black jersey and the circumstan­ces were fortuitous.

He was the sixth prop called up to the 1972-73 tour of Great Britain and France, after original tourists Keith Murdoch (sent home after punching a security guard) and Jeff Matheson (ribs) left the squad.

He played five midweek fixtures, including a 12-3 win over a South West selection in the Pyrenean city of Tarbes.

He must have liked the climate and the people. He'd soon return to play a long stint for the local club, who were French champions in 1973.

It was what happened between the tour and his French connection that would mark him out as a man of honour and conviction.

In 1973, the Springboks were due to tour New Zealand.

Police warned of an eruption of violence (which was subsequent­ly seen in 1981) if the tour went ahead and there were also grave fears the 1974 Christchur­ch Commonweal­th Games would be targeted for boycotts and demonstrat­ion.

Prime Minister Norman Kirk had promised, while campaignin­g as Opposition leader, not to interfere but was eventually persuaded to write to a typically unyielding NZRFU, saying he saw “no alternativ­e, pending selection on a genuine merit basis, to a postponeme­nt of the tour”.

McNicol needed no cajoling. He had made his position clear. Despite his performanc­es at the end of the northern tour suggesting he would be a good chance of being selected, he had already informed the union he would not play against South Africa on moral grounds.

Don't underestim­ate the magnitude of that decision. McNicol was a rugby man, had a military background and played for a province, Wanganui, whose mainly rural citizenry would have been overwhelmi­ngly pro-tour.

McNicol was also an educator, a teacher with the sort of moral fibre he liked to impart on his students.

A Facebook tribute this week from Cath Handley, a former student who

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Sandy McNicol

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