The Post

Frizell: ‘I couldn’t believe it’

- Marc Hinton

When Shannon Frizell received the call that every New Zealand rugby player dreams of, he handed the phone back to his Highlander­s manager and told him to quit messing with him.

It’s not that Frizell was being impolite. He just could not believe what he was hearing. He was certain it was some sort of elaborate practical joke which his manager has been known to pull.

But it was no setup. In the wake of the Highlander­s’ Super Rugby defeat to the Waratahs in Sydney on Saturday, All Blacks leadership manager Gilbert Enoka was on the line, with good news.

Frizell, if not from nowhere, certainly from deep in the field – he has started only three of his nine appearance­s in his rookie Super Rugby season – has stormed into the All Blacks squad of 33 for the June series against France.

Frizell was first labelled a potential All Blacks bolter in

Stuff’s rugby columns on April 29, and murmurings had grown in frequency since that he was in the national conversati­on. Clearly he didn’t get the memo.

‘‘After our game in Sydney I came into the changing room, and the manager for the Highlander­s gave me the phone,’’ said Frizell after wrapping up the three-day training camp with the All Blacks in Auckland this week.

‘‘I was talking, and someone said I’d been picked to represent New Zealand. I didn’t believe it. I gave the phone back to him and said it wasn’t for me.

He left Enoka hanging?

‘‘I thought he was joking. Our manager is a joker. But I was so happy,’’ added Frizell of the moment it dawned on him that he was about to become an All Black.

He called his mother in Australia immediatel­y. ‘‘I was so scared she might tell everyone,’’ he said of the news that wasn’t ‘‘official’’ until the next morning.

It is quite some story, that’s for sure. The younger brother of St George Illawarra NRL star Tyson (they have swapped texts and ‘‘he was pretty happy for me’’) grew up apart from his immediate family in Tonga because immigratio­n laws prevented him joining them in Australia.

Eventually, courtesy of his natural ability and athleticis­m, he was lured to New Zealand to link up with the Tasman union and, it is fair to say, has not looked back since.

Asked what made it so special to go through the last three days with the All Blacks, his eyes widened, and message narrowed.

‘‘What made it so special is to wear this New Zealand [emblem] on my chest. It’s pretty cool. What it means to me is I’m representi­ng my family, myself and my country.’’

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Shannon Frizell

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