Weekend Herald

Night on the tiles: Fisher-Harris hooks the Kiwis captaincy

- Michael Burgess

I’ve always wanted to be captain but it was surreal. It was weird, but I was ready.

James Fisher-Harris

James Fisher-Harris was in a western Sydney hardware store when he took one of the most important phone calls of his career.

He was on a day off — towards the end of the NRL finals series — when the number of Kiwis coach Michael Maguire flashed up on his screen. Maguire told the 27-year-old he would be the next Kiwis captain.

“I was out with my partner, we were shopping when I took the call,” Fisher-Harris told the Weekend Herald. “We were looking at tiles for a pool or something, trying to get things done before I left.”

The call may have been out of the blue but Fisher-Harris didn’t hesitate with his answer. The internatio­nal game may not have the reverence it once had — scaled back in favour of the NRL season — but he remains one of the proudest men to pull on the black and white jersey.

“I’ve always wanted to be captain but it was surreal,” says Fisher-Harris. “It was weird, but I was ready.”

Ahead of the clash with Samoa tonight (6pm) at Eden Park, FisherHarr­is appeals as a long-term leader, after a period of rotation since Simon Mannering’s internatio­nal retirement.

Adam Blair was captain during the ill-fated 2017 World Cup — in Jesse Bromwich’s absence — before Dallin Watene-Zelezniak took over for the early part of Maguire’s tenure. Benji Marshall filled the role for three tests in 2019 before Bromwich returned for last year’s World Cup. Now the coast is clear for Fisher-Harris to stamp his mark.

As a fellow Northlande­r, he has always looked up to Blair — “I remember when he got the captaincy and I said, that’s where I want to be one day”. He is quiet and famously reserved but has quickly earned respect in team environmen­ts.

“He’s not much of a talker but his actions speak way louder,” says teammate Joseph Tapine, who made his Kiwis debut in 2016 alongside FisherHarr­is. “The mahi he does on the field and away from it speaks for itself.

That’s why he is where he is. He is profession­al as. Not many people work harder than him so he pushes you to be better and do better. He ticks every box.”

Fisher-Harris has co-captained the Panthers on a few occasions and led the Kiwis in one pool match at last year’s World Cup, before a tandem leadership role with Tapine for the Ma¯ori All Stars match in Rotorua.

“I’ve had a little taste but this is pretty special,” he admits. “I’m going to do what I do, not going to change much and be the best I can be for the team. With all the team stuff I am sweet, it is probably the media stuff that I will have to get used to, but I am just going to be me.”

Fisher has always been earmarked as a special talent — since he made his NRL debut in 2016 — but he has reached a new level in recent years, a cornerston­e of Penrith’s remarkable premiershi­p threepeat. He is often mentioned in conversati­ons around the best prop in the game but deflects that talk.

“I reckon there are a couple of boys ahead of me, that I am still chasing,” said Fisher-Harris. “I’m hunting them. I’m in a great team so that makes me stand out a little bit.”

But he has yet to peak, which is an exciting prospect for the Kiwis.

“I’m still learning. I’m a student of the game, especially in terms of internatio­nals. I haven’t reached my potential yet. I’m still striving for a lot of things.”

He is also incredibly resilient. Fisher-Harris has featured in the last four grand finals, with internatio­nal football on top of that. After a long World Cup campaign, his season started this year on February 11 with the All Stars match and is still going now, via an epic premiershi­p decider.

“I’ve played a lot of footy over the last three years,” he said. “[But] I’m really in a good space now, my mind is clear and I am ready to go. Me and [fellow prop] Moses [Leota], we talk about it a little bit, we would rather play than train. That is our mentality, that’s what we do, roll with the punches.”

Fisher-Harris will be key today. Samoa are missing some backline names but have plenty of punch in the pack and their forward effort was key to their epic World Cup run last year, when they made history to reach the final against the Kangaroos.

The Kiwis’ test is the third act of a triple-header, with the Kiwis A side against Tonga A at 1.30pm before the Kiwi Ferns face their Tongan counterpar­ts at 3.45pm.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? James FisherHarr­is at Kiwis training.
Photo / Photosport James FisherHarr­is at Kiwis training.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand