Cape Times

Five years on and Nadolo looks forward to Waratahs reunion

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WELLINGTON: Nemani Nadolo’s thick Australian accent is just one tell-tale sign the Waratahs’ decision to let the rampaging winger slip through their fingers could come back to haunt them on Saturday.

The Fiji internatio­nal crossed the Tasman Sea with his Crusaders side yesterday intent on clinching their eighth Super Rugby title in the final against the Waratahs, who cut him loose after a solitary season in 2009.

“When you are unwanted and have got to go elsewhere and find opportunit­ies, I guess when the door shut there you do feel a bit sad,” Nadolo told Television New Zealand of his dumping by the Waratahs

“But life goes on and five years later I’m here and going to play against them which will be good ... and a challenge I am looking forward to.”

Born in Fiji, Nadolo moved with his family to Brisbane as a young child and grew up in Queensland where his father played for the state alongside Wallabies World Cup winner Tim Horan.

Rugby ran deep in the family. Nadolo attended the storied rugby school Nudgee College, while former dual internatio­nal Lote Tuqiri and current Wallabies centre Tevita Kuridrani are his cousins.

He transferre­d that high school promise onto the internatio­nal stage where he was the ever, let him go after just one season, believing the 1.95-metre tall, 130kg Nadolo was not fast enough to play on the wing.

Nadolo then bounced around between clubs in Europe and back to Australia before he finally settled in Japan with NEC Green Rockets in 2011.

Crusaders coach Todd Blackadder, searching for a block-busting prototype to ignite a backline that was full of skilled players but no-one of any great size, settled on Nadolo after a tip from former All Blacks fullback Greg Cooper, who was coaching NEC.

“We are looking for something just a little bit different, a little bit of X-factor,” Blackadder told The Press newspaper when Nadolo was named in the Crusaders squad last year.

“And this guy has got it. He is an absolute hulk of a man, yet he can fly down the field like you wouldn’t believe for a man that size. Comparison­s have been drawn with (former All Blacks winger) Jonah Lomu, and we can’t wait to work with him and unleash him in this competitio­n.”

Unleash him they did. Nadolo was the second highest try-scorer during the season with 11, one behind Waratahs’ fullback Israel Folau.

It is not only his try-scoring ability that has helped the Crusaders into their 11th final.

Nadolo creates doubt in the minds of defensive lines and is able to break tackles – he has the highest number in Super Rugby this year with 26 – and gets his hand free to pass the ball to teammates running off him.

The biggest concern for Crusaders’ fans is that his contract situation is still to be determined.

“It hasn’t been sorted out, yet, but hopefully it will be pretty soon. I am off to Japan after this, but I really want to come back and build on this. We’re in talks.

“I have always wanted to play Super Rugby and in the past things didn’t go my way. These guys came and gave me a lifeline and I am forever indebted to them.” – Reuters

 ??  ?? NEMANI NADOLO: Not fast enough for Waratahs top try-scorer for Australia in the Internatio­nal Rugby Board’s junior World Cup in 2008 and was signed by the Waratahs.
The Sydney-based side, how-
NEMANI NADOLO: Not fast enough for Waratahs top try-scorer for Australia in the Internatio­nal Rugby Board’s junior World Cup in 2008 and was signed by the Waratahs. The Sydney-based side, how-

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