Joe Rokocoko

Josevata Rokocoko
Full name Josevata Taliga Rokocoko
Date of birth (1983-06-06) 6 June 1983
Place of birth Nadi, Fiji
Height 1.89 m (6 ft 2 in)
Weight 109 kg (17 st 2 lb)
School Saint Kentigern College
Notable relative(s) Joeli Vidiri
Rugby union career
Playing career
Position Wing
New Zealand No. 1032
Professional / senior clubs
Years Club / team Caps (points)
2011–2015
2015–
Aviron Bayonnais
Racing Metro 92
95
32
(120)24t
(40)8t
correct as of 25 September 2016.
Provincial/State sides
Years Club / team Caps (points)
2004–11 Auckland 20 (120)24t
correct as of 2011.
Super Rugby
Years Club / team Caps (points)
2003–11 Blues 96 (200)40t
correct as of 2011.
National team(s)
Years Club / team Caps (points)
2003–10 New Zealand 68 (230)46t
correct as of 22 August 2010.

Josevata Taliga "Joe" Rokocoko (pronounced [rokoˈðoko], born 6 June 1983) is a professional New Zealand rugby union player. Rokocoko is known for his speed and strength which has accounted for his prolific try strike rate. He is a specialist left-winger but has occasionally played on the right wing for the All Blacks.

Early life

Born 6 June 1983 in Nadi, Fiji, Rokocoko migrated to New Zealand with his family at the age of 5, settling in Weymouth, South Auckland and he attended James Cook High School. Rokocoko later won a scholarship to Saint Kentigern College, where he was a member of the 2001 National Secondary Schools team. After an outstanding career with New Zealand international sides at the under-16, under-19, and under-21 level, he started playing Super 12 rugby.

Professional career and the All Blacks

Rokocoko played for the Blues in the 2003 Super 12 season. He made his first appearance for the All Blacks on 14 June 2003 against England. He had a high strike rate for the All Blacks, scoring 25 tries in his first 20 tests, and breaking the All Blacks single-season record for test tries previously shared by Jonah Lomu and Christian Cullen—his 17 test tries scored in 2003 equals the world record held by Daisuke Ohata of Japan. The International Rugby Players' Association named him new player of the year in 2003. His incredible speed has been seen many times throughout his career. On 19 June 2004, in the All Blacks' second 2004 test with England, Rokocoko shredded the England defence for three tries in a 36–12 All Blacks victory over the reigning Rugby World Cup champions.

Rokocoko returned to the All Blacks line-up for the 2005 Tri Nations Series, punctuating his comeback with a two-try effort in the All Blacks' pivotal home fixture against South Africa. By the end of the 2006 season he had scored 35 tries in 39 test matches – and in total scored 46 tries with the All Blacks in 68 tests, including 4 hat-tricks: against France (2003), Australia (2003), England (2004) and Romania (2007). He scored his first try since the 2007 Rugby World Cup against Italy in June 2009.

In 2011, after 68 games for New Zealand and 96 for the Blues, he signed with Aviron Bayonnais of the Top 14. He played for Aviron Bayonnais for a total of four seasons, where he made a positional switch from wing to centre during his time there. In July 2015, it was announced that Rokocoko had signed a contract with Racing Metro 92, and will link up with a host of other New Zealanders plying their trade at this club in Paris. He debuted for them on Friday 21 August 2015, where Racing Metro recorded an emphatic victory over Toulon at Stade Mayol in Toulon.[1]

Personal life

Although often known as Joe, Rokocoko asked New Zealand rugby management to list his Christian birth name, Josevata, on team releases.[2]

He is a cousin of former Auckland Blues and All Black winger Joeli Vidiri and NPC, Super 12, and New Zealand sevens player Iliesa Tanivula.[3] He and fellow All Black wing Sitiveni Sivivatu regard themselves as "cousins" because Sivivatu lived with the Rokocoko family, but they are not blood relations.[4]

In January 2008, Rokocoko married his long-time sweetheart Beverly Politini, the daughter of Howard Politini, a Major in the Fiji Military, at a wedding attended by a large number of All Blacks.[5] They have a son called Cypress Rokocoko.[6]

Trivia

References

  1. http://www.3news.co.nz/sport/joe-rokocoko-to-join-dan-carter-at-racing-92-2015072909#axzz3kWo3Nlpd
  2. Smith, Tony (11 November 2006). "Joe becomes Josevata". Fairfax Media / Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 11 November 2006.
  3. Jan de Koning. "Joe Rokocoko – An ace up the Blues' sleeve". Rugby World. Retrieved 30 January 2006.
  4. "Traditional post-match kava will have to wait this time", New Zealand Herald, 1 September 2006
  5. "All Black getting married". Fairfax Media / Stuff.co.nz. 4 January 2008. Retrieved 4 January 2008.
  6. "What the Kiwi gossip mags say". Stuff.co.nz. 13 May 2009. Retrieved 8 October 2011.
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