Former All Black Karl Tu’inukuafe announces retirement from rugby
- Publish Date
- Wednesday, 5 February 2025, 12:38PM
All Black Karl Tu’inukuafe has announced his retirement from rugby.
The second-heaviest ever All Black made 59 Super Rugby appearances between stints for the Chiefs and Blues, and played 27 tests before departing to France to play for Montpellier in 2022.
On Instagram, Tu’inukuafe, 31, reflected on a career that he never dreamed would turn out the way it did.
“I was never great, but I was always grateful - me, my whole career.
“I never played NZ Secondary Schools, NZU20′s. I never dreamt of becoming a pro footy player but God had other plans. If you think you’re too overweight or getting too old to go pro, never fold. It’s been done before.
“The last 10 years were great.”
Tu’inukuafe took the long road on his journey to international rugby. He was pushing 175kg at the end of 2014 and he complained to his doctor of leg pain.
The doctor made it clear the pain wasn’t going away if Tu’inukuafe continued to put on weight.
He had taken a mostly sedentary security job and given up rugby.
He’d been in the Wesley College first XV - playing alongside future French prop Uini Atonio - but work and life got in the way of rugby.
Speaking to the Herald in 2018, Tu’inukuafe opened up about how rugby helped him get his health back in order.
“I think it was 2014 and I was complaining about a bit of pain in my legs and the doctor explained all the bad health decisions I was making,” says Tu’inukuafe.
“My eating was leading towards a heart attack or whatever. When he told me to lose weight, the easiest way was to play rugby with my brothers and family.
“I would rather do it with them on the field rather than try to do it on my own. That made it easier.”
He had a good boss who allowed him to balance his job with sport and the weight came off. The fact he saved his own life by reconnecting with rugby is remarkable enough on its own.
But the story continued when he won a contract to play with Jerry Collins’ old club in France, Narbonne.
That toughened him up and won him a place with the North Harbour side. Again, if that had been the end of his journey, it was still a remarkable turnaround.
But the three months at the start of the season were beyond believable. The Chiefs were hit with a run of injuries at prop, and by March, they had to scour the country for replacements.
They knew a little bit about Tu’inukuafe and called him in. They had no choice, really, and the big man, slimmed down to 135kg, made his debut against the Blues at Eden Park.
Being chucked in the deep end worked - he swam - and the All Blacks, having no idea who he was, suddenly found him quite compelling viewing.
And when Wyatt Crockett retired, Kane Hames couldn’t shake his concussion and Tim Perry damaged his hamstring, the call went out to Tu’inukuafe to join the squad to face France.
He made his test debut on June 9, 2018 at Eden Park, just three months after his first Super Rugby game at the same ground and his new home ground after signing a three-year deal with the Blues.
“I had never heard of him before he got to the Chiefs and I don’t think the Chiefs had either until they had to go and find him,” said All Blacks coach Steve Hansen.
“When I say I hadn’t heard of him, I mean he obviously wasn’t someone who was sitting on top of our radar. We knew he had played rugby before and we knew a little about him but he wasn’t someone who we said, ‘let’s keep a big eye on this guy because he is going to be the future’.
“His future was accelerated by the misfortune of others and he has taken the opportunity.
“Once he came in, he quickly caught everyone’s eye because he has slotted in and that Chiefs scrum is strong and he’s a big part of it,” said Hansen.
In 27 tests for the All Blacks, Tu’inukuafe scored his first and only try against the Wallabies in a 43-5 thrashing in Sydney.
He was nominated for World Rugby Breakthrough Player of the Year in 2018 but Tu’inukuafe did not win the award, losing to South African winger, Aphiwe Dyantyi. Dyantyi tested positive for a banned substance and was subsequently banned for four years, but Tu’inukuafe earned respect from players and fans across the rugby world.
This article was first published on nzherald.co.nz and is republished here with permission