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![]() Fitzpatrick in 2024 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Birth name | Sean Brian Thomas Fitzpatrick | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Date of birth | (1963-06-04)4 June 1963 (age 61) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Auckland, New Zealand | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 105 kg (16 st 7 lb) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
School | Sacred Heart College | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Notable relative(s) | Brian Fitzpatrick (father) Rosanne Meo (aunt) Connie Purdue (great-aunt) Miriam Soljak (great-grandmother) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Sean Brian Thomas FitzpatrickONZM (born 4 June 1963) is a New Zealand formerrugby union player.
He played for the dominant Auckland team in the late 1980s and 1990s, and won the first two Super 12 titles with theAuckland Blues in 1996 and 1997.
He made his debut for theNew Zealand national team (the All Blacks) in 1986, and went on to win 92 international caps. He was part of the New Zealand side that won the first Rugby World Cup in 1987. He captained New Zealand from 1992 until his retirement in 1997, winning a grim test series against the British Lions in 1993, reaching and losing the 1995 World Cup final, and winning a series in South Africa in 1996.
Fitzpatrick was born inAuckland on 4 June 1963,[1] the son ofBrian Fitzpatrick, also a New Zealand international player.[2] He is the nephew ofRosanne Meo[3] and the great-grandson ofMiriam Soljak.[4] Fitzpatrick's high school education was atSacred Heart College,Auckland. As a primary school student he attended at Mt Carmel Primary (Auckland).
A product of the powerfulAuckland provincial side, Fitzpatrick made his international debut as one of the "Baby Blacks" in the 1986 Test series inFrance. Although most of the regular starting fifteen for New Zealand had been suspended following the unauthorisedNew Zealand Cavaliers tour of South Africa, the All Blacks won, and a number of new faces made their mark on the selectors. Despite this start, Fitzpatrick went into the1987 Rugby Union World Cup as second choice to captainAndy Dalton. Dalton missed the early stages of the tournament due to injury, and although he recovered in time for the knockout stages, Fitzpatrick kept his place in the team, leaving scrum-halfDavid Kirk to skipper the side to victory against France in the final atEden Park in Auckland.
In 1992 Fitzpatrick was awarded the captaincy of the All Blacks, a position he held until his retirement from test rugby. A first test match win against theSpringboks since their return from isolation, plus series victories over a World XV andIreland were dampened by the loss of theBledisloe Cup in Australia.[citation needed]
The biggest event of the rugby calendar in 1993 was theBritish & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand. The first test went narrowly to the All Blacks, with Grant Fox kicking a last minute 50-metre penalty to steal a win. This was avenged in the Second Test by the Lions with their highest-scoring Test win in New Zealand.[citation needed] In the third test, with Fitzpatrick faced the prospect of becoming only the second ever All Blacks captain to lead his team to a series defeat against the Lions. The side were 10–0 down at one point, but recovered to take the match convincingly and with it the series.[citation needed]
Unwanted history could not be avoided on the end of season tour of Britain however, as England picked up a win over New Zealand at Twickenham. 1994 was another up and down season for the All Blacks. South Africa were defeated 2–0 with one game drawn. However, France caused a major upset by winning their series in New Zealand 2–0, the first and until 2022, only European team to achieve this.[citation needed]
By the time of the1995 World Cup New Zealand had assembled a more formidable side.Ian Jones,Jeff Wilson,Andrew Mehrtens,Zinzan Brooke andJonah Lomu had proved themselves as world-class players. New Zealand were most pundit's pre-tournament favourites. The All Blacks had convincingly defeated all opponents, the most remarkable being a semi-final againstEngland, in which Lomu scored four tries. They met the hosts, South Africa in thefinal, who had stuttered through the early stages. South Africa won the tournament in extra time with aJoel Stransky drop goal. After storming through the firstTri Nations Series unbeaten, the All Blacks embarked upon a further three-match series in South Africa. The 1996 tour of South Africa was the first series win by a New Zealand side in South Africa. The 1996 All Blacks were one of the great teams in the history of the game, and the series win cemented their captain's place among the true greats.[citation needed] Continued success withAuckland in theNPC and theAuckland Blues in the newSuper 12 continued in the following seasons, but it was clear that Fitzpatrick's days in the game were numbered. He was carrying an injury in the autumn of 1997, yet such was his status that coachJohn Hart thought it would be good for the other players to include him in the party. He made his 92nd and final test appearance on 29 November 1997 as a substitute in the 42–7 victory againstWales atWembley.[citation needed]
Fitzpatrick was appointed anOfficer of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to rugby, in the1997 New Year Honours.[5]
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by | All Blacks Captain 1992–1997 | Succeeded by |