Legendary rugby hardman Jerry Collins gave Sebastien Chabal a taste of his own medicine with this hit during the second test between France and the All Blacks back in 2007.
“Pick a definitive list of rugby’s hard men?” is one of those nice innocuous questions – the kind that comes up in the pub – that ends up stoking a raging argument that lasts for hours.
So when we started discussing it in the RUCK office it quickly became a tough thing to do.
You can rank our 15 hard men yourself on PAGE FOUR.
15. Jerry Collins (New Zealand)
A no better place to start. The All Black flanker, who tragically died in a car crash, was widely regarded as one of the most abrasive players to ever step foot on a rugby pitch.
Don’t be fooled by his nickname ‘Cuddles’. The 37-year-old former Canadian logger spent a year in a juvenile detention centre when his trouble-filled youth included being a collection agent for drug dealers. A true warrior on the pitch.
He was the totem of the Irish pack and their go-to man from the first time he pulled on a green jersey back in 2002 until the last at the 2015 Rugby World Cup. Another who led by example throwing himself into the fray with scant regard for life and limb.