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Gorden James Tallis (born 27 July 1973 in Townsville, Queensland) is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played from 1992 to 2004. He captained Australia, Queensland and the Brisbane Broncos with whom he won three premierships and one Clive Churchill Medal. Nicknamed the "Raging Bull" for his on-field aggression, at the peak of his career Tallis was renowned as the best second-row forward in the world and in 2008 was named in an Indigenous Australian rugby league team of the century. He is currently a commentator and pundit for the Fox Sports network, as well as an NRL Board Member. Tallis was a member of the Board Of Directors for the North Queensland Cowboys and is now forwards coach of the South Sydney Rabbitohs.
[edit] Playing career[edit] St George DragonsTallis' father Wally played rugby league briefly for Leigh in the 1960s.[1] Gorden was born in Townsville, North Queensland where he played for the Centrals Tigers club. He moved to Sydney to make his first grade debut in the Winfield Cup premiership for St. George on 29 August, 1992. He was a reserve in St George's grand final loss to Brisbane in 1993. Tallis was used to good effect off the interchange bench during the 1994 season and also made his representative debut for the Queensland side in the final two State of Origin matches that year. In 1995 he was included in the Tongan squad for the 1995 World Cup but had to withdraw due to injury.[2] When the proposed Super League competition was put on hold in 1995, Tallis offered to buy out the final year of his contract with St George in order to join the Broncos. The Dragons declined the offer however, and subsequent court action held him to his original contract. Having already signed a Super League contract to play with Brisbane, the fiery North Queenslander caused controversy when he was the only player who chose to sit out the 1996 season rather than play a final year with St George. [edit] Brisbane BroncosAfter 54 appearances for the Dragons, Tallis returned to the game in 1997 with the Broncos and was the most dominant forward in the Super League competition, which culminated in Brisbane's crushing 26-8 win over the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks in the Telstra Cup grand final. After representing Queensland in the Tri-Series competition, he made his international debut in three Super League Tests against Great Britain. The enforcer of the champion Broncos pack in 1997-98, he used his giant frame to terrorise opposing players in both attack and defence – and he wasn't afraid to mix it with opponents when called upon. In 1998 Tallis returned to St. George for the first time since his acrimonious split with the Saints and was pelted with garbage and insults and was loudly booed every time he touched the ball before his try secured a 30-18 victory.[3] Brisbane went on to capture another premiership and Tallis won the prestigious Clive Churchill Medal as best and fairest player in the club's 38-12 grand final win over the Canterbury Bulldogs. Tallis celebrated a remarkable year by making his Australian Kangaroos Test debut in the second match of the Trans-Tasman series. He continued his great personal form when chosen for the ANZAC Test in 1999 and spearheaded Queensland's State of Origin campaign in a historic tied series. However, the season ended with Brisbane's failure to defend its premiership and Tallis was ruled out of October's Tri-Nations competition because of injury. 2000 saw him score a try in Australia's 52-0 thrashing of New Zealand in the ANZAC Test, but after being sent off in the opening State of Origin match for verbally abusing referee Bill Harrigan, Tallis suffered the ignominy of a whitewash defeat (his public admission that the 'dead' third match of the series should be cancelled was a momentary lapse in judgment that may have indirectly contributed to the Blues' record 56-16 win). If Tallis' stature as the most dominant forward in the game wasn't secure following Brisbane's 14-6 win over the Roosters in the 2000 grand final, his four tries in Australia's 82-0 humiliation of Papua New Guinea before the 2000 World Cup and his selection as Australian captain for the match against Russia (which resulted in a record 110-4 victory) did. In 2000 Gorden also received the Australian Sports Medal. Following Australia's World Cup victory, Tallis captained a rookie Queensland team in the 34-16 win over New South Wales in the opening State of Origin game in 2001 and was named man-of-the-match. Soon after, he suffered a career-threatening neck injury in a club match against the Manly Sea Eagles which revealed a spinal condition that required corrective surgery. While Tallis' season was over (despite the smokescreen of his naming on the Broncos' interchange bench for the club's preliminary final) he made a strong return to football in 2002. It was in the deciding match of the 2002 State of Origin that Gorden Tallis performed a famous tackle on Blues fullback, Brett Hodgson, dragging and eventually tossing him out of the field of play like a rag-doll. Tallis' reaction later of giving the one-finger salute to a section of the crowd, right behind the northern tryline where Carlaw's series-tying try was scored, became a major after-match talking point. Tallis gained some sympathy when it was revealed that he was objecting to an offensive sign about his mother. But many again raised questions about his capacity to captain Australia with debate raging over the choice between Tallis or Andrew Johns to succeed Brad Fittler. Days later Johns was chosen to lead the Kangaroos in the July Test against Great Britain. Tallis scored a try in Australia's 64-10 win in that match and was later named Test leader (in Johns' absence) for the one-off Test against New Zealand in October, which Australia also won 32-24. In January 2003, Tallis' book Raging Bull was published. His ancestry and ethnicity has been the subject of many questions much to the bemusement of Tallis. In his book, Tallis addresses these questions; "People ask me about my ethnic background. Newspapers pick me in their “fantasy” Indigenous and Aboriginal sides. To tell the honest truth, I haven’t worried too much about it. An auntie of mine did some research and she found that my great-grandfather came from North Western Ambrym in Vanuatu and my great-grandmother was from Loh Island in the Torres Strait. All we were ever told in my family was that we were Australians. My dad was born in Townsville and his dad was born in Bowen, so that makes us Australian and we’re proud of it. I have played in one Indigenous side though, the Redfern All Blacks, who won the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander tournament in 1992. That was some side. We had Choc Mundine who was about 17, Tricky Trindall who was 25, and Wes Patten who was 19. People might have read a bit into me playing in that tournament but to me it was just a chance to play some footy with my mates." At the end of 2003, Tallis announced his retirement from representative football, but continued playing with the Broncos. In 2004 he started to feel more affected by his neck injury and took heed of the warning signs his body was emitting. He played his last official match in the 2004 semi-final for the Brisbane Broncos, fittingly in his hometown of Townsville, against the Cowboys, which the Broncos lost. At the time of his retirement, he held the Broncos' club record of most career tries for a forward. [edit] Post-football CareerIn 2005 Tallis was appointed as one of News Ltd's member on the NRL board, replacing John Brass[4] but stood down from the role in 2008, amid speculation that he will join the coaching staff of Les Catalans.[5] He was a Director on the board of the North Queensland Cowboys. A role he had to relinquish as he has now joined the most successful club in Rugby League,[2] the South Sydney Rabbitohs as a forwards coach.[3]He was brought in by Russell Crowe to add his knowledge and aggression to the team. [4] Tallis commentates games for Fox Sports, as well as providing written columns for newspapers. Tallis has made his views on fighting clear on the Fox Sports broadcasts of Rugby League, stating that if a fight erupts, "he would run in, you would run in, we would all run in, because its your mate getting bashed"[6]. [edit] References
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Categories: 1973 births | People from Townsville | Australians of Tongan descent | Australians of Vanuatuan descent | Australian rugby league players | St. George Dragons players | Indigenous Australian rugby league footballers | Brisbane Broncos players | Brisbane Broncos captains | Clive Churchill Medal winners | Australian national rugby league team captain | Queensland Rugby League State of Origin players | Queensland Rugby League State of Origin captains | Recipients of the Australian Sports Medal | Rugby league commentators | Rugby league administrators | Living people | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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