Colin Earl Meads

New Zealand athlete
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Also known as: Pinetree
Quick Facts
Born:
June 3, 1936, Cambridge, New Zealand
Died:
August 20, 2017, Te Kuiti
Also Known As:
Pinetree

Colin Earl Meads (born June 3, 1936, Cambridge, New Zealand—died August 20, 2017, Te Kuiti) was a New Zealand rugby union football player and former national team captain (1971) whose outstanding performance as a lock forward made him a legendary figure in New Zealand and in international rugby history. Noted as one of the best locks of all time, Meads played 55 Test (international) matches (48 at lock, 7 at the number eight position) for the New Zealand national team, the All Blacks, between 1957 and 1971; on 11 occasions between 1961 and 1966 he played alongside his younger brother Stan.

Meads provoked controversy in 1986 when he led the rebel New Zealand Cavaliers on tour of South Africa just one year after a scheduled tour by the All Blacks had been blocked by the New Zealand courts in protest against the South African institution of apartheid. As a result of his actions, Meads lost his position as All Black selector. He was soon forgiven, however, and served as manager of the All Blacks for the 1995 World Cup. In 1999 Meads was named New Zealand Rugby Player of the Century by New Zealand Rugby Monthly magazine.

Standing 6 feet 4 inches (1.92 metres), Meads was nicknamed “Pinetree” and soon grew into a cult hero in his home country. Dunedin is home to the Colin Meads fan club, whose members get together to wear number 5 jerseys, drink five-ounce (140-gram) beers, and read from Mead’s biography, Colin Meads, All Black.

Assorted sports balls including a basketball, football, soccer ball, tennis ball, baseball and others.
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Meads was chairman of the King Country Rugby Union between 1987 and 1994. He was a trustee of the New Zealand Rugby Foundation and the International Hall of Fame. Meads was awarded the Member of the British Empire in 1971 and the Distinguished Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to rugby and the community in 2000.

John Nauright