Sonny Boy Williams recently announced his retirement from Rugby Union having won several World  Cups with the All Blacks but the reason he has retired is not so that he can put his feet up, rather he  wishes to resume his boxing career, which at one time saw him become the New Zealand champion  as well as the World Boxing Association (WBA) Heavyweight Champion. In addition he has also  

represented New Zealand in Rugby League as well as the New Zealand seven-a-side team that went  to the Olympics. Here is a sportsman, a sports man, to be more precise, a man who has played not  just one sport at the highest level but many sports.  

He is not unique, however. JJ Williams was a great Welsh rugby wing who also represented Wales in  Athletics at the Commonwealth games while JPR Williams, a brilliant full-back for Welsh rugby won a  British Junior Tennis title. Jeff Wilson played rugby and cricket for New Zealand. Eric Liddell played  international Rugby for Scotland before winning Olympic Gold in the 400m in Paris in 1924. Then  there is a little known fact that the great Viv Richards did not simply represent the West Indies in  cricket with such distinction but also represented Antigua in qualification matches for the 1974  Soccer World Cup. AB De Villiers, the great South African cricketer was also short-listed for national  hockey and football squads, while also excelling at rugby, swimming, tennis, badminton and golf.  

In fact, many others have not simply played for their country in different sports at different times  but some have even done it at the same time, combining both careers simultaneously. Ellyse Perry is  one such, a lady who has represented Australia in all formats of cricket over a hundred times (and is  still going strong) while also representing Australia in soccer; appearing in both cricket and football  World Cups. Andy Goram was another who combined professional soccer and cricket in the modern  era, being capped 43 times for Scotland in soccer and also capped 4 times for Scotland in cricket.  

From a different era, Des O’Brien could beat that, representing different countries in different  sports. He played rugby for Ireland (and the British Lions) but also played tennis for Wales, squash  for Ireland and had trials for hockey for Wales. We could go on but the point is made: these are  sports men and women, people who play many sports, and are rightly called sportsmen and  sportswomen.  

Others place a different emphasis on the term ‘sportsman’, when they speak of sportsmanship, that  being the quality of playing sport with an attention and priority to fairness, morals, respect,  camaraderie and friendship. Sonny Bill Williams, who was mentioned at the start of this article,  would also meet this criteria of being a great sportsman through his actions at the 2015 World Cup,  when a young supporter who in his enthusiasm had run on to the pitch at the end of the match to  greet his hero was knocked down heavily by a security guard. Williams escorted him back to his  family, and then gave him his winner’s medal. Interestingly he saw nothing special about his actions,  though. “It wasn’t about being a footy player, a rugby union player, it was just about being a good  person. That’s how I was raised, to have good manners.” It is well known that the All Blacks hold to a  mantra that says a better person makes a better player and Williams perhaps showed that.  

Rudyard Kipling is not known for being a sportsman but many will know his poem entitled ‘If’. We  might well be able to help our children become great sportsmen and women if we paraphrase the  poem in sporting terms, along these lines: If you can stay calm under pressure; have confidence in  your own ability even when others do not; show openness to listen to criticism and advice; have  

patience when results are not forthcoming; ignore abuse without returning it; retain humility; look  for progress; readily and honestly reflect on your performances; accept victory and defeat similarly;  recover from injury and setbacks with respect and courage; be prepared to take a chance; do not  blame others for losses; show resolute determination to keep going through hard times; play with  players of all abilities; stay humble in all situations; give one hundred percent at all times – if you can  do all that, you will not only be a sports man but also a man. Being a great sportsman – a man or  woman who plays many sports and who does so in the right spirit of sport – is important but it is  even more important to be a great man and great woman. Williams did that. Will our children do so? 

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