Paul William HarragonOAM(born 12 October 1968), nicknamedChieforChief Harragon,is anAustralianrugby leaguefootball identity. A formerAustralian internationalandNew South WalesState of Originrepresentative forward, he played rugby for theNewcastle Knightswhom he captained to the1997 ARL premiership.Harragon was a regular presenter ofThe Footy Showand as of 2013 is the Chairman of the Newcastle Knights Advisory Board.
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Full name | Paul William Harragon | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | Kurri Kurri, New South Wales | 12 October 1968||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Height | 193 cm (6 ft 4 in) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 111 kg (17 st 7 lb) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Position | Prop,Second-row | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Background
editHarragon was born inKurri Kurri, New South Wales,Australia.
Playing career
editHarragon was raised in theNew South Walestown ofKurri Kurri,and played forLakes Unitedin theNewcastle competition.[citation needed]He joined theNewcastle Knightsin 1988 and made his first grade debut in 1989 against theBalmain Tigers.
He represented and captained Country,New South WalesandAustralia.He was named man-of-the-match in the second game of the1994 State of Origin series.At the end of the1994 NSWRL season,he went on the1994 Kangaroo tour.
Harragon captained the Knights to the1997 ARL premiershiptitle in a grand final againstManly-Warringah Sea Eagles,despite suffering from serious headaches and seizures throughout most of the season.[3]
Harragon excelled at theState of Originlevel, making 20 consecutive appearances forNew South Walesbetween Game I 1992 and Game II 1998. He holds the record for the second most consecutive Origin games by a New South Welshman (Danny Buderus played 21 consecutive State of Origin games between game I 2002 and game III 2008), and most appearances by a NSW forward.
Between 1992 & 1998, Harragon was a frequent choice to play for theKangaroos.During the1992 Great Britain Lions tour of Australia and New Zealand,he helped Australia retainThe Ashes.All up he scored three tries while representing his country. He missed the 1995 World Cup final due to injury, with Gary Larson being flown in to replace him. That year it was reported that Harragon would receive $1.2 million to secure his loyalty to the Australian Rugby League in addition to $700,000 per season for the next three seasons.[4]
In 1996, he captained the team in a World Cup Test against South Africa,[3]and in 1997 he played in a match against the "Rest of the World".[5]
In 1999, Harragon participated in the first rugby league game to be played atStadium Australia.Later that year, after playing 169 first grade games in a career lasting ten years, Harragon retired due to an ongoing knee injury mid-season.
Post-playing
editHarragon has since become a media personality, working for local Newcastle stationNBN Television,before joiningChannel 9as a member ofThe Footy Showpanel (on which his "That's Gold" segment became immensely popular), and as a rugby league commentator. Following format changes to the programme before the 2009 season, Harragon decided to leave the production.[6]
Harragon was also a director of and is a life member of the Newcastle Knights, and is spokesman forNIB Health FundsandSubway.
In 2016, Harragon became a contestant onNetwork Ten's second series ofI'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!in which he placed second.[7]
Discography
editTitle | Year | Peak chart positions |
---|---|---|
AUS [8] | ||
"That's Gold" | 2007 | 8 |
References
edit- ^"NRL Stats".203.166.101.37.Retrieved18 December2017.[permanent dead link ]
- ^"Paul Harragon – Career Stats & Summary".Rugby League Project.Retrieved18 December2017.
- ^abMatt Logue. "Legend Q&A".Rugby League Week(14 May 2008). Sydney, NSW: PBLMedia: 38–39.
- ^Magnay, Jacquelin (27 October 1995)."Harragon hits the jackpot".The Sydney Morning Herald.Retrieved4 January2014.
- ^"Paul Harragon at Rugby League Project".Rugby League Project.Retrieved23 September2009.
- ^Erin McWhirter (5 January 2009)."Paul Harragon quits Footy Show on Nine TV Network".Herald Sun.Retrieved19 March2009.
- ^"'We can't handle any more scandals'".Sydney: The Daily Telegraph. 2 February 2016.Retrieved17 February2016.
- ^Ryan, Gavin (2011).Australia's Music Charts 1988–2010(PDF ed.). Mt Martha, Victoria, Australia: Moonlight Publishing. p. 124.
Further reading
edit- Harragon, Paul; Brett Keeble (1999).One perfect day: an autobiography.Ironbark.ISBN978-0-330-36183-5.