Gordon Tietjens

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BornGordon Frederick Tietjens
(1955-12-09) 9 December 1955 (age 70)
Rotorua, New Zealand
HeightUnknown
Years Team
Years Team
Gordon Tietjens
Tietjens in Fiji
BornGordon Frederick Tietjens
(1955-12-09) 9 December 1955 (age 70)
Rotorua, New Zealand
HeightUnknown
Rugby union career
Provincial / State sides
Years Team Apps (Points)
1977–1982 Bay of Plenty 81
1983 Waikato 14
1984–1986 Bay of Plenty[1]
National sevens team
Years Team Comps
1983 New Zealand Sevens 1
Coaching career
Years Team
1994–2016 New Zealand Sevens
1996–2002 Bay of Plenty
2016–2020 Samoa national sevens team

Sir Gordon Frederick Tietjens KNZM (/ˈtɪənz/; born 9 December 1955) is a celebrated former coach of the New Zealand men's national team in rugby sevens, the All Blacks Sevens. He spent 22 years in this role. He was also head coach of the Samoa rugby sevens team for four years.[2][3]

When the International Rugby Board inducted him into the IRB Hall of Fame in May 2012, it said that "Tietjens' roll of honour is without peer in Sevens, and perhaps in the game of rugby as a whole."[4] According to Spiro Zavos, Tietjens is "The greatest of all the Sevens coaches".[5]

As of his induction, he had coached the All Blacks Sevens to 10 series titles in the IRB Sevens World Series, the Rugby World Cup Sevens crown in 2001, and gold medals in four of the five Commonwealth Games in which the sport had been contested, losing the 2014 final in Glasgow.[4] He has also added two more IRB Sevens series titles (2013 and 2014), and a second Rugby World Cup Sevens crown (also in 2013).

Tietjens has coached many young players who have gone on to become All Blacks, including[citation needed] Christian Cullen, Jonah Lomu, Joe Rokocoko, Mils Muliaina, Rico Gear, Cory Jane, Ben Smith, Rieko Ioane, Israel Dagg, and Liam Messam.[6] Tietjens coached 44 players who went on to become All Blacks in the 15-a-side game and before his retirement, he was the only remaining active international coach from the amateur era.[7]

Tietjens is currently assisted by Eric Rush, a former long-serving captain of the New Zealand Sevens team and a former Sevens star himself.

Olympics

In 2012, his contract as the NZ Sevens coach was extended through to 2016.[8] This allows Tietjens to be part of Sevens rugby's first inclusion in the Olympic Games. According to then-World Rugby chairman Bernard Lapasset, sevens' inclusion in the Olympics was "in no small way down to Gordon Tietjens. Through his knowledge, passion, and expertise, he has driven the standards towards what we now celebrate as a truly global game of sevens."[7]

In the 1999 New Year Honours, Tietjens was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM);[9] in the 2007 New Year Honours, he was elevated to Companion of the same order (CNZM),[10] and in the 2013 Queen's Birthday Honours, he was further promoted to a Knight Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit (KNZM).[11]

After an unsuccessful 2016 Olympics campaign, Tietjens stepped down from the All Black Sevens coaching position.

Samoa

In October 2016, Tietjens accepted the role of coach to the Samoa national sevens team.[12] In 2020, he announced that he would be stepping down from the head coaching role for the Samoa national sevens team stating that he wanted Samoa to be able to plan for the future.[13]

Achievements

References

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