Explore popular quotes and sayings by a New Zealander athlete Beauden Barrett.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Beauden John Barrett is a New Zealand rugby union player. He plays at First Five-Eighth position (fly-half) and fullback for Taranaki in the Mitre 10 Cup, the Blues in Super Rugby and New Zealand's national team, the All Blacks. He was a key member of the 2015 Rugby World Cup winning team.
I'm a Kiwi country boy, approachable, genuine, never getting too far ahead of myself, a straightforward kind of bloke.
Whatever role the coaches decide for me and the team, I'm happy with that.
I grew up on a farm playing backyard footie in my bare feet.
In the back of your mind there's always these contractual things you have to deal with. You try to put that aside when it comes to training and playing.
A lot of the values I have come from the farm and from my parents, of grafting and of giving, and of always striving to be the best you can be. It's about teamwork.
I take a laid-back approach to a lot of things in life and, at the end of the day, rugby's just a game.
When you lose for the All Blacks it's not a nice feeling. Expectations on us are pretty high. We have high standards and we know if we've let ourselves or let the jersey down.
I'm such a perfectionist and I want to do everything right, kick every goal, do everything perfectly, but that is not reality.
You've got to understand and accept that nothing in the world is perfect. The sooner you understand that, the better it will be.
I grew up dreaming of being a Hurricane and I'm so proud of playing the number of games I have for them.
We grow up in New Zealand from a young age getting up at 3am to watch the All Blacks play South Africa or England, it's part of who we are. So to be an All Black now is amazing.
If you overthink things, you end up doing things without the right reasons in mind.
For some reason, the more the pressure comes on, the more enjoyable it gets.
I think New Zealand Rugby do an exceptional job, the way it's set up from the All Blacks, right down to grassroots. There's a clear path young players can take if they want to be an All Black, if they're talented, or if they get opportunities.
Every season is hard, every season has its ups and downs.
I live in Wellington now but I love going back to the farm where all you can hear are the cows or the sea crashing in about a kilometre away. Our uncle's farm is on the beach and we are one up from that towards the mountain.
Our mental skills expert Gilbert Enoka is just amazing the work he does.
I must say I'm a bit more daunted about changing a nappy than I am making a tackle... unless it's Ngani Laumape or Ben Lam.
I just remember, it seemed to be the thing to do to get up a three o'clock in the morning and watch the All Blacks play England or South Africa.
I was more than happy to not wear shoes. The only time we wore shoes was on Sunday when we went to church.
It certainly helped just having acres and acres of green grass, a back lawn where there's goal posts and plenty of siblings and cousins around to compete with and play against.
I don't read anything. I don't read the press. I've always valued my supporters and my haters are supporters in disguise. That's just the way it is. I run a couple of social media accounts and you can't help but look at comments every now and then.
Mum always encouraged us to run, she was very athletic.
Time flies. It seems like just yesterday I was playing my first game against Ireland, when I came off the bench, full of energy and flying into tackles, even though I couldn't tackle back then.
Japan is an appealing place for a young family and comparatively safe in health terms.
I learnt a lot from a psychological point of view about having to move on and flush things and not live on previous mistakes.
To me, being an All Black means following our dreams.
We pride ourselves on preparing well and genuinely. It's quite easy to brush over the small details, your recovery, the little one percenters. There are so many little things that add up to the performance.
At 17 I was graduating and didn't know what to do. I was seriously contemplating going to Melbourne to play Aussie football.