A Quote by Jonah Lomu

Each haka has its own interpretation, but you have to make sure you are in unison with your team-mates; the haka should be a proper war cry. — © Jonah Lomu
Each haka has its own interpretation, but you have to make sure you are in unison with your team-mates; the haka should be a proper war cry.
I'm half Hawaiian and the haka is a very sacred thing, something your family teaches you - my father taught me.
I went to a boarding school with a strong Maori tradition, where we were taught all about the haka.
Everybody recommends New Zealand. I really want to learn this haka, the traditional dance - I love it; it's so cool.
The biggest thing for me is earning the respect of my fellow players and coaches. I think that is why I was a little bit emotional. You don't get a haka done to you from the brothers for no reason if they don't respect you.
You should seek your enemy, you should wage your war - a war for your opinions. And when your opinion is defeatedy our honesty should still cry triumph over that!
Of course, I enjoy assisting my team-mates because playing no.10 is the position you have to serve your team-mates.
Listen to people, gain advice and gain the respect of your fellow team-mates. Make sure you put in the hours and you'll have fun.
You have to think for your team-mates and give them positive response. Whatever happens as a captain you have to take the responsibility. Backing my team-mates and supporting them was the biggest learning.
There is so much interaction in a football match: between you and your team-mates and how you support each other, work for each other, make runs. But I also enjoy the other aspect: the pressing and how people work so hard to recover the ball.
If you had to call it "unison", it ain't unison. It ain't the same as somebody else. If you can hear that it's unison, and you have to name it something other than "unison", it ain't unison, you know what I mean? It's two guys playin', but one guy is playin' slightly out of tune, one is playin' slightly off meter.
You will make a mistake in a game, fair enough, but you want your team-mates to help you out because it is a team game.
You are the master of your environment. You've got your own head, your own mind. So once you figure out what you want for yourself, you have to create the proper environment to make sure you can live out all the things you want.
There are two ways of getting the ball. One is from your own team-mates, and that's the only way
When you are part of a group for seven years, you leave something - I hope - beautiful inside each of your former team-mates.
The reason [drummers] call things "unison", and they sound unison, is because you actually play two different tempos . . . like you're a little sharp, or a little flat; it's so slight that they call it "unison", but it's not unison.
If you're not right, you can make a mistake that will cost your team-mates a game.
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