Johnny Sexton鈥檚 new book reveals Rieko Ioane鈥檚 sledging is just one of several All Blacks clash-related things that irked him.
* Sexton details the 鈥渢oxic waste鈥 online hate he received from Kiwi fans after Rugby World Cup exit.
* Disses Irish team鈥檚 Dunedin accommodation in 2022 as being dirty.
* Says British & Irish Lions tour 鈥渦nprofessional鈥 bonding in Queenstown cost them 2017 series against All Blacks.
* Retired Irish hero also hails hardman Brad Thorn and reveals the comment the dual international made which left him speechless.
Fiery Irish rugby star Johnny Sexton 鈥渉ated鈥 coming on tour to New Zealand.
In his just-released autobiography titled Obsessed, the former World Rugby Player of the Year has detailed at length the highs and lows of his career; which ended with 118 tests for Ireland.
The highs include being voted the world鈥檚 best player in 2018, winning Six Nations and Heineken Cup titles and Ireland鈥檚 first-ever series win over the All Blacks.
The lows include numerous brushes with officialdom and team-mates after outbursts, and the sledging from All Blacks centre Rieko Ioane after Ireland鈥檚 2023 Rugby World Cup exit; a match that was Sexton鈥檚 last.
That spat was serialised in the British media earlier this month, before the book鈥檚 official release in the UK several days ago.
And while Sexton heaps praise on ex-All Black Brad Thorn 鈥 a former teammate at Leinster 鈥 and Ireland鈥檚 former Kiwi coach Joe Schmidt in Obsessed, he doesn鈥檛 hold back from firing up about other issues that irked him, flowing on from clashes with the All Blacks.
鈥淚 loved Brad Thorn but I can鈥檛 say the same about New Zealand,鈥 Sexton wrote in the book, published by Penguin Ireland.
鈥淎t least, I hated going there when it鈥檚 summer at home and it鈥檚 winter there, and when the rugby season has been going non-stop for 12 months because of the World Cup and you鈥檙e knackered.
Johnny Sexton has written of issues with New Zealand's weather, the state of some hotel and some fans during his time playing for Ireland and the British & Irish Lions. Photo / Brett Phibbs.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the third straight year that you鈥檝e been sent down there, and the All Blacks are now World champions, and really, if you don鈥檛 mind, I鈥檇 rather just lay my aching bones on a sunlounger in Portugal.鈥
He later added it usually rained when he was on tour in New Zealand, and the dark arrived too quickly daily in winter.
The 鈥渦nprofessional鈥 blunder Warren Gatland鈥檚 British & Irish Lions made before All Black series showdown
The British & Irish Lions have only won one test series in New Zealand.
Kiwi coach Warren Gatland and his touring squad arrived here in early June 2017 determined that they would be able to repeat the success of the 1971 Lions team.
The All Blacks won the opening test 30-15, before the Lions hit back to win the second 24-21, setting up a decider at a packed-out Eden Park.
The dramatic third and final test ended in a 15-15 draw.
In his book, Sexton said the Lions made a huge off-field tactical error in the week leading up to the match.
鈥淢y biggest regret about that tour was what happened after Wellington, when we had some mandatory 鈥榖onding鈥 for a couple of days in Queenstown,鈥 he wrote in Obsessed.
Johnny Sexton says the British & Irish Lions made a huge off-field tactical blunder ahead of the 2017 test series decider. Photo / Photosport
鈥淭he bonding idea took root because the 2009 Lions went on the piss in their final week in South Africa and ended up winning the final test. Big deal.
鈥淭he series was already over. The Springboks picked their second-string side in the last test.
鈥淲e did it again in Australia four years later, but it wasn鈥檛 like the test match squad were on the beer down in Noosa.鈥
Ahead of the showdown for the All Blacks, Sexton said the Lions 鈥渄id nothing except 鈥榖ond鈥欌 at the start of the crucial week in Queenstown. The first time they hit the practice field was three days out from the test.
鈥淲e were supposed to be preparing for a series decider against the best team in the world at Eden Park. A shot at history. It was crazy. Unprofessional.
鈥淎s a result, I don鈥檛 think those Lions maxed out on their potential, not with the athletes we had at our disposal.鈥
Sexton said he wasn鈥檛 blaming Gatland solely for the mistake.
鈥淚鈥檓 not pointing the finger solely at Gats here. I blame the senior players for not taking control of the situation and making sure we prepared properly,鈥 Sexton wrote.
鈥淚 include myself in that. We had enough experience in that group to speak up. I wish I鈥檇 said something.鈥
It wasn鈥檛 the only pre-match preparation that Sexton was critical of during the Gatland-coached team鈥檚 dramatic tour seven years ago.
Management decided that the team who played the opening match against the New Zealand Provincial Barbarians would travel from the team鈥檚 tour base in Auckland to Whang膩rei by road.
British & Irish Lions head coach Warren Gatland and his senior players made an "unprofessional" off-field move that could have cost them the 2017 test series, writes Johnny Sexton. Photo / Brett Phibbs
But the travel wouldn鈥檛 be via a team bus. Instead, players were loaded into the vehicles of one of the Lions鈥 sponsors for what turned out to be a lengthy trip north to promote the brand.
鈥淲e鈥檇 only touched down in New Zealand three days previous, having travelled the guts of two days across 11 time zones,鈥 Sexton confided in Obsessed.
鈥淎fter such an arduous trip, it takes at least a week to get sleep patterns on to local time, even with the assistance of melatonin tablets.
鈥淪o I found myself dozing off on the five-hour drive from Auckland to Whang膩rei in our sponsored 4x4s.
鈥淚t was no way to prepare for a game and it shouldn鈥檛 be allowed to happen again.鈥
Kiwi fans added to Ioane鈥檚 cutting sledge post-retirement
In the weeks leading up to the release of Obsessed, its publishers serialised a section of the book in the UK press detailing Ioane鈥檚 cutting verbal attack on Sexton.
Ioane unleashed his spray on full time in the All Blacks鈥 Rugby World Cup quarterfinal win over Ireland - Sexton鈥檚 swansong 鈥 telling the Irishman: 鈥淒on鈥檛 miss your flight tomorrow. Enjoy your retirement, you c***鈥.
Sexton wrote: 鈥淪o much for the All Blacks鈥 famous 鈥榥o d***heads鈥 policy. So much for their humility. I walk after Ioane and call him a fake-humble f.
鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 look great, me having a go at one of them just after we鈥檝e lost. But I can鈥檛 be expected to ignore that.鈥
Rieko Ioane wasn't the only Kiwi to give Johnny Sexton abuse after the 2023 Rugby World Cup. Photo / Getty Images
Also in the book, he reveals that some of Ioane鈥檚 countrymen 鈥 鈥榢eyboard warriors鈥 based back in New Zealand 鈥 later joined in the abuse via social media.
鈥淒uring a quiet moment in the team hotel pre-departure, I鈥檇 made a rare enough visit to my Instagram page,鈥 Sexton wrote in Obsessed.
鈥淣ormally, I鈥檒l only ever see my 鈥榙irect messages鈥, those posts sent by friends or people I follow. But this time, curiosity made me check my 鈥榬equested messages鈥 - in other words, messages sent by anyone and everyone who felt inclined to do so.
鈥淭his included a few Scots, South Africans and Kiwis who wanted to give me a Rieko Ioane-style send-off. You get used to this sort of toxic waste after a while.鈥
Sexton鈥檚 happiest NZ memory - despite hotel horror
The former Irish No 10 isn鈥檛 lacking in reasons to bemoan his interaction with New Zealand during his lengthy test career.
But there were also some positives.
He rates Schmidt 鈥 who coached him at Leinster and Ireland 鈥 as one of the world鈥檚 best and most innovative coaches.
New Zealand was also the scene of one of his 鈥 and Ireland rugby鈥檚 - most famous moments, when Sexton helped inspire his team to their first-ever test win on Kiwi soil, then a first series over the men in black, in 2023.
Sexton missed the second half of the first-up 42-19 loss to the All Blacks at Eden Park when he failed a head injury assessment after taking a knock.
The second test was in Dunedin, with Sexton recalling in his book: 鈥淥ur hotel was the same as the one we used in 2011.
鈥淚t looked as though it hadn鈥檛 seen a lick of paint in the intervening 11 years, or a hoover.
All Blacks coach Ian Foster shakes hands with Ireland captain Johnny Sexton after Ireland's historic 2022 test series triumph. Photo / Photosport
鈥淲e made this a reason to laugh, rather than to mope. Seeing the positives in every situation was becoming a habit for us.鈥
Ireland won the second test 23-12, before securing the series with a 32-22 win in the third.
鈥淲hat we鈥檇 achieved 鈥 winning a three-test series in New Zealand 鈥 had never been done by any visiting team in the professional era,鈥 Sexton wrote in Obsessed.
鈥淏etter still, we鈥檇 won from behind. 鈥楾he hardest thing to do in rugby, by a country mile,鈥 as Faz [coach Andy Farrell] described it.
鈥淗arder than winning a World Cup? At the time, as we serenaded the surprisingly large number of Ireland supporters in Wellington that night, anything seemed possible.鈥
How Brad Thorn left Johnny Sexton speechless
Sexton鈥檚 career found him coming up against many New Zealand players; both clashes against the All Blacks and in the European club rugby scene against sides featuring ex-pat Kiwi players.
In Obsessed, he reveals one of the most special moments of his career was when he spent a season playing alongside one of the toughest of the professional rugby era All Blacks; Brad Thorn.
Thorn 鈥 who played 59 times for the All Blacks, having earlier played test rugby league for the Kangaroos 鈥 spent part of the 2012 season with Irish club Leinster, who Sexton played for and at the time was coached by Schmidt.
Sexton wrote while losing the 2012 Pro12 final to Welsh side Ospreys was a low, what followed in the dressing room after the match was a special moment in his career.
鈥淭he room was nearly empty when Brad sat down beside me, handed me a beer and thanked me for making him welcome at Leinster,鈥 he wrote.
鈥淎nd then he bowled me over.
Brad Thorn - in action during the 2011 Rugby World Cup - made comments that left Johnny Sexton speechless and humbled. Photo / Brett Phibbs
鈥淗e said, 鈥楧on鈥檛 change mate. You鈥檙e a champion. Don鈥檛 change anything. Not for anyone鈥.
鈥淚 still consider it the biggest personal compliment that I鈥檝e been paid from a fellow professional. Irish people generally aren鈥檛 good at giving or taking compliments. We鈥檙e quicker to criticise. Or if we give a compliment we do it indirectly.
鈥淏ut this was unconditional praise. Given what he鈥檇 achieved in the game and everyone he鈥檇 played alongside, it meant the world to me.鈥
is a Napier-based senior reporter who covers general news, features and sport. He joined the Herald in 2014 and has 30 years of newsroom experience.
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE