66
Clinton Toopi
🇳🇿
Centre, Debut: 1999-04-09
- Age
185 Ht
100 Wt
66
Clinton Toopi
🇳🇿
Centre, Debut: 1999-04-09
- Age
185 Ht
100 Wt

Player Clinton Toopi

Full Name
Clinton James Te-Whata Toopi
Date of Birth
Feb 29, 1980
Birth Location
Stratford, New Zealand
Nationality
  1. 🇳🇿 New Zealand
Height (cm)
185 cm
Weight (kg)
100 kg
Position/s
  1. Centre
Nickname
Toops
Warrior #
66
Warriors Debut Date
Apr 9, 1999
Warriors Debut Details
April 9 1999, Round 6 vs Melbourne Storm at Ericsson Stadium, Auckland, NZ
Warriors Years Active
  1. 1999
  2. 2000
  3. 2001
  4. 2002
  5. 2003
  6. 2004
  7. 2005
  8. 2006
Signed From
Otahuhu Leopards
Rep Honours
  1. NZ
  2. NZ māori
Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinton_Toopi
Rugby League Project
https://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/players/clinton-toopi/summary.html

mt.wellington

Clinton Toopi

Clinton Toopi 2002 1.webp

Clinton James Te-Whata Toopi (born 29 February 1980) is a New Zealand former professional rugby league and rugby union footballer who played in the 2000s and 2010s. A New Zealand international representative centre, he played his club football in the National Rugby League for the New Zealand Warriors and the Gold Coast Titans, and in the Super League for the Leeds Rhinos. Clinton began coaching the Helensvale Hornets in 2021 and guided them to victory in the 2022 Gold Coast A Grade Competition.

Toopi was born in Stratford, New Zealand, and began his career playing rugby league with the junior ranks of the Mt Wellington and Otahuhu Leopards clubs. He played for Auckland South in the 1999 provincial competition. His first grade career began with the then Auckland Warriors, débuting against the South Sydney Rabbitohs on 2 May 1999. He went on to play 119 games for the club, including the 2002 NRL Grand Final loss to the Sydney Roosters.

In 2000 Toopi was part of the Aotearoa māori side that played at the World Cup.

Toopi represented New Zealand on twelve occasions between 2001 and 2005. Toopi played for the Kiwis 14 times. He scored three tries in one match against Australia in the 2005 Tri Nations.

On 31 May 2006 Leeds Rhinos announced the capture of Toopi for the 2007 season as a replacement for Chev Walker. On 17 July he was granted an early release from the New Zealand Warriors so he could join the Rhinos for the rest of the season, this was granted the day before the deadline to register players in Super League. He made his début on 4 August 2006 against Hull FC.

On 23 August 2008 Leeds released Toopi, due to a knee reconstruction that would keep him out of action for 9 months. He attracted interest from the Japanese rugby union club Sanyo Wild Knights, and expressed interest in joining the Manly Sea Eagles in the National Rugby League competition however he did not secure a contract.

Toopi instead returned to New Zealand and switched to rugby union, joining the Whakatane Marist team in the Eastern Bay rugby union competition. On 18 June 2009 it was announced that he had made the Bay of Plenty Rugby Union's squad for the Air New Zealand Cup. He agreed to join the Gold Coast Titans for 2010.

During the 2010 pre-season Toopi trialed with the Gold Coast Titans. He did enough to impress management and earn a one-year contract. This was later extended for the 2011 season. He retired at the end of 2011.

Toopi again played for the New Zealand Māori in 2010, captaining the side against England.

In 2023, Toopi participated in season 3 of Match Fit, where former rugby players return to play against the Australian counterparts. He joined in the first season that featured former rugby league stars. On episode 3, he revealed he currently resides in Gold Coast, Australia. Throughout the first third of the 15-week program, his heart rate kept topping out even though he feels no ill effects, which suggest he has lower than expected aerobic endurance, he thought it was due to jet lag.


Former forward, a Junior Kiwi rep, shifted to the centres with the Warriors. After making his Test debut for the Kiwis in 2001, Toopi took his place in the Warriors’ grand final team the following year. In the October 2003 Test against Australia in Auckland, Toopi scored a hat-trick of tries in the Kiwis’ 30-16 victory. After another Test appearance against Australia in April 2004, Toopi represented the Kiwis in the Tri Nations competition (2 Tests) as well as the combined ANZacs team that defeated Cumbria in November. The following year Toopi was a member of the NZ team that defeated Australia in the Tri-Nations final.
- ALAN WHITICKER

 
#66 Clinton Toopi

Toopi is working as a NRL Community Program Manager delivering programs like State of Mind and Voice Against Violence. He still resides on the Gold Coast...

NRL Social Impact Ambassadors

Clinton Toopi​

Clinton Toopi.webp

Fast facts​

  • Born in Stratford, New Zealand and raised in Auckland, New Zealand
  • Debuted with the NZ Warriors in 1999
  • Played with the NZ Warriors for eight seasons
  • Played in the 2002 NRL Grand Final against Sydney Roosters
  • Played for the Gold Coast Titans from 2010-2011
  • Played more than 150 career games
  • Captained the NZ māori team in 2010
  • Played for the New Zealand Kiwis from 2000-2007
  • Represented New Zealand in more than 20 international games
  • Retired from professional rugby league in 2011
  • NRL Ambassador from 2016-2018
  • Current NRL Community Program Manager - State of Mind

Fun facts​

  • Favourite NRL team: Vodafone Warriors and Gold Coast Titans
  • Career ambition as a kid: A professional NRL player
  • Favourite food: Anything healthy and tasty with the odd sweet treat (Coles choc cookies)
  • Spirit animal: Cuddly Bear
  • What's on TV (when the footy isn't on): A program that will inspire me

Biography​

Starting junior league at just seven years old, Clinton Toopi was introduced to the game by his father, a local junior league coach, playing for the Glen Innes Falcons, Richmond Rovers, Mt Wellington Warriors and the Otahuhu Leopards and has loved the sport ever since.

Born and raised in New Zealand, Clinton debuted with the NZ Warriors in 1999 and completed eight seasons with the side, including the 2002 NRL grand final clash against the Sydney Roosters.

Inspired most by the seniors at his local junior club, Mt Wellington Warriors, Clinton challenged himself to play with the passion and aggression they showed, giving him the edge he needed to make the NRL.

After playing eight seasons with the Warriors, Clinton tested his skills in rugby union, before returning to rugby league in 2010, playing for the Gold Coast Titans in 2011.

In 2016 Clinton was inducted as a NRL Ambassador after his existing involvement in the Queensland State of Mind program and is now in the role of NRL Community Program Manager, Managing the NRL Program, State of Mind.

"I have a genuine passion to empower and drive change in mental health and wellbeing, through our NRL State of Mind program. As program deliverers we get to engage and connect with our communities, normalise help seeking behaviours, start healthy conversations, reduce stigma around mental health, create safe spaces and identify leaders within our grassroots clubs and local schools. to move us forward with mental health and wellbeing at the forefront. I love that our game provides these amazing programs that are delivering powerful messages of hope and change." said Clinton.

 
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