Tonga national rugby union team

The Tonga national rugby union team (Tongan: timi feohi ʻakapulu fakafonua ʻa Tonga) represents Tonga in men's international rugby union. The team is nicknamed ʻIkale Tahi (Sea Eagles) and is governed by the Tonga Rugby Union. Like their Polynesian neighbours, the Tongans precede their matches with a traditional challenge – the Sipi Tau. They are members of the Pacific Islands Rugby Alliance (PIRA) along with Fiji and Samoa. The Ikale Tahi achieved a historic 19–14 victory over France in the 2011 Rugby World Cup, but having lost to New Zealand and Canada, were unable to achieve what would have been their first-ever presence at the quarter-finals.

Tonga
NicknameʻIkale Tahi (The Sea Eagles)
EmblemWhite dove
UnionTonga Rugby Union
Head coachTevita Tuʻifua
CaptainBen Tameifuna
Most capsSonatane Takulua (58)
Top scorerKurt Morath (340)
Top try scorerFetuʻu Vainikolo & Sonatane Takulua (17)
Home stadiumTeufaiva Sport Stadium
First colours
Second colours
World Rugby ranking
Current19 (as of 18 November 2024)
Highest9 (2011, 2012)
Lowest20 (2005, 2006)
First international
 Tonga 9–6 Fiji 
(Nukuʻalofa, Tonga; 25 August 1924)
Biggest win
 Tonga 119–0 South Korea 
(Nukuʻalofa, Tonga; 22 March 2003)
Biggest defeat
 New Zealand 102–0 Tonga 
(Auckland, New Zealand; 16 June 2000)
 New Zealand 102–0 Tonga 
(Auckland, New Zealand; 3 July 2021)
World Cup
Appearances9 (first in 1987)
Best resultPool stage (1987, 1995, 1999, 2003, 2007, 2011, 2015, 2019, 2023)
Medal record
Pacific Games
1979 Suva
1963 Suva
1983 Apia

History

Rugby was brought to the region in the early 20th century by sailors and missionaries, and the Tonga Rugby Football Union was formed in late 1923. Tonga beat Fiji 9–6 in their first test in 1924 played in the capital Nukuʻalofa. However, Tonga lost the second test 14–3 and drew the decider 0–0.

Between 1924 and 1938 Tonga and Fiji played three test series every alternate year. Matches between the two Pacific nations were hard fought; many have claimed that the ancient feuding wars between the Islanders were transplanted onto the rugby field. Troubles during the third Test of Fiji's 1928 tour to Tonga forced the game to be abandoned with Tonga leading 11–8. In 1954 Tonga played host to a touring Western Samoa.

Tonga beat New Zealand Maori in 1969, but had to wait until 1973 before they played their second test match, a 30–12 defeat against Australia in Sydney. They got their revenge when they beat Australia in Ballymore, Brisbane 16–11, scoring four tries to two in June 1973. The following year they traveled to the Arms Park for a non-cap international against Wales, a game that ended in a 26–7 defeat.

The first Tongan tour to Great Britain was in 1974, when they played 10 games, including those in Wales against East Wales, Llanelli, North Wales, Newport, West Wales and a Wales XV. The only tour victory was by 18–13 in the opener against East Wales. The 'tests' were lost by 44–8 to a Scotland XV and by 26–7 to the Wales XV.

They remained a little-known quantity in Europe until 1986, when Wales embarked on a tour of Fiji, Tonga and Western Samoa. Early in the game against Tonga, Welsh flanker Mark Brown was knocked over by three Tongan forwards, leading to a mass brawl involving the entire team except Malcolm Dacey and Mark Titley. Robert Jones describes the event in his book Raising The Dragon as "the worst brawl I have ever seen on a rugby field." At the post-match dinner Jonathan Davies was asked to give a few words in Welsh and as the hosts politely applauded he described them as "the dirtiest team I have ever played against"

Tonga were drawn to play Wales again in the inaugural 1987 Rugby World Cup in New Zealand. The previous meeting, plus the decision to rest some of the leading players, led to a poor Welsh performance though they managed to win 29–16. Tonga lost its other two games to Ireland (32–9) and Canada (37–4).

They failed to qualify for the 1991 Rugby World Cup. In 1994 they won the South Pacific championship on try count and so qualified for the Super 10, in which they finished bottom of their pool with only one point.

They qualified for the 1995 World Cup ahead of Fiji on points difference. Tonga managed only two victories in the next two World Cups, against the 29–11 Côte d'Ivoire in 1995 and Italy in 1999. The win over the Côte d'Ivoire brought tragedy when Ivorian winger Max Brito was left paralysed.

June 1999 brought a 20–16 defeat of France in Nukuʻalofa over a touring France but in 2000 they were defeated 102–0 (including 15 tries) by New Zealand.

After losing their first four matches to Fiji and Samoa, Tonga finished third in the Oceania qualifying group. As a result, they had to play home and away matches against Papua New Guinea, which they won 47–14 and 84–12, followed by a play-off against South Korea, who finished as runners-up in the Asian section. Tonga thrashed them 75–0 and 119–0.

At the 2003 Rugby World Cup Tonga lost all their games and finished bottom of their pool. Although they kept Wales to 20–27, they were again thrashed by New Zealand 91–7.

In 2007 Tonga participated in the 2007 Rugby World Cup, winning two of their pool matches and nearly defeating the eventual champions, South Africa, before losing 30–25.

Tonga achieved one of the most unexpected victories in Rugby World Cup history with their 19–14 win over France in the 2011 World Cup.

On 24 November 2012, Tonga beat Scotland, at Pittodrie Stadium, 21–15 for their first victory over a traditional rugby power on a European pitch.

Sipi Tau

Like several Pacific rugby nations, Tonga has a pre-game war dance, called the Sipi Tau. It is a form of the Kailao, which was originally a war dance that was imported to Tonga from Wallis Island. It is usually performed at both public and private ceremonies.

During the 2003 Rugby World Cup in Australia, in Tonga's match against New Zealand, the All Blacks began their traditional haka, and then Tonga answered to the haka through the Sipi Tau while the All Blacks were performing, bringing the teams within metres of one another just prior to kick-off.

Performance

Overall record

  1. Change from the previous week
Tonga's historical rankings
date810121416182010/6/20038/17/20096/29/20155/10/2021TongaMen's World Rugby rankings
Source: World Rugby
Graph updated to 8 December 2025

Below is table of the representative rugby matches played by a Tongan national XV at test level up until 17 October 2025.

Opponent Played Won Lost Drawn Win % For Aga Diff
 Argentina 2 0 2 0 0.00% 28 73 −45
 Australia 4 1 3 0 25% 42 167 −125
 Australia A 4 1 3 0 25% 71 210 −139
 Canada 13 7 6 0 53.85% 303 295 +8
 Chile 2 2 0 0 100% 71 40 +31
 Cook Islands 4 4 0 0 100% 289 32 +257
 England 4 0 4 0 0.00% 36 241 −205
 England Saxons 1 0 1 0 0.00% 14 41 −27
 Fiji 96 27 66 3 28.13% 1,286 1,963 −677
 France 6 2 4 0 33.33% 96 172 −76
French Barbarians 3 2 1 0 66.67% 94 107 -13
 Georgia 7 2 5 0 28.57% 141 119 +22
 Hong Kong 1 1 0 0 100% 44 22 +22
 Ireland 3 0 3 0 0.00% 44 131 −87
 Italy 6 2 4 0 33.33% 96 190 −94
 Ivory Coast 1 1 0 0 100% 29 11 +18
 Japan 20 9 11 0 45% 493 542 −49
 Namibia 2 2 0 0 100% 55 35 +20
 New Caledonia 1 1 0 0 100.00% 58 3 +55
 New Zealand 7 0 7 0 0.00% 42 519 −477
 Junior All Blacks 3 0 3 0 0.00% 48 124 −76
 Māori 12 4 8 0 33.33% 165 319 −154
 Papua New Guinea 2 2 0 0 100% 131 26 +105
 Portugal 1 1 0 0 100% 24 19 +5
 Romania 6 3 3 0 50% 144 136 +8
 Samoa 71 28 39 4 39.44% 1,075 1,350 −275
 Scotland 6 1 5 0 16.67% 89 241 −152
 Scotland XV 2 0 2 0 0.00% 13 67 −54
 Solomon Islands 1 1 0 0 100% 92 3 +89
 South Korea 6 6 0 0 100% 464 66 +398
 South Africa 3 0 3 0 0.00% 53 153 −100
 Spain 3 2 1 0 66.67% 88 48 +40
 Tahiti 1 1 0 0 100% 74 0 +74
 Uruguay 1 1 0 0 100% 43 19 +24
 United States 11 9 2 0 81.82% 289 189 +100
 Wales 9 0 9 0 0.00% 108 301 −193
 Wales XV 1 0 1 0 0.00% 7 26 −19
 Zimbabwe 1 1 0 0 100% 42 13 +29
Total 327 124 196 7 37.92% 6,281 8,013 −1,732

World Cup record

Rugby World Cup record Qualification
Year Round Pld W D L PF PA Squad Pos Pld W D L PF PA
1987 Pool stage 3 0 0 3 29 98 Squad Invited
1991 Did not qualify 3rd 3 1 0 2 64 62
1995 Pool stage 3 1 0 2 44 90 Squad P/O 2 1 0 1 34 26
1999 3 1 0 2 47 171 Squad P/O 9 5 0 4 341 178
2003 4 0 0 4 46 178 Squad P/O 8 4 0 4 398 178
2007 4 2 0 2 89 96 Squad P/O 7 3 0 4 329 136
2011 4 2 0 2 80 98 Squad Automatically qualified
2015 4 1 0 3 70 130 Squad
2019 4 1 0 3 67 105 Squad 2nd 4 1 0 3 68 93
2023 4 1 0 3 96 177 Squad P/O 4 2 0 2 126 111
2027 Qualified 2nd 2 1 0 1 40 48
2031 To be determined To be determined
Total 33 9 0 24 568 1143 39 18 0 21 1398 832
  •   Champions
  •   Runners–up
  •   Third place
  •   Fourth place
  •   Home venue


Pacific Nations Cup

Tonga previously competed in the Pacific Tri-Nations winning three tournaments. The Pacific Nations Cup replaced the Tri-Nations tournament in 2006. Tonga have yet to win a tournament.

Tournament Won Drawn Lost Tonga finish
2006 2 0 2 4th / 5
2007 1 0 4 5th / 6
2008 1 0 4 6th / 6
2009 0 0 4 5th / 5
2010 0 0 3 4th / 4
2011 2 0 1 2nd / 4
2012 1 0 2 3rd / 4
2013 2 0 2 3rd / 5
2014 0 1 1 3rd / 3
2015 3 0 1 3rd / 6
2016 0 0 2 3rd / 3
2017 1 0 1 2nd / 3
2018 1 0 1 2nd / 4
2019 1 0 2 5th / 6
2022 0 0 3 4th / 4
2024 1 0 2 5th / 6
2025 2 0 2 3rd / 6
Total 18 1 37 0 titles

Wins against Tier 1 nations

Tonga have recorded six wins against tier 1 opposition.

30 June 1973 Australia  11–16 Tonga Ballymore Stadium, Brisbane  
Try: Cole
Tindall
Pen: McGill
Report Try: Kavapalu
Latu
Mafi Pahulu
Vave
Attendance: 9,563
Referee: Bob Burnett (Australia)
16 June 1999 Tonga 20–16  France Teufaiva Sport Stadium, Nukuʻalofa  
Try: Taufahema
Taumalolo (2)
Con: Sateki Tuipulotu
Pen: Sateki Tuipulotu
Report Try: Sarraméa
Con: Lamaison
Pen: Lamaison (3)
Attendance: 7,000
Referee: Clayton Thomas (Wales)
10 October 1999 Italy  25–28 Tonga Welford Road, Leicester  
Try: Moscardi
Con: Domínguez
Pen: Domínguez (6)
Report Try: Fatani
Taufahema
Sateki Tuipulotu
Con: Sateki Tuipulotu (2)
Pen: Sateki Tuipulotu (2)
Drop: Sateki Tuipulotu
Attendance: 10,244
Referee: David McHugh (Ireland)
1 October 2011 France  14–19 Tonga Westpac Stadium, Wellington  
Try: Clerc 80' m
Pen: Yachvili (3/3) 1', 23', 49'
Report Try: Hufanga 26' c
Con: Morath (1/1) 28'
Pen: Morath (4/8) 6', 35', 66', 72'
Attendance: 32,763
Referee: Steve Walsh (Australia)
24 November 2012 Scotland  15–21 Tonga Pittodrie, Aberdeen  
Pen: Laidlaw (5/7) 10', 38', 46', 55', 61'
Report Try: Lokotui 51' c
Vainikolo 65' m
Con: Apikotoa (1/2) 52'
Pen: Apikotoa (3/5) 5', 64', 72'
Attendance: 20,306
Referee: Mathieu Raynal (France)
26 November 2016 Italy  17–19  Tonga Stadio Euganeo, Padua  
15:00 CET (UTC+1) Try: Cittadini 12' c
Allan 54' c
Con: Canna (1/1) 13'
Allan (1/1) 55'
Pen: Padovani (1/1) 77'
Report Try: Piutau 51' c
Con: Takulua (1/1) 53'
Pen: Takulua (4/5) 32', 45', 77', 80'
Attendance: 18,125
Referee: John Lacey (Ireland)

Players

Current squad

On 6 November, Tonga named a 30-player squad ahead of their November test against Scotland.

Head coach: Tevita Tuʻifua

  • Caps Updated: 22 November 2025 (after Scotland v Tonga)
Player Position Date of birth (age) Caps Club/province
Sam Moli Hooker (1998-12-24) 24 December 1998 (age 26) 22 Moana Pasifika / Tasman
Sosefo Sakalia Hooker (1991-12-14) 14 December 1991 (age 34) 24 Kolomotu’a RC
Siegfried Fisiʻihoi Prop (1987-06-08) 8 June 1987 (age 38) 32 Massy
Phil Kite Prop (1993-04-23) 23 April 1993 (age 32) 3 Colomiers
Fatongia Paea Prop (1999-09-04) 4 September 1999 (age 26) 1 Auckland
Ben Tameifuna Prop (1991-08-30) 30 August 1991 (age 34) 43 Bordeaux Bègles
Siate Tokolahi Prop (1992-03-16) 16 March 1992 (age 33) 5 Pau
Tupou Afungia Lock (1999-09-12) 12 September 1999 (age 26) 10 Unattached
Viliami Napa'a Lock (2002-05-16) 16 May 2002 (age 23) 0 Waitohi RFC
Harison Mataele Lock (1994-01-01) 1 January 1994 (age 31) 15 Unattached
Sitaleki Timani Lock (1986-09-19) 19 September 1986 (age 39) 1 Carcassonne
Veikoso Poloniati Lock (1995-08-27) 27 August 1995 (age 30) 6 Unattached
Lotu Inisi Back row (1999-04-26) 26 April 1999 (age 26) 13 Takapuna
Fotu Lokotui Back row (1992-03-19) 19 March 1992 (age 33) 21 Niort
Siosiua Moala Back row (1989-05-29) 29 May 1989 (age 36) 7 Poverty Bay
Semisi Paea Back row (1999-04-17) 17 April 1999 (age 26) 10 Moana Pasifika / Bay of Plenty
Aisea Halo Scrum-half (1993-06-29) 29 June 1993 (age 32) 12 Counties Manukau
Siaosi Nginingini Scrum-half (1998-10-17) 17 October 1998 (age 27) 3 Moana Pasifika / North Harbour
Sonatane Takulua Scrum-half (1991-01-11) 11 January 1991 (age 34) 62 Carcassonne
William Havili Fly-half (1998-09-09) 9 September 1998 (age 27) 16 Tasman
Patrick Pellegrini Fly-half (1998-09-28) 28 September 1998 (age 27) 16 Moana Pasifika
Tima Faingaʻanuku Centre (1997-04-26) 26 April 1997 (age 28) 10 North Harbour
Solomone Kata Centre (1994-12-03) 3 December 1994 (age 31) 15 Leicester Tigers
Ofa Manuofetoa Centre (1991-05-31) 31 May 1991 (age 34) 0 Aurillac
Taniela Filimone Wing (1999-06-01) 1 June 1999 (age 26) 4 Manawatu
Fine Inisi Wing (1998-05-19) 19 May 1998 (age 27) 17 Dragons
John Tapueluelu Wing (1999-04-07) 7 April 1999 (age 26) 10 Alhambra
Anzelo Tuitavuki Wing (1998-10-10) 10 October 1998 (age 27) 8 Colomiers
Josiah Unga Fullback (2003-05-15) 15 May 2003 (age 22) 6 Auckland Marist

Coaches

Current coaching staff

The current coaching staff of the Tongan national team:

Name Nationality Role
Tilitili Puloka TON Manager
Tevita Tuʻifua TON Head Coach
Nili Latu TON Assistant Coach
Pauliasi Manu TON Scrum Coach
Joe Tuineau TON Lineout Coach
Viliami Maʻafu TON Defence Coach
Kurt Morath TON Skills Coach
Isi Fatani TON Breakdown Coach
Semisi Fonua TON Strength & Conditioning coach
Joh Fifita TON Performance Analyst
Dr. Penisimani Poloniati TON Team doctor
Siosaia Vakasiuola TON Physiotherapist

Individual all-time records

Most caps

# Player Pos Span Mat Start Sub Pts Tries Conv Pens Drop Won Lost Draw %
1 Sonatane Takulua Scrum-half 2014–present 63 57 6 283 18 44 35 0 24 38 1 38.10
2 Nili Latu Flanker 2006–2017 48 47 1 28 5 0 1 0 19 28 1 40.62
3 Vunga Lilo Fullback 2007–2018 44 41 3 87 12 3 7 0 19 25 0 43.18
4 Siale Piutau Wing 2011–2019 43 41 2 32 6 1 0 0 17 25 1 40.69
Ben Tameifuna Prop 2017-present 43 33 10 20 4 0 0 0 14 29 0 32.56
6 Steve Mafi Lock 2010–2023 42 31 11 10 2 0 0 0 20 22 0 48.42
7 Elisi Vunipola Fly-half 1990–2005 41 40 1 50 8 2 2 0 15 26 0 36.58
8 Kurt Morath Fly-half 2009–2021 40 34 6 340 2 48 78 0 18 22 0 47.36
9 Pierre Hola Fly-half 1998–2009 39 38 1 322 12 68 42 3 19 20 0 48.72
Benhur Kivalu Number 8 1998–2005 39 35 4 40 8 0 0 0 14 24 1 37.17

Last updated: Scotland vs Tonga, 23 November 2025. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Most tries

# Player Pos Span Mat Start Sub Pts Tries Conv Pens Drop
1 Sonatane Takulua Scrum-half 2014–present 63 57 6 283 18 44 35 0
2 Fetuʻu Vainikolo Wing 2011–2016 28 27 1 85 17 0 0 0
3 Josh Taumalolo Centre 1996–2007 26 23 3 118 14 6 12 0
4 Pierre Hola Fly-half 1998–2009 39 38 1 322 12 68 42 3
Vunga Lilo Fullback 2007–2018 44 41 3 87 12 3 7 0
6 Fepikou Tatafu Centre 1996–2002 23 21 2 50 10 0 0 0
7 Viliame Iongi Wing 2011–2016 21 15 6 45 9 0 0 0
Benhur Kivalu Number 8 1998–2005 39 35 4 45 9 0 0 0
Telusa Veainu Wing 2015–2024 16 15 1 45 9 0 0 0
10 Elisi Vunipola Fly-half 1990–2005 41 40 1 50 8 2 2 0

Last updated: Scotland vs Tonga, 23 November 2025. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Leading point scorers

# Player Pos Span Mat Start Sub Pts Tries Conv Pens Drop
1 Kurt Morath Fly-half 2009–2021 40 34 6 340 2 48 78 0
2 Pierre Hola Fly-half 1998–2009 39 38 1 322 12 68 42 3
3 Sonatane Takulua Scrum-half 2014–present 63 57 6 283 18 44 35 0
4 Sateki Tuipulotu Fullback 1993–2003 20 19 1 190 5 33 32 1
5 Fangatapu Apikotoa Fly-half 2004–2014 30 20 10 147 2 40 19 0
6 Josh Taumalolo Centre 1996–2007 26 23 3 118 14 6 12 0
7 Kusitafu Tonga Fullback 1996–2001 13 12 1 114 1 32 15 0
8 William Havili Fly-half 2022-present 19 19 0 101 1 27 14 0
9 Patrick Pellegrini Fly-half 2023- 17 11 6 89 5 20 8 0
10 Vunga Lilo Fullback 2007–2018 44 41 3 87 12 3 7 0

Last updated: Scotland vs Tonga, 23 November 2025. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Most points in a match

# Player Pos Pts Tries Conv Pens Drop Opposition Venue Date
1 Pierre Hola Centre 44 2 17 0 0  South Korea Nukuʻalofa 22 March 2003
2 Fangatapu Apikotoa Fly-half 30 2 10 0 0  South Korea Henderson 10 February 2007
3 Sateki Tuipulotu Fullback 27 1 8 2 0  South Korea Seoul 4 May 1999
4 Benhur Kivalu Number 8 25 5 0 0 0  South Korea Nukuʻalofa 22 March 2003
Patrick Pellegrini Fly-half 25 3 5 0 0  Canada Salt Lake City 20 September 2025
6 Pierre Hola Fullback 24 0 9 1 1  Papua New Guinea Nukuʻalofa 7 December 2002
7 Gustavo Tonga Fullback 23 1 9 0 0  Cook Islands Nukuʻalofa 5 July 1997
8 Viliame Iongi Centre 20 4 0 0 0  United States Esher 8 June 2011
Kurt Morath Fly-half 20 0 4 4 0  Fiji Lautoka 2 July 2011
Sonatane Takulua Scrum-half 20 1 3 3 0  Samoa Nukuʻalofa 1 July 2017

Last updated: Scotland vs Tonga, 23 November 2025. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Most tries in a match

# Player Pos Pts Tries Conv Pens Drop Opposition Venue Date
1 Benhur Kivalu Number 8 25 5 0 0 0  South Korea Nukuʻalofa 22 March 2003
2 Viliame Iongi Wing 20 4 0 0 0  United States Esher 8 June 2011
3 Josh Taumalolo Fly-half 15 3 0 0 0  Cook Islands Nukuʻalofa 5 July 1997
Josh Taumalolo Fullback 17 3 1 0 0  Georgia Tbilisi 28 March 1999
Jonathan Koloi Flanker 15 3 0 0 0  South Korea Seoul 4 May 1999
Viliami Hakalo Wing 15 3 0 0 0  Cook Islands Rarotonga 24 June 2006
Sonatane Takulua Scrum-half 15 3 0 0 0  Hong Kong Sunshine Coast 23 July 2022
Patrick Pellegrini Fly-half 25 3 5 0 0  Canada Salt Lake City 20 September 2025
9 49 players on 2 tries

Last updated: Scotland vs Tonga, 23 November 2025. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Most matches as captain

# Player Pos Span Mat Won Lost Draw % Pts Tries Conv Pens Drop
1 Nili Latu Flanker 2006–2016 42 15 26 1 36.90 23 4 0 1 0
2 Siale Piutau Wing 2015–2019 19 9 10 0 47.36 22 4 1 0 0
Sonatane Takulua Scrum-half 2017–present 19 6 13 0 25.00 80 8 8 8 0
4 Inoke Afeaki Lock 2001–2003 12 4 8 0 33.33 15 3 0 0 0
5 Ben Tameifuna Prop 2024- 11 3 8 0 27.27 5 1 0 0 0
Fakahau Valu Flanker 1977–1987 11 0 11 0 0.00 12 3 0 0 0
7 Aleki Lutui Hooker 2004–2011 9 1 8 0 11.11 5 1 0 0 0
Elisi Vunipola Fly-half 1999–2001 9 4 5 0 44.44 15 3 0 0 0
9 Sione Mafi Pahulu Number 8 1973–1975 7 1 6 0 14.28 15 3 0 1 0
10 Siaosi Atiola Number 8 1987–1990 6 1 4 1 25.00 4 1 0 0 0

Last updated: Scotland vs Tonga, 22 November 2025. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Youngest players

# Player Pos Age Opposition Venue Date
1 Elisi Vunipola Fly-half 17 years and 292 days  Fiji Nukualofa 24 March 1990
2 Viliami Hakalo (Wing) 18 years and 182 days  Japan Fukuoka 4 June 2006
3 Sione Kalamafoni (Flanker) 18 years and 268 days  South Korea Henderson 10 February 2007
4 Soane Havea Scrum-half 18 years and 292 days  New Zealand North Shore City 16 June 2000
5 Semi Taupeaafe Wing 18 years and 317 days  Fiji Suva 11 June 1991
6 Sinali Latu Number 8 18 years and 320 days  Fiji Suva 7 July 1984
7 Unuoi Vaʻenuku Centre 19 years and 51 days  France Pretoria 26 May 1995
8 Pita Alatini Centre 19 years and 119 days  Samoa Nukuʻalofa 8 July 1995
9 Tevita ʻAhoafi (Scrum-half) 19 years and 171 days  Australia A Sydney 25 May 2007
10 Isi Tapueluelu Centre 19 years and 176 days  Fiji Nukuʻalofa 24 March 1990

Last updated: Tonga vs Samoa, 22 August 2025. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Oldest players

# Player Pos Age Opposition Venue Date
1 Sitaleki Timani (Lock) 39 years and 73 days  Scotland Edinburgh 23 November 2025
2 Siegfried Fisiʻihoi Prop 38 years and 168 days  Scotland Edinburgh 23 November 2025
3 Polutele Tuʻihalamaka Lock 37 years and 249 days  Canada Napier 24 May 1987
4 Aleki Lutui (Hooker) 37 years and 95 days  Argentina Leicester 4 October 2015
5 Kurt Morath Fly-Half 36 years and 358 days  England London 6 November 2021
6 Fakahau Valu Flanker 36 years and 347 days  Ireland Brisbane 3 June 1987
7 Joe Tuineau Lock 36 years and 302 days  Samoa Suva 16 June 2018
8 Siosiua Moala Flanker 36 years and 178 days  Scotland Edinburgh 23 November 2025
9 Hale T-Pole Lock 36 years and 152 days  Namibia Exeter 29 September 2015
10 Elvis Taione Hooker 36 years and 76 days  Canada Lautoka 8 August 2019

Last updated: Scotland vs Tonga, 23 November 2025. Statistics include officially capped matches only.

Kit history

Tonga usually wears a home kit consisting of a red shirt, white shorts and red socks and an away kit with the reversed colours. In the 1999 Rugby World Cup, Tonga wore an all-red home kit. Since 2007, Tongan traditional designs, similar to the ones found on the tapa cloths, were incorporated on the jersey design.

Kit manufacturers:

Period Kit manufacturer
1974–1980 Umbro
1980–1999 Canterbury
2000–2002 Carisbrook
2003–2005 Sekem
2005–2008 KooGa
2008 Field to Podium ^a
2008 Samurai Sportswear^a
2008 Samurai Sportswear^a
2008–2010 Aoniu^b
2011–2012 KooGa/BLK
2012–2015 Kukri
2016–2020 Mizuno
2021 Siomai Print
2021-2023 Force XV
2024--present Talatā Sports Wear
  • ^a Tonga wore Samurai Sportswear kits in the matches against Maori All Blacks and Japan in 2008
  • ^a Tonga wore Field To Podium kits in the matches during the 2008 Pacific Nations Cup
  • ^b Tonga wore kits manufactured by the local brand Aoniu in the 2008 end-of-year international tours.
1987–1995 Home
1987–1995 Away
1999 RWC Home
2003 Home
2003 Away
2007 Home
2009 Home
2011 Home
2015 Home
2015 Away
2017 Home
2017 Away
2019 Home
2019 Away

Coaches

Name Span Mat Won Lost Draw %W
David Mullins 1969–1974
Viliami Haʻunga 1979
Kelepi Tupou 1983
Fred Wolfgramm 1985
Prince Mailefihi 1986–1987
Peseti Maʻafu 1991
Sione Taumoepeau 1994-1995
Fakahau Valu 1995
Rev. Tevita Latailakepa 1998
Polutele Tuʻihalamaka 1999
David Waterston 1999–2000
Vaita Ueleni 2000–2001
Jim Love 2001–2003 19 6 13 0 31.58
Viliami Ofahengaue 2004–2005 8 0 8 0 0.00
Adam Leach 2006–2007 7 5 2 0 71.43
Quddus Fielea 2007–2010 16 5 11 0 31.25
Isitolo Maka 2010–2011 14 7 7 0 50.00
Toutai Kefu (caretaker) 2012 3 1 2 0 33.33
Mana Otai 2012–2015 24 11 12 1 47.91
Toutai Kefu 2016–2023 51 15 32 0 29.41
Tevita Tuʻifua 2024–present

Notable former players

See also

Sources

  • Tongan rugby history (from the BBC)
  • The good and bad of Tonga (from the BBC)

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