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Leigh Halfpenny

Image source, Getty Images/Huw Evans Picture AgencyImage caption, Leigh Halfpenny played for Cardiff, Scarlets, Toulon, Crusaders, Harlequins, Wales and the British and Irish Lions

It's not often BBC Radio 1 come to the Scrum V desk looking for help lining up a guest.

But news of Leigh Halfpenny's retirement at the end of this season has attracted widespread, and deserved, attention and acclaim.

Second in the 2013 BBC Sports Personality of the Year behind Wimbledon champion Andy Murray, he was a British and Irish Lion whose appeal stretched way beyond the traditional image of a rugby player - youthful, almost boyband in look, he had a reach few in the game ever manage.

No ego. No noise. Just a quiet, consistent excellence that defined his 20-year career. Now fittingly, a quiet confirmation that he will retire at the end of the season aged 37.

Because this is more than just another retirement.

Back in 2008, a Wales Under-20s side went deep into the Junior World Championship and hinted at what was coming. Sam Warburton, Justin Tipuric, Dan Biggar, Rhys Webb, Jonathan Davies and Halfpenny were in that side.

Grand Slams, titles and World Cup semi-finals. For a time, the best team in the world.

One by one, they've gone. Halfpenny is the last.

The numbers are strong. Some 101 caps, 801 points - third behind Neil Jenkins and Stephen Jones - but they don't quite explain him.

He was unassuming, almost bashful, and the last person looking for credit.

Nobody has a bad word to say about him. In this game, that's rare.

His former Wales coach Warren Gatland called him the best defensive full-back the game has seen. At his peak, especially with the British & Irish Lions in 2013, he was probably the best full-back. Full stop.

A perfectionist, obsessive about detail, and as committed to his craft as anyone in the professional era.

That started early, kicking balls for hours in Gorseinon, and he never really changed.

Injuries disrupted his career, sometimes cruelly. A missed World Cup, long absences, even the game of his 100th cap against Canada in 2021 ended with a serious knee injury in the first minute.

If Antoine Dupont is the game's natural talent - the rugby equivalent of Lionel Messi or Roger Federer - Halfpenny was the other side of it.

He was more Cristiano Ronaldo or Rafael Nadal. Not in build, but in method, everything earned, in a frame many thought too small for this level.

When he played, he delivered. Technically excellent, positionally outstanding and ice-cold from the kicking tee.

Halfpenny's club career started at Neath in 2006 and took him from Cardiff to Toulon, the Scarlets, New Zealand and Harlequins, with European success along the way.

Players like this, so tied to the detail of the game, usually leave something behind.

Which is why this one feels like more than just another retirement.

With former team-mates George North and Liam Williams also stepping away, this is the end of a glorious chapter in Welsh rugby. A generation that defined an era.

He'd hate this bit, of course - the focus on him rather than the people who helped him along the way.

No fuss. Just a career built on doing everything properly and doing it better, more consistently, than almost anyone else.

Read original at BBC News

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