
Love for both: Finefeuiaki has Tonga and Samoa in heart
The languages, customs and family values of both nations are well understood by him.
"I know both. I can speak both. I can understand both. I love each and every one of them," he said.
The 21-year-old will make himself available for Tonga on October 26 at Suncorp Stadium to play against Samoa in one of the most anticipated internationals of all time, but it was far from a straight-forward decision.
"My whole name is Tongan," he said.
"I don't think that anybody knows that I'm half Samoan as well because of my mum, but (I will play) for Tonga because I grew up more on my dad's side than my mum's side.
"When it comes to those kind of games, my parents ask me who am I going for. I just go for the ref because I don't want to start any fights in the house.
"I just love both of my parents, so I hope I get to represent both nations down the track."
Finefeuiaki is yet to make his international debut but has been in Tonga camp previously and is on track to do so in this year's Pacific Championships. He watched with interest as Payne Haas made his decision this week to link with Samoa..
"It was pretty special for someone like Payne, with the profile he has and what he's done for the game, to turn away from Australia to go to Samoa, especially being half Samoan myself," Finefeuiaki said.
"No doubt the Samoan nation will be happy.
"If it comes at the back end of the season then I would love to put my hand up to represent Tonga. I'm just trying to focus on my game and my footy at the Dolphins."
Finefeuiaki joined Queensland camp during this year's State of Origin series but gets the sense the international rivalries brewing in the Pacific will surpass it.
"I reckon it's just a bit more than Origin, when it comes to international footy," he said.
"Everyone from the small islands, they get behind their own countries and no doubt that first game between Samoa and Tonga at Suncorp will be a sellout. The parades are going to be crazy all around New Zealand and Australia.
"(Maroons camp) was a pretty cool experience, especially for myself playing my junior footy here.
"I was just learning off all the veteran players like Patty Carrigan and how they carry themselves.
"I try to add what they have to my game, so I just need to keep working on that."
Finefeuiaki will play for the Dolphins away against Manly on Saturday as a finals berth goes on the line.
"I just need to carry hard and make my tackles. On the weekend I missed a few crucial tackles there, so I just need to ... keep my feet closer to contact and just help my edge," he said.
"If I do my job, then the boys will do their job as well."
Dolphins forward Kulikefu Finefeuiaki has summed up the passion, respect and love behind the looming Pacific Championships showdown between Tonga and Samoa.
The languages, customs and family values of both nations are well understood by him.
"I know both. I can speak both. I can understand both. I love each and every one of them," he said.
The 21-year-old will make himself available for Tonga on October 26 at Suncorp Stadium to play against Samoa in one of the most anticipated internationals of all time, but it was far from a straight-forward decision.
"My whole name is Tongan," he said.
"I don't think that anybody knows that I'm half Samoan as well because of my mum, but (I will play) for Tonga because I grew up more on my dad's side than my mum's side.
"When it comes to those kind of games, my parents ask me who am I going for. I just go for the ref because I don't want to start any fights in the house.
"I just love both of my parents, so I hope I get to represent both nations down the track."
Finefeuiaki is yet to make his international debut but has been in Tonga camp previously and is on track to do so in this year's Pacific Championships. He watched with interest as Payne Haas made his decision this week to link with Samoa..
"It was pretty special for someone like Payne, with the profile he has and what he's done for the game, to turn away from Australia to go to Samoa, especially being half Samoan myself," Finefeuiaki said.
"No doubt the Samoan nation will be happy.
"If it comes at the back end of the season then I would love to put my hand up to represent Tonga. I'm just trying to focus on my game and my footy at the Dolphins."
Finefeuiaki joined Queensland camp during this year's State of Origin series but gets the sense the international rivalries brewing in the Pacific will surpass it.
"I reckon it's just a bit more than Origin, when it comes to international footy," he said.
"Everyone from the small islands, they get behind their own countries and no doubt that first game between Samoa and Tonga at Suncorp will be a sellout. The parades are going to be crazy all around New Zealand and Australia.
"(Maroons camp) was a pretty cool experience, especially for myself playing my junior footy here.
"I was just learning off all the veteran players like Patty Carrigan and how they carry themselves.
"I try to add what they have to my game, so I just need to keep working on that."
Finefeuiaki will play for the Dolphins away against Manly on Saturday as a finals berth goes on the line.
"I just need to carry hard and make my tackles. On the weekend I missed a few crucial tackles there, so I just need to ... keep my feet closer to contact and just help my edge," he said.
"If I do my job, then the boys will do their job as well."
Dolphins forward Kulikefu Finefeuiaki has summed up the passion, respect and love behind the looming Pacific Championships showdown between Tonga and Samoa.
The languages, customs and family values of both nations are well understood by him.
"I know both. I can speak both. I can understand both. I love each and every one of them," he said.
The 21-year-old will make himself available for Tonga on October 26 at Suncorp Stadium to play against Samoa in one of the most anticipated internationals of all time, but it was far from a straight-forward decision.
"My whole name is Tongan," he said.
"I don't think that anybody knows that I'm half Samoan as well because of my mum, but (I will play) for Tonga because I grew up more on my dad's side than my mum's side.
"When it comes to those kind of games, my parents ask me who am I going for. I just go for the ref because I don't want to start any fights in the house.
"I just love both of my parents, so I hope I get to represent both nations down the track."
Finefeuiaki is yet to make his international debut but has been in Tonga camp previously and is on track to do so in this year's Pacific Championships. He watched with interest as Payne Haas made his decision this week to link with Samoa..
"It was pretty special for someone like Payne, with the profile he has and what he's done for the game, to turn away from Australia to go to Samoa, especially being half Samoan myself," Finefeuiaki said.
"No doubt the Samoan nation will be happy.
"If it comes at the back end of the season then I would love to put my hand up to represent Tonga. I'm just trying to focus on my game and my footy at the Dolphins."
Finefeuiaki joined Queensland camp during this year's State of Origin series but gets the sense the international rivalries brewing in the Pacific will surpass it.
"I reckon it's just a bit more than Origin, when it comes to international footy," he said.
"Everyone from the small islands, they get behind their own countries and no doubt that first game between Samoa and Tonga at Suncorp will be a sellout. The parades are going to be crazy all around New Zealand and Australia.
"(Maroons camp) was a pretty cool experience, especially for myself playing my junior footy here.
"I was just learning off all the veteran players like Patty Carrigan and how they carry themselves.
"I try to add what they have to my game, so I just need to keep working on that."
Finefeuiaki will play for the Dolphins away against Manly on Saturday as a finals berth goes on the line.
"I just need to carry hard and make my tackles. On the weekend I missed a few crucial tackles there, so I just need to ... keep my feet closer to contact and just help my edge," he said.
"If I do my job, then the boys will do their job as well."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
5 hours ago
- ABC News
Pacific rugby league players 'caught between two worlds' when choosing a national team to represent
Samoan rugby league fans are celebrating the news that one of the game's superstars, Australian Kangaroos front-rower Payne Haas, has switched allegiances. Joining the likes of Brian To'o, Stephen Chrichton, and Jarome Luai, 25-year-old Haas has announced he will represent Toa Samoa in the upcoming Pacific Championships as well as the next Rugby League World Cup, which will be held in both Australia and Papua New Guinea in 2026. Defections like this are a huge boost for tier 2 nations, but it also reminds us that for decades, the best Pacific Island players have often found themselves stuck between two worlds, having to choose between their islander heritage or representing a tier 1 nation like Australia or New Zealand. It's as much a personal choice as it is a professional one, and high-profile Pacific players such as Xavier Coates and Tino Fa'asuamaleaui have received backlash from Pacific footy fans over their decision to play for Australia. Unitec Associate Professor and proud Samoan man Lefaoali'i Dr Dion Enari joined Nesia Daily to unpack the experience Pacific players go through in deciding what jersey to wear.


Canberra Times
8 hours ago
- Canberra Times
Big love, Payno! - What Luai said on Samoa defection
"We've obviously got a big job to do for our clubs but hopefully, God willing, all fit and healthy at the back end of the year and we can put on that jersey together (at the Pacific Championships)."

Sydney Morning Herald
13 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
After 15 years in the NRL, did we ever get to know the real Daly Cherry-Evans?
Cherry-Evans' crime? Having the audacity to potentially finish his career somewhere other than the Northern Beaches. Paul Vautin somehow managed to finish up at the Roosters without becoming less of a Manly man, but another standard is seemingly applied to Cherry-Evans. Perhaps it's because fans could relate to Fatty, Cliffy, Bozo, Beaver, Wombat or Toovs. But, after 15 years in first grade, did we ever truly get to know Daly Cherry-Evans? 'By nature I am very, very private,' Cherry-Evans said. 'I think over the later part of my career I've tried to give the media and journalists a bit more of an insight, only because I believe that you guys are the link between us and the fans. 'So I think for the fans' sake I've tried to show them a bit more. 'Have I really showed my true colours through the media? Probably not. 'But I guess there's also a part of me that really enjoys when I'm at the pub and someone comes up to me and we have a chat and then they go 'Geez, you're not what I thought you were.' I sort of like that a little bit.' His move to the Tricolours has been reported as a done deal, but that's not the case, at least in a contractual sense. Sources speaking on the condition of anonymity have told this masthead that no deal has been agreed, not even of the handshake variety. Yet the transfer is still expected to happen, raising the prospect that he could join Cameron Smith as the only players to break the magical 400-game barrier. 'At the moment it does seem like it's so far away, but I think deep down I had the same feeling at 300,' Cherry-Evans said. 'I thought, 'That looks so far away', but before you know it, you keep persisting, and you're here again. 'I'll never say never on those things, but the reality is I actually just don't know how long I'm going to keep playing for. 'It would be crazy for me to think any more than just year to year. If I was to get there, a lot of things would have to go right, but it's pretty ambitious, isn't it? 'I think for right now I'm just going to enjoy 350 and see where that takes me.' This isn't the biggest contractual drama Cherry-Evans has endured. A decade ago, he committed to the Titans but, as permitted under the rules at the time, backflipped when Manly came back with a better offer. It was dubbed a 'lifetime deal', one that couldn't have predicted recent events. Does he have regrets about the nature of his departure? 'I think I've been through bigger decisions than this one,' he said to the Gold Coast situation. 'I thought the one earlier in my career was a bigger one and I've got no regrets for that one. So I reckon I'll have no regrets for this one.' The Sea Eagles may not like his decision, but it was made early enough for the club to plan for the future. Cherry-Evans' departure, along with Lachlan Galvin's mid-season exit from Wests Tigers, have been the biggest rugby league stories of the year. It's possible the transfers will end well for all four clubs involved. The Bulldogs-Galvin combination will be better after a pre-season together, while the Tigers have won four of their past six games since the youngster left the club. Manly have the arrival of Canberra's Jamal Fogarty and the emergence of young guns Joe Walsh and Onitoni Large to look forward to, while the Roosters hope Cherry-Evans can have a Cooper Cronk-like impact. The Tricolours signed Cronk at the end of 2017 for the final two years of his career, which both ended in Roosters premierships. With only three games to go in the maroon jersey, the focus will turn to Cherry-Evans' legacy on the northern beaches. 'The piece on how you get remembered, I think at the end of the day all you want to be known for is a reliable teammate that could do his job and be counted on,' he said. Loading 'I think that's the main thing you want to walk away with when it comes to how you want to be remembered. 'The thing I'm going to take away is the connections, the friendships, the relationships … To be able to go away, I'll retire and be old and hopefully one day I can bring my grandkids here and sort of point to something on the wall and say I was a part of this one day.'