Last updated 14:15, May 14 2018
Richie McCaw 'every game would throw himself into harm's way, soaking up the attention of immensely powerful forwards'.
Outspoken international referee Nigel Owens has hailed All Blacks great Richie McCaw as the hardest man he's seen on a rugby field.
Owens, in his weekly column for , has hit back at widely reported recent assertions from England loose forward James Haskell that the game had gone "soft" on the back of him being penalised for a high tackle in his home finale for Wasps.
The openly gay Welsh referee who won plaudits for his condemnation of Israel Folau's recent controversial comments has taken issue with Haskell's lament that rugby had become "a bit of a pathetic sport" with its hardline stance on high hits.
Welsh rugby referee Nigel Owens.
Owens wrote in his column that despite rugby cleaning up the "dirty" aspects that had prevailed in earlier eras, it remained as tough a game as it had ever been. He then cited the recently retired McCaw as a prime example of that.
"The game is definitely cleaner at the top level than it was in the 1970s or 1980s. But does that make it softer? No, it does not," said Owens in his column.
"Some see the rugby of 30 or 40 years ago as the good old days, but were those days really that good? You hear horror stories about players getting booted at the bottom of rucks, about stamping and head-butting. Call me old-fashioned but that's not the kind of game I would want to be part of.
"Just because that stuff has been rooted out does not mean the game has gone soft."
Owens said the modern game featured "thunderous" hits put in by "blokes who are built like tanks".
"Yet I regularly see people climbing off the floor and resuming playing after being smashed square-on. The courage shown in every game never ceases to amaze."
Owens felt it was important to differentiate between the "hard" player and the "dirty" player and that the advent of professionalism and increase in sponsorship and television exposure had effectively removed the latter.
"Rugby had to clean itself up and my view is that today the product is infinitely better," he said.
Then he went for McCaw as the "hardest man" he had encountered on a rugby pitch.
"[He was] capped 148 times by New Zealand despite playing in the most attritional of positions where every game he would be required to throw himself into harm's way, perhaps by locking himself over possession and soaking up the attention of immensely powerful forwards who would do everything they could to wipe him off the ball.
"That's what I call a genuine hard man."
He also offered Welsh openside Martyn Williams and undersized wing Shane Williams as further examples of the hardness of the modern player, the former for his durability and latter "one of the smallest men to play rugby who took the hits from the big men, yet rose to his feet and got on with the game".