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Scarlets, Wales and Lions Hooker Retires Aged 37
Scarlets, Wales and Lions Hooker Retires Aged 37
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Ken Owens: Scarlets, Wales and Lions hooker retires aged 37
By Matt Lloyd
BBC Sport Wales
Last updated on17 April 202417 April 2024.
From the sectionWelsh Rugby
241
Wales' most capped hooker and oldest captain Ken Owens has retired, aged 37.
Owens played 91 internationals for Wales and five Tests for the British and Irish
Lions on two tours.
He won four Six Nations titles, including two Grand Slams, appeared at three World
Cups and won a league title with Scarlets but has been sidelined for almost a year
by a back injury.
"Not playing has been challenging but the time is right to follow medical advice
and hang up my boots," he said.
Owens, who made his Wales debut at the 2011 World Cup, made the decision
"reluctantly", having been beset by injuries over recent years.
He battled back from serious neck and back issues to realise his dream of
captaining Wales in the 2023 Six Nations - at the age of 36.
But the last game of that season in April, for Scarlets in the European Challenge
Cup semi-final loss to Glasgow, has proved to be his final match due to a long-
standing back problem that ruled him out of the 2023 World Cup.
"It might not be the dream ending but my career has been more than I could have
dreamt of," said Owens.
"Had I written the script there would have been one more game for Wales, for the
Scarlets and ultimately Carmarthen Athletic. A chance to sign off and thank
everyone involved. It was not to be.
"Whilst part of me wishes I could have done more, I am well aware that if you had
told me as a kid I would be fortunate enough to experience what I have, I wouldn't
have believed you."
Owens twice reached a World Cup semi-final with Wales and won Grand Slams in 2012
and 2019, as well as Six Nations titles in 2013 and 2021.
He was selected on successive Lions tours, playing two Tests against New Zealand in
2017 and starting all three against South Africa four years later, scoring a try in
the final game.
Owens' final international was as captain against France in Paris in March 2023.
"To have played 91 times for Wales is an honour I can never fully describe," said
Owens.
Owens has developed into a senior figure off the field, serving as chair of the
Welsh Rugby Players Association.
He captained the club for seven years and won the Pro12 league title in 2017.
"My only professional club, the Scarlets, believed in me and I hope my loyalty over
19 years has repaid the faith you showed," said Owens.
Ken Owens and British Lions players appeal to referee Romain Poite
Ken Owens feared his late penalty could have cost the British and Irish Lions the
series against New Zealand in 2017
Tributes for 'brilliant ambassador for Wales'
Wales head coach Warren Gatland: "Ken has had an incredible rugby career and been a
brilliant ambassador for the game in Wales.
"Ken is an incredibly passionate Welshman. I know it meant a lot to him to play for
Wales and you could see that every single time he wore the red jersey.
"He has been a dedicated professional and a great leader, always helping drive
standards but also popular with his teammates. It was an easy decision to name him
as captain."
Scarlets head coach Dwayne Peel: "Ken is undoubtedly one of the greatest players to
have worn the Scarlets jersey.
"I can't speak highly enough of him as a player and a person. He is someone who
wears his heart on his sleeve, has been a warrior on the field and has always led
by example.
"He epitomises all the core values of our great club, a proud west Walian, a family
man with his heart firmly in his community.
"If ever the young players at the club wanted a role model for their professional
career, they should look to Ken Owens."
line
Analysis, Gareth Griffiths BBC Sport Wales rugby writer
Known affectionately as the "Sheriff of Carmarthen", Owens became a cult hero for
Scarlets and Wales fans.
Owens proudly belting out the Welsh national anthem alongside Alun Wyn Jones was a
defining and inspirational image of the successful first Warren Gatland era.
Initially an impact player off the bench, he finished as a candidate for being
Wales' greatest hooker. Certainly the most enduring.
There are the medals and honours for Wales and the Lions that perhaps can only be
matched for a hooker by the 1970s legend Bobby Windsor. But there is more than
silverware to this modern day Welsh great.
He battled neck and back injuries to thrill Welsh fans with his "Cannonball" style
runs, squeezing out every inch of his talent and pushing his body to the limit.
He led both on and off the field. After achieving a lifelong dream by becoming
Wales captain in 2023, he was faced with the threat of a players' strike during
that year's Six Nations.
Few who witnessed it will forget Owens standing alongside WRU boss Nigel Walker in
the gloom warning Wales must not return to being a "laughing stock of world rugby".
A warrior on the field, a statesmen off it. There will only be one Ken Owens.
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