Nick Bradley-Qalilawa

Nick Bradley-Qalilawa (born 28 March 1980) is a former Fiji international rugby league footballer who played in the 2000s.

Nick Bradley-Qalilawa
Personal information
Full nameNick Bradley-Qalilawa
Born (1980-03-28) 28 March 1980
Darlinghurst, New South Wales, Australia
Height185 cm (6 ft 1 in)
Weight94 kg (14 st 11 lb)
Playing information
PositionWing, Centre
Club
Years Team Pld T G FG P
2001–03 Wests Tigers 27 5 0 0 20
2004 Manly-Warringah 11 4 0 0 16
2005–06 Harlequins 58 28 0 0 112
2007–08 Manly-Warringah 4 5 0 0 20
Total 100 42 0 0 168
Representative
Years Team Pld T G FG P
2008 Fiji 4 0 0 0 0
As of 22 January 2019
Source: [1][2]

Background

Bradley-Qalilawa was born in Darlinghurst, New South Wales, Australia.

Career in Australia

Bradley-Qalilawa is a North Sydney Bears junior playing every grade in the district except first-grade and won a Jersey Flegg Grand final in 1998. He played at the Wests Tigers, making his first grade début in 2001, Manly and London Broncos/Harlequins RL. He primarily played on the wing.[3]

Career in the Super League

Bradley-Qalilawa joined the London Broncos in 2005 and played for the club under its new guise as Harlequins RL in 2006. He left the club at the conclusion of 2006's Super League XI, scoring 26 tries in 55 games.

Representative career

He was named in the Fiji squad for the 2008 Rugby League World Cup.[4]

gollark: They literally do nothing with this except use it to write simple integrals slightly differently.
gollark: I mean, *look* at this.
gollark: AQA ones might be different, but we do Edexcel and they're mostly fairly trivial.
gollark: The only "difficult but rewarding" stuff here is extension papers like STEP and they don't really have... teaching... for that.
gollark: Not only does it do horrible abuse of notation but it does a "left-handed Riemann sum" with fixed thing widths, and thus breaks on certain exotic functions.

References

  1. NRL Stats
  2. Rugby League Project
  3. "WESTS TIGERS FIRST GRADE PLAYERS". Wests Tigers.
  4. "Samoa, Tonga and Fiji name squads". BBC. 8 October 2008. Retrieved 9 October 2008.

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