Background
Barry holds a special place among the long parade of All Blacks for when he was chosen as a 22-year-old for the tour of Scotland and England in 1993 he followed his father Kevin and his grandfather Ned in wearing the silver fern.
Barry holds a special place among the long parade of All Blacks for when he was chosen as a 22-year-old for the tour of Scotland and England in 1993 he followed his father Kevin and his grandfather Ned in wearing the silver fern.
He is the head coach of North Harbour"s provincial rugby union side in New Zealand. He has previously been the assistant coach of rugby union Super Rugby side, the Blues. He debuted for North Harbour in 1991 at the age of 20, and racked up 83 games over a decade-long provincial career.
He had two spells in Japan, playing for Nippon Electric Corporation from 1997 to 2001 and Kubota from 2002 to 2004.
That became the first instance of a family providing three generations of All Blacks. On his first tour with the All Blacks Liam Barry became the innocent participant in a major controversy.
Coach Laurie Mains brought Mike Brewer into his squad for the latter part of the tour although he had been originally unavailable for business reasons and was in Britain at the time for that purpose. When Brewer was brought in as a reserve for the international against England and especially when he took the field as a replacement against the Barbarians in the tour finale it caused a storm of protest, especially in New Zealand.
This was because he had been preferred to official selections in the team in Barry and also John Mitchell.
Mains, apparently, believed Barry in 1993 had shown a lack of readiness for top international rugby and while he went on the development tour of Argentina in 1994 he was overlooked for the All Blacks for the next two seasons. But at the end of the 1995 season he toured France and Italy and gained a test cap in the second international against France. That was the end of his All Black career, though.
He was affected by injury for much of the 1996 season and was ruled out of the tour of South Africa.
At the end of that year he took up a contract in Japan, returning to New Zealand for another Non-Player Character season with North Harbour in 2001. Barry had spent the six years with the Blues franchise, as s skills coach from 2006-2009 and assistant coach in 2009-2010.