Semi Radradra

A Fiji attacking identity profile for tracking cross-code background, midfield power, offload threat and the way elite Fijian backs shape club and international rugby conversations.

Tracking snapshot

Season snapshot

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Career Rows

By season and team

SeasonTeamCompetitionMatchesStartsTriesPointsMin
Current Fiji / club to be confirmed International rugby, club rugby TBC TBC TBC TBC TBC

Related News

Country and club context

Premiership top-four race tightens before a heavy weekend

Gallagher Premiership

The Gallagher Premiership run-in is entering a decisive phase, with the top-four chase giving several fixtures playoff weight. Northampton and Leicester sit at the centre of the weekend narrative, while Bristol against Saracens has the feel of a knockout-style contest for two sides that cannot afford to drift. Sale's trip to Gloucester also matters for European and table positioning, especially with Sale trying to manage injuries and maintain enough forward platform away from home. Bath and Exeter add another layer near the top end of the standings. The key question is which clubs can turn late-season pressure into clean set-piece, discipline and bonus-point efficiency.

Pacific rugby faces fresh pressure after Moana Pasifika collapse talk

International Rugby

Pacific rugby's strategic future is under sharper scrutiny after reports around Moana Pasifika's collapse and the NRL's aggressive investment push into the region. The concern is bigger than one club: Samoa, Tonga, Fiji and the wider Pacific remain vital rugby union heartlands, but rival-code money, development pathways and government-backed expansion could pull athletes away earlier. The contrast with the Fijian Drua model is important because it shows that a Pacific project can work when it has a clear home base, strong local support and sustainable identity. The question now is how rugby union protects player pathways without relying on sentiment alone.

Henshaw recovery gives Leinster a timely lift

European Cups

Robbie Henshaw's recovery from a frightening head injury has become an important piece of Leinster's build-up to the European final against Bordeaux. The Ireland centre was stretchered off in the semi-final win over Toulon, but has since reassured supporters that he was briefly knocked out and is now moving through the return-to-play picture positively. For Leinster, the timing matters. Their latest Champions Cup final carries familiar emotional weight after repeated near misses, and Henshaw's defensive organisation, carrying, and big-match composure are the kind of details that can tilt a final. Bordeaux will bring power, pace, and confidence as defending champions, so Leinster need every senior voice available. Henshaw's situation also underlines the brutal edge of knockout rugby: the same player can be central to a final plan while still reminding everyone how quickly the sport's physical risk becomes real.

Pacific rugby faces a sharper fight for talent

Super Rugby Pacific

The future of Pacific rugby development is under sharper scrutiny after fresh concern around Moana Pasifika and the growing pull of rugby league investment in the region. The worry is not just about one Super Rugby team; it is about pathways, identity, money, and whether union can keep offering elite opportunities to players from Samoa, Tonga, Fiji, and neighbouring communities. Rugby league's expansion plans, backed by serious public and commercial funding, threaten to compete directly for athletes, attention, and development infrastructure. Fiji's Drua model shows that a Pacific-rooted professional project can work when it has a strong home base and clear community connection, but Moana's challenges expose how difficult the model becomes without financial stability and a settled identity. For union, the next phase needs more than sentiment. It needs durable structures that make staying in the game feel viable.