In 1998 I was in the Black Ferns team that won the first Women's Rugby World Cup. I had an interesting history in rugby. I had played as a 5-year-old for my dad's old club but at the end of the season, when they realised I was a girl, I wasn't allowed to play anymore. I started playing again in 1995 and made the Black Ferns.
I'd come from playing netball for New Zealand. That was a huge privilege and I really enjoyed it. The big difference between rugby and netball for me was that netball was restrictive and prescriptive and rugby was free and you could express yourself outside the set pieces.
My whole passion for rugby came through my father. He was one of those men who got up in the middle of the night to watch a game if the All Blacks were playing. He would be just yelling at the television and completely obsessed.
I would stay up and watch with him and I would understand the players and the tactics. So for me rugby is very much linked with that relationship.
Once we were selected, we said: "What do we want to achieve?" And we all wanted to win the Rugby World Cup. "Okay, how will we do it?" We set our own team rules and they were about respecting one another. We created a framework that meant if we implemented all those things the outcome would take care of itself.