Great lock partnerships are built on trust and repetition. They steady teams when momentum shifts, manage the set piece and impose physical standards that others follow.

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Judging the greatest pairings in rugby history isn’t about reputation alone, but how two players functioned together over time. The partnerships ranked here shaped winning teams, influenced selection thinking and showed how the second row can control matches.

10 Alun Wyn Jones and Paul O’Connell

Their partnership was brief but memorable on the 2009 and 2013 British & Irish Lions tours. Jones, emerging as a leader, and O’Connell, already an established authority, set the tone in Tests and midweek matches.

O’Connell captained the Lions in 2009, while Jones featured prominently in both series. Key moments came in brutally intense training weeks and forward battles that shaped Lions culture more than highlight reels.

9 Eben Etzebeth and RG Snyman

This pairing surfaced for South Africa between 2018 and 2023, most notably during the 2019 World Cup cycle. Etzebeth was ever-present, while injuries limited Snyman’s availability. When fit together, such as in Rugby Championship matches, their impact was obvious.

Snyman’s performances off the bench in Japan hinted at what the partnership could become. Their shared minutes were few, but they shifted how teams prepared for Springbok power.

8 Ian Jones and Robin Brooke

Playing together regularly from 1994 to 1998, Jones and Brooke were central to New Zealand’s rebuild after the amateur era ended. They featured in the 1995 World Cup and the successful 1996 series win in South Africa. Brooke captained the side, while Jones anchored the engine room.

A key moment was the Eden Park dominance of the mid-90s, where their control helped reassert All Blacks authority.

7 Colin Meads and Sam Strachan

This pairing defined New Zealand’s second row in the early 1960s, particularly from 1961 to 1964. They toured South Africa in 1960 and Britain in 1963–64, with Meads becoming a towering figure.

Strachan’s quieter contribution allowed Meads to lead aggressively. Their key moments came in hard-fought Tests against the Springboks, where physical resilience mattered more than flair and reputations were forged permanently.

6 Paul O’Connell and Donncha O’Callaghan

Ireland relied on this partnership from 2003 to 2011, including a Grand Slam campaign in 2009. They played together at three World Cups and were central to Ireland’s improved consistency.

O’Connell captained the side, while O’Callaghan was ever-present in tight Tests. A defining moment came against Wales in 2009, when their lineout control steadied Ireland during a tense title run.

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