Va'aiga Tuigamala terrorised opponents while playing on the wing for Auckland and the All Blacks, and his son, Lika, is on track to do similar things in the ring as a boxer.
Lika, a 15-year-old who stands 1.9m and weighs about 117kg, is fighting on the undercard of Joseph Parker's heavyweight clash in Apia on Saturday night.
It will be his first fight and it will be against 28-year-old Seloti Fata, Samoa's national amateur heavyweight champion, who has had more than 50 bouts.
However, young Lika is confident of getting the right result .
"My preparation has been good," he said. "Also, in sparring last Saturday - and I know it's different to fighting - I stopped him in the first round. I think I cracked the cartilage in his nose.
"I finished him in the first round and I have finished the No2 in the first round.
"I'm not cocky, but I'm confident."
Asked about fighting older men, he said: "Because of my weight, I have to fight men. There aren't many 15-year-olds that are 117kg."
The finishing touches on his preparation were provided by Parker's trainer Kevin Barry at the open-sided gym constructed in an abandoned building by Lika's father, who became known as "Inga the Winger" during his rugby career, and his elder brother Bubba, who is also fighting at the nearby Faleata sports complex on Saturday.
Parker, who did a light session at the gym yesterday, features on a poster positioned between pictures of former Samoan heavyweights David Tua and Jimmy Peau.
Barry helped Lika with his footwork and jab, and afterwards said: "He's a very exciting young prospect. To have that size and that power at the age of 15 is quite unique. He obviously has very good pedigree and I saw huge potential in the short session that we did."
Lika's ultimate goal is to become a professional fighter, but first he has high hopes as an amateur.
"We have a five-year goal that my dad and I have set and the biggest goal is the last year, the 2020 Olympics, that's the aim," he said.
Tuigamala senior, a blockbusting runner who scored five tries in 19 tests for the All Blacks before playing 22 tests for Manu Samoa, said of his youngest son: "He's been training for three years with his older siblings so he's been dying for this opportunity and I said 'what better way than fighting on Joseph Parker's undercard'."
Tuigamala, based fulltime in Samoa after several failed business ventures in New Zealand, said boxing came naturally to all his four children.