Some might say (if you also are ginger with a ginger beard) that this is the best looking new signing Cardiff have made as the 10/12 comes in from Newcastle.
After attending Bryanston School he came through at Bath before switching to London Scottish and Coventry in the Championship. A random move to Clermont followed during covid leading to two years at London Irish and then a season with the Falcons following the Exiles' demise.
Now examples of good play from anyone at Newcastle last season are quite tough to come by, and watching their games back for this was a slog, but Jennings has a sharp low chop tackle technique that will feed into the jackal threats at Cardiff well.
He's not a massive carrier by any means, but doesn't shirk trucking the ball up if needed, and despite the latches gets the ball presented cleanly and efficiently here.
Jennings' strength is in his link play, where his decision making and handling are at a good level.
Sharp hands here and a willingness to get back into the contact area to secure quick ball.
Newcastle used him well, bringing him on the loop here and finishing with a smart miss-pass rather than picking the marked short runner on his shoulder.
And he's got the vision and passing range to get the ball out the flanks when it's on, feeding a certain Iwan Stephens on a few occasions last season.
Jennings also brings the footballing ability to that channel, identifying some bigger men on the outside and goes to the boot to take advantage of the space.
That footballing extends to goal kicking, with the 28-year-old a handy back up option to have off the tee.
Not a headline grabbing signing, but with plenty of experience of different environments at the top level, a versatility positionally and attributes that match the way Matt Sherratt wants to get Cardiff playing, a handy pick up to provide depth and leadership.
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The Samoan centre was at his very best for Cardiff away at Perpignan on Saturday. At 38 he's still one of our most important players and there's no sign of that changing.
Defensively his spot blitzing is second-to-none. Incredible reading of the game and athleticism to back that up.
THREAD | Tom Bowen makes his debut at 18 years old tonight.
The UK #1 when he was born was Crazy by Gnarls Barkley.
Two days earlier Cardiff had lost 26-17 at Ulster with a Jamie Robinson try and Nick MacLeod's boot getting our points, and Gethin Jenkins at tighthead!
So what are we expecting from Bowen?
Well, underpinning everything is that he is an out-and-out speedster.
He offers plenty more than that though.
Having also played full-back through his development he's more than comfortable stepping into midfield and distributing.
Rounding off the threads with a look at the fastest new signing as another former Newcastle man wings into the Arms Park.
The 22-year-old started out in rugby league as part of the Leeds Rhinos Academy, raised in the north of England after Dad Colin finished his playing career up there. He switched to union with Newcastle and graduated the Academy there to play 25 times and win England U20 honours.
So what are we getting at Cardiff? Well, for starters, pace. And a lot of it.
Stephens is rapid, and has that standout ability to change direction at pace.
A new boy, but also an old boy, as Cardiff lad Callum Sheedy returns to the club after a long stint away to finally pull on the Blue & Black jersey at the Arms Park.
Now 28, fly-half Sheedy was involved with the U16s way back in 2011/12, before switching across to Millfield School and eventually joining Bristol where he played over 160 times in the intervening decade, as well as winning 16 Cymru caps so far.
Of course, the focus will be on his attacking qualities, but I wanted to nod to his defensive work first, happy to step in at guard here and chop down Alex Dombrandt one-on-one.
Up and running again with a look at the South African scrum-half. Probably the least well-known of Cardiff's summer recruits, but could he be one of the most exciting?
Mulder attended Affies School, with Pierre Spies and RG Snyman as other alumni, before joining the Bulls Academy. From there he established himself as first choice scrum-half at Griquas and spent a short-term spell with Lions last season before joining the Blue & Blacks.
The first thing to say is that he has a great passing range, and a high pass consistency.
Seems able to generate a huge amount of torque on the ball even when off-platform.