Multiple Netball NZ board members step down from roles after ‘challenging’ year

Source: Radio New Zealand

The chairperson had served on the Netball NZ Board for more than eight years. File photo SANKA VIDANAGAMA

Multiple Netball NZ board members – including chairperson Matt Whineray – are stepping down from their roles.

In a statement released this evening, Netball NZ said Whineray and board members Pavan Vyas, Stephen Cottrell and Aliesha Staples are moving on after a “a challenging period for the sport and broader netball community”.

The statement said the board members recognised there was “a need for new leadership to enable renewed focus and momentum for Netball NZ”.

Last year the organisation struggled to secure a broadcast deal for the ANZ Premiership, the sport’s domestic showpiece

Then in September it announced that Silver Ferns coach Dame Noeline Taurua was being suspended due to concerns in the high performance environment, sparked by player complaints..

Dame Noeline was eventually reinstated, but calls for ‘heads to roll’ at Netball NZ came from many quarters of the netball community.

Jane Patterson was hired as interim chief executive last month, following Jennie Wyllie’s decision to step down as head in December 2025 after nine years in the job.

Whineray had served on the Netball NZ Board for more than eight years, and had been chair for the past two and a half years.

In today’s announcement, Whineray said netball had “long been a sport that is inclusive, accessible and deeply connected to people of all ages and backgrounds”.

“This job has been deeply fulfilling, and it has been an honour to serve New Zealand’s vibrant netball community over the past eight and a half years,” Whineray said.

“The board accepts that the last year has been a significantly challenging time for Netball NZ and the wider netball community and, as chair, I acknowledge there is a need for a change in leadership. To this end, I firmly believe now is the right time for me to step back from the board and allow Netball NZ to appoint a new chair to guide the organisation through an important year ahead.”

A recruitment process will begin in the next week to find replacements for the board chair and board members, who will remain in their roles until those replacements are appointed.

The incoming chair will take responsibility for managing the recruitment of Netball NZ’s new chief executive

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‘World Rugby needs to help more’ – Umaga on Moana resources

Source: Radio New Zealand

All Black legend and Moana Pasifika coach Tana Umaga is calling for more financial support from World Rugby. Photosport

The Pacific Islands have long been a breeding ground for some of the world’s greatest rugby players – in Aotearoa alone, 40 percent of the playing pool is Pasifika.

But while other nations are happy to pilfer the Pacific for players, the same level of interest is not always shown when it comes to growing the game in Fiji, Tonga and Samoa.

Moana Pasifika – a franchise born to provide more Pasifika players with another professional pathway – no longer receives any funding from World Rugby, a move which disillusions coach Tana Umaga.

“We just want to be on a level playing field around the funding that goes out to all the teams, you can just see what we bring to the competition, world rugby probably needs to help out a bit more, when you look around the world and how many Pacific island players are playing in all these different countries, you don’t want to lose sight of what we represent and what we can do for this game.”

Umaga pointed to the Pacific renaissance in rugby league as a prime example of how the islands can impact the sporting landscape.

“We saw it with Tonga and Samoa who got their best players playing, our Pacific people will get in behind it. We saw it with Moana Pasifika last year, everyone likes us when we come visit because they get good crowds, we are pulling people, we have pulling power and I think that needs to be supported.”

He said it was critical for Polynesian players to be visible.

“You can talk about it, you can’t watch it on TV but if you can see it, touch it feel it, people that look like me, its easier to believe it and achieve it. A lot of our guys come from the backgrounds these kids come from, they think ‘if he can do it why cant I?’ and there is no reason why they cant, its just about getting onto those pathways.”

The former All Black captain said purpose underpins everything the side stands for.

“I feel like our guys understand why we’re here for, we’re very strong around purpose, be that you know your personal purpose or our collective purpose and how that all aligns. They’re under no illusion about what we represent and who we represent. We talk a lot around Pacific excellence and what it takes. What are those sacrifices that we have to make and we’ve made a lot, and we don’t have to look too far from our parents and those around us who’ve sacrificed a lot to give us this opportunity.”

Moana Pasifika picked up a stunning upset win on Saturday, defeating the Fijian Drua at one of the toughest places in Super Rugby to win – Lautoka.

Their next assignment sees them head to the capital to face the Hurricanes who had the bye in week one.

Umaga and his men are weary of the last time they were in Wellington, where they were hammered 64-12.

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T20 World Cup Live: Black Caps v Canada

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the T20 cricket World Cup action as the New Zealand Black Caps take on Canada at MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai.

A win will secure the Black Caps a place in the Super 8s, where they will be divided into two groups of four each, and play each other in a round-robin format.

The top two teams from each Super 8s group will progress to the semi-finals.

First ball is at 6.30pm NZT

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Black Sox say Halberg recognition a boost for softball and next generation

Source: Radio New Zealand

The New Zealand Black Sox will fight for their eighth title at the WBSC Mens Softball World Cup. WBSC

For a sport that rarely commands the national spotlight, the New Zealand Black Sox say being recognised on one of the biggest sporting nights in Aotearoa is a huge moment, not just for the team, but for softball itself.

The New Zealand men’s side were finalists for ISPS Handa Team of the Year at the 63rd Halberg Awards in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland, following their silver-medal finish at last year’s WBSC Men’s Softball World Cup in Canada.

The Black Sox are the most decorated sporting team in New Zealand, winning seven world titles and totalling 14 medals. They won a medal in 13 of the first 15 World Cups, and appeared consecutively in the World Championship Final 10 times from 1984 to 2017.

The other finalists were Black Ferns Sevens (rugby sevens), Auckland FC (football), New Zealand Kiwis (rugby league), Men’s Team Pursuit: Nick Kergozou, Tom Sexton, Keegan Hornblow and Marshall Erwood (cycling – track), Ben Taylor and Oliver Welch (rowing).

The Black Ferns Sevens took out the award on the night following an impressive 2025 performance.

Infielder and Black Sox Slugger Jerome Raemaki (Cook Island) said the recognition shines a light on a sport that continues to grow from the grassroots up.

“For us it’s a positive light on softball in general in New Zealand and our programmes are still strong with the youth coming through as well,” he said.

“I think we’ve put our best foot forward.”

WBSC

New Zealand climbed back onto the world stage at the World Cup, finishing with silver in a campaign that signalled a resurgence for the Black Sox.

They were lead by a wealth of experience, with Hall of Famer and four-time World Champion Thomas Makea (Ngāti Kahungunu, Ngāti Porou, Ngāti Marama, Ngāti Makea Ki Rarotonga), taking the reins of Head Coach.

Pitcher Pita Rona (Te Ātiawa) said belief had been central to that success.

“We actually believed in ourselves a hell of a lot more as individuals and then also we believed in each other like a hell of a lot more,” he said.

“There was a lot of things that was installed in us right from the get-go, like three, four years ago, building up to when it really mattered.”

He said support from whānau and management had played a key role in building that foundation.

“There’s also a lot of things that have helped us get to where we are today.”

The Enoka brothers said being in the room alongside other elite athletes from across different codes was special. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

The campaign also marked personal milestones. Brothers Ben and Thomas Enoka (Ngāpuhi) both brought up 100 caps for the Black Sox during the campaign in Canada – a moment that reflected the longevity within the squad.

Ben Enoka said the Halberg nomination was recognition of the collective effort.

“Just excited, you know, to be nominated amongst some of the high-performance athletes in New Zealand. Just happy to be here representing the Black Sox.”

Thomas Enoka said the exposure mattered for those coming through the pathways.

“To be on a platform where they can strive to and something they can look up to, I’d hope,” he said.

“To put us back on the Halberg map… for the next generation.”

According to statistics from Softball New Zealand, Māori and Pasifika whānau make up nearly half of their membership. WBSC

Softball in Aotearoa has long had strong Māori and Pasifika representation, something reflected across the current squad. Several players spoke about the importance of whānau and whakapapa within the team environment.

Rona, the son of Black Sox Hall of Famer and four-time World Champion, Brad Rona, described the sport as grounded in family.

“Our sport is such a small community and family becomes a big part in our sport,” he said.

“You play for more than yourself. You play for your family. You play for the next generation. You play for the ones before us.”

Raemaki said that sense of whānau shaped the team culture during their World Cup run.

“We created a culture that was relaxing, where everyone felt comfortable. They had a voice,” he said.

“So we didn’t have to iron out any of that and we could just focus on the task at hand.”

WBSC

Thomas Enoka said representing their whānau on the world stage carried weight.

“Our whānau is pretty proud of us to be on a stage like this or even on a world stage just in our own sport,” he said.

“If you look at things like that, I think that’s something that brings a lot of mana to yourself.”

For 22-year-old Canterbury pitcher Liam Potts – who was named WBSC Men’s Softballer of the Year following the tournament – the moment was unexpected.

“I never think of my softball career I’d get to come to an event like this,” Potts said.

“To see so many faces that you think, wow, I’ve watched you on TV … and be like, holy, you’re actually a real person.”

Potts said his individual accolade came from focusing on doing his job for the team.

“I didn’t think much of what I could do. I was just kind of competing the best I could for my team,” he said.

“Getting named WBSC Player of the Year, it’s just unreal.”

After an impressive campaign, Black Sox Pitcher Liam Potts was named in the WBSC Mens Softball World Cup Finals 2025 All-World tournament team. WBSC

Potts is set to represent the fern on the World Stage in April, competing in the WBSC U-23 Men’s World Cup.

“You’ve just got to believe you can do it,” Potts said.

“It will never be a straight line up. You always have your ups and downs … you’ve got to enjoy the journey. And honestly, you do the work, it will pay off in the end.”

The Black Sox said whether they left with silverware or not, the recognition and accolades would offer a platform that could help inspire the next generation of softballers across Aotearoa.

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T20 cricket World Cup: Black Caps chasing place in Super Eight stage

Source: Radio New Zealand

Black Caps batter Glenn Phillips www.photosport.nz

The Black Caps can secure their place in the Super Eight stage of the T20 World Cup with victory over Canada tonight and shouldn’t have too many problems achieving it.

However, there remains some concern about how the New Zealand side will perform against the top teams later in the tournament.

New Zealand were beaten 4-1 by India in last month’s T20 series and while they opened the world cup with wins over Afghanistan and the UAE, they crashed back down to earth with a seven wicket loss to South Africa in their last game.

The Black Caps weren’t at their best batting against South Africa, particularly in the power play. They were four down by the seventh over, leaving plenty of work for the middle order to do. The bowlers also struggled to make inroads into the Proteas batting line-up.

All-rounder Glenn Phillips didn’t think the inconsistency they showed in the series against India and the loss to South Africa is a major issue.

“There’s not necessarily been a pattern per se,” Phillips said.

“If our top order’s gone down, then our middle order stepped up. And, sometimes it just happens to be the way that the top order gets off to a start and then the middle can’t go through. So that’s just the nature of T20 cricket when you’re trying to keep the momentum going the whole time.

“If you look at the options the boys took, they’re in really clear mindsets. Obviously, it just comes down to execution at the end of the day.

“And then with the ball as well, we’re just trying to make sure that we’re hitting our straps as much as possible. If we didn’t bowl as well as we have on previous days, then we look at that and we go, we can be better on the next day and that’s fine.”

If New Zealand bats first against Canada in Chennai they would like to get close to setting a target of 200. A score they haven’t managed to score yet in the tournament.

With victory expected in this game the selectors may consider rotating a few players, however they may also be keen to play some of their regulars back into form.

The two sides have met three times in ODI World Cup’s with New Zealand winning all three, but this is their first clash in T20I’s.

New Zealand will be without Lockie Ferguson for the match as he has returned home for the birth of his child. Kyle Jamieson could take his place in the side, while spinner Ish Sodhi is another option.

Meanwhile, tournament organisers have approved the inclusion of off-spinning all-rounder Cole McConchie into the Black Caps squad as a replacement for the injured Michael Bracewell.

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Supreme Halberg Award winner Hamish Kerr sets sights on world record

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand high jumper Hamish Kerr is the Supreme Winner at The 63rd Halberg Awards. 2026. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Supreme Halberg Award winner Hamish Kerr has set himself some lofty goals to achieve over the next few years and it includes a tilt at the world record.

Kerr won the New Zealand Sportsman of the Year Award and the Supreme Award for his feats in 2025 which included winning the World Championship title for the first time and claiming the Diamond League title.

“To be honoured for those achievements (at the Halberg Awards) was very special,” Kerr told RNZ.

However, what the Olympic champion has done in the last two years is spurring him on to higher things.

The 29-year-old Cantabrian has always been motivated by jumping higher and has said with that comes results.

“I came into this sport with just this desire to want to jump higher and that is the amazing thing about athletics it is so measurable.

“That goal to see where the limit is, with how high I can jump, has not been achieved yet.”

Kerr is in the middle of a heavy training block and will open his season at the National Championships in Auckland in early March.

He will defend his Diamond League title and Commonwealth Games titles this year and improving his personal best from 2:36m to 2:40m is the aim for 2026.

Hamish Kerr during the International Athletics Meet in Christchurch, 2025. © Photosport Ltd 2025 www.photosport.nz

Only 16 men have jumped 2:40m or higher and the last person did it in 2014.

“It is definitely the target for this year and to achieve that would be an amazing honour, but we also know there is more in the tank.”

He is also inspired by the thought of challenging the world record of 2:45m set by Cuban Javier Sotomayor in 1993.

Kerr realises it would be quite an achievement, but it’s one he has put plenty of thought into.

“With my team we wrote down all the things we think we could optimise and it came out as quite a big list. So that is really gratifying to know that even after all these years there are still a lot of stones that we haven’t turned over yet.

“I think in the next few years if we can start flipping a few of those over there is a decent chance that we’ll be able to get a number of those centimetres.”

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Blues captain Dalton Papali’i to leave New Zealand rugby

Source: Radio New Zealand

Blues captain Dalton Papali’i. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Blues captain Dalton Papali’i will leave New Zealand rugby at the end of the Super Rugby season to play in France.

The Blues have confirmed the 28-year-old will take up an opportunity with French Top 14 team Castres Olympique.

Papali’i, who made his Blues debut in 2017, said the decision was extremely tough to make, but the timing felt right at this stage of his career.

“This club means everything to me. I grew up dreaming of wearing the Blues jersey and representing my country. I’ve been lucky enough to live that dream for a long time,” Papali’i said.

All Blacks loose forward Dalton Papali’i in action against France, 2025. Brett Phibbs / www.photosport.nz

“The Blues gave me my chance, backed me, and helped me become the player and person I am. This was a really hard decision, but the opportunity in France is something that works well for where I’m at in my career with my young family.

“I’m fully committed to finishing my time here the right way. I love this club, the people, and our supporters, and I’ll keep giving everything I’ve got into the season ahead.”

Papali’i played 37 tests for the All Blacks after debuting in 2019, but played just once for the national side in 2025.

Papali’i (98 games) is on track to become a Blues centurion during Round 3’s match against the Brumbies in Canberra.

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Global high jump star Hamish Kerr claims Supreme Halberg award

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hamish Kerr celebrates winning the Men’s High Jump final at the 2025 World Athletics Championships in Tokyo. www.photosport.nz

Hamish Kerr has claimed New Zealand’s highest sporting honour at the 63rd Halberg Awards in Auckland, after achieving heights in his career that no other Kiwi high jumper has reached.

Kerr has won the Supreme Halberg Award, capping off an extraordinary 2025 in which he dominated on the world stage.

Kerr – who also secured the Sportsman of the Year title earlier in the evening – won gold at the 2025 World Athletics Championships in Tokyo in September.

His maiden triumph in Tokyo completed the final piece of Kerr’s collection of global titles. He is now the reigning world champion, Olympic champion (Paris 2024), and Diamond League champion (2025) – an unprecedented achievement by a New Zealand high jumper.

Kerr, who also won last year’s Halberg Sportsman of the Year, took the title ahead of athletics team-mate Geordie Beamish; Freeski Big Air World Champion Luca Harrington; footballer Chris Wood and golfer Ryan Fox.

Kerr’s athletics coach James Sandilands, who guided the 29-year-old through one of the best seasons of his career, was named Coach of the Year – his first win in the category.

Snowboard star Zoi Sadowski-Synnott, who is currently competing at her third Winter Olympics, was named Sportswoman of the Year.

Sadowski-Synnott won a third snowboard slopestyle world title in 2025, and got the accolade ahead of a field including global champions across cycling – Sammie Maxwell and Niamh Fisher-Black; tennis – Erin Routliffe, and rugby – Jorja Miller.

New Zealand snowboarder Zoi Sadowski-Synnott. JAMIE SQUIRE / AFP

The Black Ferns Sevens were crowned the Team of the Year after another dominant 2024-25 HSBC SVNS World Series and the SVNS World Championship.

Their unmatched global success stood-out in an impressive line-up of team finalists including Auckland FC; world champion men’s rowing pair Ben Taylor and Oliver Welch; the men’s team pursuit track cycling squad; the New Zealand Kiwis and the New Zealand Black Sox.

Sam Ruthe unsurprisingly beat out the other finalists in the Emerging Talent category after making history in 2025 by becoming the youngest person ever to run a sub-four-minute mile.

Paralympic sprint star Danielle Aitchison was awarded the Para Athlete/Para Team of the Year Award, for her impressive results on the track at the 2025 World Para Athletics Championships. Other finalists included fellow Para athletics team mate Lisa Adams, Para track cyclists Nicole Murray and Devon Briggs and Para swimmer Cameron Leslie.

International sport administrator and leader Katie Sadleir received the Sport New Zealand Leadership Award, recognising her influential contributions to global sport and her long-standing dedication to athlete well-being and equity.

The Black Ferns Sevens continue to dominate. Jayne Russell / PHOTOSPORT

Kat Mueller was honoured with the Sir Murray Halberg Legacy Award, for her significant work championing inclusive sport and recreation opportunities for people with disabilities across Aotearoa.

Two new inductees to the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame were also celebrated. Dame Valerie Adams and Richie McCaw were formally welcomed into the prestigious group, recognising their contributions, achievements, and lasting impact on New Zealand sport.

Full List of Winners – 63rd Halberg Awards:

  • Supreme Halberg Award: Hamish Kerr (athletics – field)
  • Sportswoman of the Year: Zoi Sadowski-Synnott (snow sports – snowboarding)
  • Sportsman of the Year: Hamish Kerr (athletics – field)
  • Para Athlete of the Year: Danielle Aitchison (Para athletics – track)
  • Team of the Year: Black Ferns Sevens (rugby sevens)
  • Coach of the Year: James Sandilands (athletics -field)
  • Emerging Talent: Sam Ruthe (athletics – track)
  • Sport New Zealand Leadership Award: Katie Sadlier
  • Sir Murray Halberg Legacy Award: Kat Mueller

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Rugby league: Door open for Kiwis to play State of Origin

Source: Radio New Zealand

Born in Sydney, Kiwis player Casey McLean would be eligible for State of Origin. Photosport / David Neilson

With State of Origin set to debut in Auckland in 2027, Kiwis can now also feature in the iconic series after changes to the eligibility criteria.

The Australian Rugby League Commission (ARLC) today announced it was amending the Origin selection rules, which paves the way for Australian-born Kiwis to play in the series.

Players were previously required to be eligible to represent Australia or a tier two nation as defined by International Rugby League.

The updated rules remove this restriction, allowing players who who meet the traditional State of Origin criteria and represent tier one nations to be eligible.

The criteria is a player must have been born in New South Wales or Queensland, resided in New South Wales or Queensland prior to their 13th birthday, or their father played State of Origin.

ARLC chairman Peter V’landys AM said the changes were a necessary and logical evolution for the game in 2026.

“Rugby league has changed, the international game has grown, and our rules need to reflect that. If a player is eligible to play State of Origin, it makes no sense to exclude them simply because they’ve represented New Zealand or England at test level.”

He said State of Origin is about where you were from and what state you were eligible for – not which country you represent internationally.

“If you’re eligible, you should be able to play for your state. Over 45 years, State of Origin has developed into something special, and we want the best players playing if they’re eligible. The commission has a responsibility to grow both the international game and State of Origin, and this change strengthens both.”

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‘Culture is the winner’: All Stars clash proves it’s more than just a game

Source: Radio New Zealand

Adam Pompey leads a Māori cultural performance in the build-up to the Māori v Indigenous All Stars Rugby League match at FMG Stadium, Hamilton. DJ Mills

“Culture is the winner at the end of the day.”

That’s how Indigenous Men’s captain Nicho Hynes summed up this year’s NRL All Stars clash – a draw on the scoreboard, but something far bigger off it.

“We all want to win,” he said.

“But when you look back on it, two proud cultures are walking away winners. Culture is the winner at the end of the day. That’s way more important than the end result for me.”

The annual fixture between the Indigenous All Stars and the New Zealand Māori side began in 2010 as a deliberate platform to showcase Indigenous excellence and leadership in rugby league.

More than 15 years on, players say the kaupapa remains important, not just as a game, but as a space to stand in their culture, reconnect with who they are, and inspire the next generation watching on.

Tthe Māori v Indigenous, Women’s All Stars Rugby League match at FMG Stadium, Hamilton. DJ Mills / Photosport

Māori Wāhine Toa All Star captain Kennedy Cherrington said the jersey sits above Origins and World Cups.

“I’ve been honoured to play in Origins, World Cups and Grand Finals,” she told RNZ.

“But we’re Māori first. Culture is the number one.”

Cherrington said the message she wanted rangatahi to take away from kaupapa like this is to stand tall in their identity.

“The conversation I really want to get through to our young rangatahi coming through is to be proud to be Māori. No whakamā around being Māori.

“I want people to have that mana and strength in saying, ‘I’m Māori,’ not that whakamā and going, ‘Oh, I don’t really want to tell anyone.'”

Her own haerenga of reconnection has been closely tied to the All Stars environment, she said.

“The message I want to get across to our Māori living overseas, or that may be born somewhere else, is to come home, visit home more often and reclaim our language and our culture because home is calling you, our tūpuna are calling you.”

Asked who she was playing for, Cherrington said it went beyond the name on her jersey.

“There’s a lot more than just the last name,” she said.

“It’s the thousands of generations that have come before.”

Kennedy Cherrington says the Maori jersey stands above them all. Instagram

That same sense of whakapapa and responsibility was reiterated across the Māori camp.

Zahara Temara said players were left feeling inspired during the week, after hearing from Te Pāti Māori MP for Hauraki Waikato Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke.

“She said ‘everyone watches sport, you know, not everyone watches politics and your voice does have weight’.

“We do have a platform and we should use it.”

That kōrero resonated across the packed out room, she said.

“We were all inspired by it… we’re inspired to help our indigenous brothers and sisters over across the ditch and, of course, ours back home.”

That cultural pride, Temara said, cannot be confined to a single fixture.

“It needs to be 365 days of the year,”

“We’re Māori first and we’ve got to represent that.”

Shanice Parker says becoming a mum has strengthened her passion to learn more about her Māori whakapapa and her son’s First Nations heritage. Instagram / Shanice Parker

Teammate Shanice Parker described the match as part of her own journey home.

She told RNZ she did not connect with her biological father’s whānau until her mid-teens.

“I felt like there was a missing piece of me,” she said.

“And then once I found that, so much made sense.”

Parker said the match offers more than visibility, and was in fact “more than just a game”.

“The social impact initially for both of our people, they are at a social disadvantage in both of our countries,” she said.

“But this showcases that we can be the pinnacle of whatever we want to do. Sport is just the vehicle. Culture underpinning this week feeds our wairua and who we are.”

The indigenous team deliver a cultural performance before the Māori v Indigenous Women’s All Stars League match at FMG Stadium, Hamilton. DJ Mills

Across the Tasman, Indigenous co-captain Quincy Dodd said the game itself was only “the little sprinkle on the top”.

“The whole week is what makes it,” she said.

“We create our own little story this week. Everyone starts their own little journeys, but we just keep building each and every year.”

Indigenous coach Jedd Skinner said the visibility of Māori, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in elite spaces was crucial.

“They see it. They can do it,” she said.

“And at the end of the day, if we keep inspiring Māori boys and girls and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander boys and girls at home to play this great game, then we’ve done our job regardless of the score.”

She said the match carries a broader purpose.

“It’s about reconciliation, right? We’re trying to educate the wider society of two strong First Nations cultures. And I think, that is success as well.”

“We hold each other, we walk with each other and we go on this journey and celebrate each other…This week helps us do that.”

Skinner described the relationship between the two cultures as close and familiar.

“Sport and politics, they don’t usually mould well together, but sport does show what we can do and it does show how strong we are. And I think that when we get it right on and off the field, we only elevate each other.

“Younger sister, older sister, we fight in the same fights,” she said.

Indigenous’ Nicholas Hynes (L) & Māori’s James Fisher-Harris (R) during the Maori v Indigenous, All Stars Rugby League match, Hamilton. DJ Mills / Photosport

Speaking to media post-match Hynes said criticism that the fixture has “run its time” missed the point.

“If you’re going to talk about this in a negative light, come spend a week in camp,” he said.

“Come to the marae, come to the cultural dinner, come and sit in a session when we talk in a circle about what it means to us.”

He pointed to the packed jersey presentation as evidence of its significance for players and wider whānau.

“That’s because their parents and family come over for this game because that’s how much it means to them,” he said.

Coach Ron Griffiths said the impact stretches beyond the field.

“At this point in time, 44 percent of out-of-home care children in Australia are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander,” he said.

“For us, it’s about creating generational change by inspiring people or understanding that at that moment in time, whether it’s Nan or Pop or Mum or Grandad who have spent their hard-earned money to come here or pay for Sky TV or whatever that is, for that moment in time, they get to forget about their problems and just watch their stars and get lost in that.

“For 80 minutes, whatever’s going on in their life, they can just shelve that and watch their heroes.”

James Fisher-Harris in action for the NZ Māori against the Australian Indigenous men at FMG Stadium. PhotoSport / DJ Mills

Hynes agreed and said there would be tamariki in the stands, or watching at home, imagining themselves in the jersey.

“Our young Indigenous kids out in rural areas don’t get much. What they do have is dreams.”

“And dreams can turn into reality by seeing these events,” he said.

“There’s probably some Māori kids out there going through some tough times, but they probably rocked up here today seeing their idols do the haka, everyone’s singing and dancing in the grandstands and they want to be a young James Fisher-Harris or a Keanu Kini or Briton Nikora. That’s their hopes and dreams.

“And some people don’t get hopes and dreams and we’re able to provide that.”

He reflected on his own journey, and said while it was a tough road to get where he was today, “it’s so worth it”.

“For people like me, I didn’t grow up in my culture and I’ve always been loud and proud ever since coming into these camps,” he said.

“No one can ever take that away from me and no one can take that away from our people.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand