JP / Julie Patterson
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Jenny & Ruzz Barr
No. 71 June 2014 From the EDITOR-Stand In(s) – Jenny & Ruzz Barr Old Maroons President Our President, Greg Bryce, has decided to step. The Committee has agreed to Ruzz Barr being the Acting President through to the AGM AGM 2014 Notice Friday 11th July 2014, 5.30 for 6pm at the CLUBHOUSE, Ilam (The day before the Crusaders play the Highlanders) The usual high class fish & chip dinner plus wine will be served at the conclusion of the meeting (cost $20 per person – pay on the night). Brian (Chub) Hays, our newest Life Member, will be speaking, after the Dinner, on the topic ‘Ramblings from 1971 to today!’ This certainly promises to be an entertaining evening 300 Club We now have 27 members of the 300 Club for 2014. If you would like to support the Rugby Club through this initiative please refer to the attachment to this Newsletter or contact Ruzz Barr Varsities Day – 17th May The annual inter-Universities rugby clash occurred on Saturday 17th May and we were hosted out at Lincoln University. The photo shows Don Davison, Steve Comer, Chub Hays and Steve Surridge partaking of the lunch generously supplied by Lincoln. In the background, between Don and Steve, we have Murray Dickson who is currently having bets on both sides - having played for Varsity and currently having a management role at Lincoln. For the record we lost the Hart- O’Reilly Trophy 13-19. Bugger Black Ferns 2014 We have two in the 2014 Black Ferns; Kendra Cocksedge is a current player and Amiria Marsh (nee Rule) is a past player now at Sydenham Page 1 of 6 Old Maroons Newsletter -
Man Loose Forwards
ROD McKENZIE JACK FINLAY BRIAN FINLAY KEVIN EVELEIGH MANAWATU: MANAWATU: MANAWATU: MANAWATU: 1933-1939 (41 games) 1934-1946 (61 games) 1950-1960 (92 games) 1969-1978 Regarded as Finlay played for Finlay went from being (107 games) Manawatu’s finest Manawatu in positions the hunted to the hunter. Few players in New player pre-World War II. Capable of as diverse as prop and first After nearly nine seasons as a midfield Zealand rugby could match playing lock or loose forward, five-eighth. He makes the cut in this back, he was transformed into a flanker Eveleigh’s wholehearted approach. McKenzie got the full respect of selection at No 8, the position that for a Ranfurly Shield challenge against He was the scourge of opposition his team-mates with his took him into the All Black in 1946. Taranaki in New Plymouth in 1958. He backs as he launched himself off the commitment on the field. Finlay was great at keeping made life miserable for the Taranaki side of scrums and mercilessly McKenzie became an All Black passing movements going, and inside backs with his speed and chased them down. Hayburner’s in 1934, going on to play 34 was vice-captain of the “Kiwis” anticipation. His form on the flank for fitness regimen was legendary. He times. In 1938 he became Army team. When returning from Manawatu led to selection for the first was an All Black between 1974 and the only Manawatu player military service to play for 1959 test against the British Lions. 1977 and captained Manawatu to a to captain the All Blacks Manawatu in 1946,Finlay’s Injury curtailed his involvement in the 20-10 win over Australia in 1978. -
Saturday, February 8, 2020
TE NUPEPA O TE TAIRAWHITI SATURDAY-SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 8-9, 2020 HOME-DELIVERED $1.70, RETAIL $2.50 SEABIN MISSION PRAISE AND ACCOMPLISHED FURY AFTER DOCTOR DIES INSIDE TODAY PAGE 3 PAGE 14 SPECIAL Help to WORKSHOP: Dorothy Taare- Smith (back centre) yesterday guided deal with members of the Tairawhiti police Youth Services Team through a ‘tricky’ workshop to help them engage with and support young people who have disorder Autism Spectrum Disorder. Those by Murray Robertson taking part included (front left, Carolyn THE Gisborne police Youth Services Hodgkinson, Team learned more about Autism Spectrum (Schools Disorder in a workshop yesterday designed to Community Officer, help them better deal with young people with and Sergeant ASD, described as “tricky” to manage. Cath Jones Seven team members attended the (Youth Services workshop, hosted by Takiwatanga Taonga Coordinator) and (ASD) facilitator Dorothy Taare-Smith. (back left) Bruce “The workshop was about raising the level Amai (Youth of awareness of Autism Spectrum Disorder Services), and Lisa among the youth team members,” she said. Basford (Schools ASD is a serious developmental disorder Community Officer). that affects communication (verbal and nonverbal), social skills and behaviour, Picture by and children with it can have a range of Rebecca Grunwell challenges. The challenges can vary from avoiding eye contact when spoken to, difficulties communicating verbally, and displaying inappropriate or unusual behaviour. “Autism is an invisible disorder and difficult safety alert to let the public know the wearer some stage in the future.” being broadened out to include all front-line to identify at a first glance, especially for first has ASD. -
Legacy – the All Blacks
LEGACY WHAT THE ALL BLACKS CAN TEACH US ABOUT THE BUSINESS OF LIFE LEGACY 15 LESSONS IN LEADERSHIP JAMES KERR Constable • London Constable & Robinson Ltd 55-56 Russell Square London WC1B 4HP www.constablerobinson.com First published in the UK by Constable, an imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd., 2013 Copyright © James Kerr, 2013 Every effort has been made to obtain the necessary permissions with reference to copyright material, both illustrative and quoted. We apologise for any omissions in this respect and will be pleased to make the appropriate acknowledgements in any future edition. The right of James Kerr to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. A copy of the British Library Cataloguing in Publication data is available from the British Library ISBN 978-1-47210-353-6 (paperback) ISBN 978-1-47210-490-8 (ebook) Printed and bound in the UK 1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2 Cover design: www.aesopagency.com The Challenge When the opposition line up against the New Zealand national rugby team – the All Blacks – they face the haka, the highly ritualized challenge thrown down by one group of warriors to another. -
BAABAA NEWS the Newsletter of the Barbarian Rugby Football Club Inc
FEBRUARY 2014 BAABAA NEWS The newsletter of The Barbarian Rugby Football Club Inc. Level 6, ASB Stand, Eden Park, Auckland, New Zealand. www.barbarianrugby.co.nz continue to support middleweight rugby (U85kg). We still have the goal of obtaining bigger games and touring to other parts of the world. Access to players is a real challenge. We are liaising closely with the NZRU and the NZ Rugby Players’ Association in that regard. As you can see, we are supporting the game we love in a number of meaningful ways. But the other side of our club is the camaraderie and social side which we all enjoy. We have magnificent premises at Eden Park. I urge you to come and utilise them. We have club nights most Friday nights from 4.00pm. There are big Super Rugby games coming up. We also organise golf and bowls days and I urge you all to get involved and enjoy these fun events. Watch the newsletters and website for details. Who knows, we may even be on Facebook next! Till next time, cheers. Kind regards, Bryan Williams President Barbarians RFC Photo: Terry Horne Terry Photo: WHAT’S ON IN 2014 Dean Paddy receives the Albert Storey Memorial Trophy for all his tireless work running the clubhouse bar. Friday February 28 PRESIDENT’S TEAM TALK Blues v Crusaders, 7.35pm Saturday March 15 My wife Lesley and I attended the Halberg Awards on February 13 Warriors v Dragons, 5.00pm and what a wonderful night it was. King of the Middleweights tourney To be present in the same room as so many sporting champions, Northcote RFC, 12.00pm and 1.00pm both past and present, was inspirational. -
BAABAA NEWS the Newsletter of the Barbarian Rugby Football Club Inc
MAY 2019 BAABAA NEWS The newsletter of The Barbarian Rugby Football Club Inc. Level 6, ASB Stand, Eden Park, Auckland, New Zealand. www.barbarianrugby.co.nz Photo: Campbell Burnes Campbell Photo: President AJ Whetton with five of the new Barbarians. From left: Chris Jujnovich, Murray Wright, Rick Tagelagi, Andy Roberts and Brent Semmons. PRESIDENT’S TEAM TALK Thompson and Barfoot & Thompson. He is hugely influential in the Fun Day. Last week we enjoyed one of the highlights on the Barbarians calendar, All Barbarians are welcome, but we especially encourage those in the induction of new members. the greater Auckland area of North Harbour, Auckland and Counties Manukau to get along. We may not have seen some of you for a long It’s always quite emotional to see them on board. The years of hard time, but this is a prime opportunity to get together, talk about the work and service around rugby are rewarded and you could see it on the past, how good we were and how bad we look now, and mix with the faces of the six who attended on the night. I had a personal connection kids, hundreds of them, and their parents, doing fun rugby activities. with the likes of Rick Tagelagi and Murray Wright and others I have met We might have future All Blacks and Black Ferns among them. We get through the game. as much out of it as the kids. The Pat Walsh Memorial Bowls event was another good day out. Ron Williams and Craig Glendinning have driven the event from the Thanks to Peter Tubberty, Mark and Noeline Walsh for the organisation Barbarians side, and they have done sterling work in making this of this important and enjoyable day, raising money for Maori youth happen again. -
Jim Tucker, Puke Ariki
Mellow Yarrow he story behind the plight of Yarrow Stadium is full of “what-ifs” and “with-the-benefit-of-hindsights”. T What if they hadn’t built Taranaki’s premier rugby ground in a swampy valley? What if the NIMBY neighbours around Sanders Park in Westown had accepted the first plan to build Rugby Park there in 1927? With the benefit of hindsight, should the playing field have been laid west-to-east instead of north-south, so the grandstands weren’t built on fill? Now that both stands have been declared earthquake-prone, a lot more what-ifs loom over the investigation into what can be done with the stadium...including the big one – can it stay there? Although Yarrow Stadium may never again attract crowds as big those during last century's Ranfurly Shield eras and international games – nearly 40,000 - memories of extraordinary occasions linger within most Taranaki family histories. We’ve got too much in to abandon the place, and initial alarm has been displaced by determination to fix it. WORDS: Jim Tucker PHOTOS: Jim Tucker, Puke Ariki Mellow Yarrow, Live, August issue 2018 DRAFT 1 f he was still alive, there’d be nobody more shocked than James McLeod (above) at the news Yarrow Stadium’s stands have been declared an earthquake risk. He died in I 1944 after a distinguished career as a politician, chair of the Taranaki Rugby Football Union for more than 30 years, manager of the provincial team and at least one All Black touring team – and the man most responsible for building Rugby Park. -
Here We Come 14
“For anyone who is interested in looking beyond the names, the dates, the half-truths and the mythologies and entering the realm of rugby’s place in our history, this is a must read.” — Chris Laidlaw Rugby is New Zealand’s national sport. From the grand tour by the 1888 Natives to the upcoming 2015 World Cup, from games in the North African desert in World War II to matches behind barbed wire during the 1981 Springbok tour, from grassroots club rugby to heaving crowds outside Eden Park, Lancaster Park, Athletic Park or Carisbrook, New Zealanders have made rugby their game. In this book, historian and former journalist Ron Palenski tells the full story of rugby in New Zealand for the first time. It is a story of how the game travelled from England and settled in the colony, how Ma¯ori and later Pacific players made rugby their own, how battles over amateurism and apartheid threatened the sport, how national teams, provinces and local clubs shaped it. But above all it is a story of wing forwards and fullbacks, of Don Clarke and Jonah Lomu, of the Log of Wood and Charlie Saxton’s ABC, of supporters in the grandstand and crackling radios at 2 a.m. Ron Palenski is an author and historian and among the most recognised authorities on the history of sport, and especially rugby, in New Zealand. He has written numerous books, among them an academic study, The Making of New Zealanders, that placed rugby firmly as a marker in national identity. Contents Acknowledgements 9. -
From Chronology to Confessional: New Zealand Sporting Biographies in Transition
From Chronology to Confessional: New Zealand Sporting Biographies in Transition GEOFF WATSON Abstract Formerly rather uniform in pattern, sporting biographies have evolved significantly since the 1970s, becoming much more open in their criticism of teammates and administrators as well as being more revealing of their subject’s private lives. This article identifies three transitional phases in the genre; a chronological era, extending from the early twentieth century until the 1960s; an indirectly confessional phase between the 1970s and mid 1980s and an openly confessional phase from the mid-1980s. Despite these changes, sporting biographies continue to reinforce the dominant narratives around sport in New Zealand. New Zealand sporting biographies have a mixed reputation in literary and scholarly circles. Often denigrated for their allegedly formulaic style, they have also been criticised for their lack of insight into New Zealand society.1 Representative of this critique is Lloyd Jones, who wrote in 1999, “sport hardly earns a mention in our wider literature, and … the rest of society is rarely, if ever, admitted to our sports literature.”2 This article examines this perspective, arguing that sporting biographies afford a valuable insight into New Zealand’s changing self- image and values. Moreover, it will be argued that the nature of sporting biographies themselves has changed significantly since the 1980s and that they have become much more open in their discussion of teammates and the personal lives of their subjects. Whatever one’s perspective on the literary merits of sporting biographies, their popular appeal is undeniable. Whereas the print run of most scholarly texts in New Zealand is at best a few thousand, sporting biographies consistently sell in the tens of thousands. -
Officials Avoid Addressing Issue
B6 SPORT Friday, April 12, 2013 THE PRESS, Christchurch NETBALL RUGBY Carter, Officials avoid addressing issue Read still Hamish Bidwell WHAT NORMA SAID cases afterwards, then what credi- bility can their sport have? If only netball’s authorities were as Something is happening in this up front and forthright as Norma ■ On Irene van Dyk:‘‘I could league: ‘‘Let’s get serious, we the big girls and unfortunately this game. It has become increasingly in doubt Plummer. show you some unbelievable stuff could have a competition without is how it’s going to be’.’’ physical and the game’s laws, and Trans-Tasman Netball League on van Dyk and you’d be b***** you. So if they don’t want to play ■ On the Waikato- Bay of the on-court umpires that enforce Richard Knowler Limited had an issue to address shocked. I’ve still got it all here. We two games on each other, we’ll Plenty Magic: ‘‘It was actually a them, are no longer adequate. yesterday and couldn’t, wouldn’t, call her the Smiling Assassin and, happily go back to our old eight bit disappointing that Noeline Players are fed up and are taking Kieran Read and Dan Carter may take your pick. seriously, I just felt she was teams over here. [Magic coach Noeline Taurua] things into their own hands. not return to the Crusaders until Netball New Zealand chief [speaking as] a frustrated player ‘‘They need us more than we would not have had a bit more Pretending otherwise, as the the April 28 match against the executive Raelene Castle managed and I’m amazed at where this has need them.’’ respect for me being able to out- league is, or muzzling people who Melbourne Rebels in Christ- to do an interview or two, just not gone.’’ ■ On Kiwi defenders: ‘‘Katrina think her on a gameplan and break make legitimate criticisms won’t church. -
Perspective Video Workshop
Perspective Video Workshop Learning Intentions: Young people will watch and observe elite athletes share personal experiences in both a sporting and non- sporting context. The facilitator will seek to highlight discussion points for participants so that they can reflect and recognise how these principles are applicable in everyday life. The goal is for the participants to understand, reflect and implement the relevant behaviours from the discussion in their school, sports team, work and wider community. Video topic focus Perspective Video Facilitation Workshop Goals To understand and foster healthy discussions based on the video content. To encourage change if needed in the participants and provide strategies to do this. Format • Play video • Discussion • Key messages summary • Strategies • Action plan challenge • Closing quote Play video Play the entire Perspective video (3.26 mins duration) Jerome Kaino Optional: Replay the Jerome Kaino section of the video (00:11–00:40 mins) (00:11–00:40 mins) Point 1: I learned the hard way. Coming through the grades for me it was all about rugby. Nothing else mattered but as I went through the years I realised that it is really important to have interests outside of rugby and focus outside of the game. Point 1 discussion question: Why do you think the player realised, as he got older, that it was really important to have interests outside of rugby? Facilitator notes Point 1: Having other interests gives you balance, so if anything happens in your rugby, like a serious injury, you don’t lose your whole world as you have other things to concentrate on. -
Ruzz Barr and JP / Julie Patterson
No. 72 November 2014 From the EDITORS – Ruzz Barr and JP / Julie Patterson Suddenly the shops are brimming with Xmas decorations so it must also be time for the annual Old Maroons gathering in Christchurch – some of the old girls had a warm up last weekend to celebrate Nicky Inwood's wedding – some excellent stories were told which may have been embellished with time. Old Maroons Christmas Gathering Monday 1st December 2014 from 5.30pm The Brewers Arms in Merivale High Performance is alive and well at UCRFC with Canterbury ITM Cup squad members – 3 from Varsity - Patrick Osborne, Kieran Read and Luke Whitelock. Other NPC – 7 more from Varsity with Mitchell Graham (Prop) – Taranaki, Matt Moulds (Hooker) – Northland, James Lentjes (Open Side Flanker) – Otago, Brendon O’Connor (Open Side Flanker) – Hawkes Bay (Captain) AND Ranfurly Shield Winner (30th August vs. Counties 27-21), Michael Allardice (Lock) – Hawkes Bay, Jimmy Tupou (Lock) – Counties, Jamie Verran (Fullback, Wing) – Southland. The Varsity Women’s Team won the Club Final against HSOB 70-0. This is the first year that Mark Meates has coached the girls. The Meates whanau were very loud in their support - particularly when Harriet took to the pitch. Canterbury Women’s Team featured 11Varsity players including our Black Fern Kendra Cocksedge ( playing position: 9), Whitney Hansen (8), Jess Hansen (4)(daughters of All Blacks Coach, Steve Hansen), Keilamarita Pouri-Lane (11), Liz Pera (13, 14), Nicola Hoole (12), Claire Smith (9), Vicki Campbell (7), Letsa Matity (5), Kristina Illston (2) and Abbey Ley (1). _______________________________________________ Earlier in the year we were delighted to see Brian (Chub) Hays inducted as a Life Member Outstanding teacher, personality, and contributor to our club, Canterbury, Crusaders, NZ and Japanese rugby over many years.