The Weekend Post

Patten farewells her FNQ netball ‘family’

- ROWAN SPARKES rowan.sparkes@news.com.au

CAIRNS Netball Associatio­n competitio­ns manager and passionate umpire Darrien Patten has blown the whistle on an eight-year stint with one of the region’s leading sports organisati­ons.

The 25-year-old former Leprechaun­s player finished up in her role with CNA this week and will relocate to Geraldton, Western Australia, next month with husband Corey and one-year-old daughter Aubrey.

Patten (nee Kumar) started working at CNA as a teenager in 2012, under then-operations manager Kym McPhee-Smith.

Now, eight years later, Patten said she never could have dreamt of finding such a perfect place to work.

“I had just finished high school and walked in as a business admin trainee, and I’ve been here ever since,” she said.

“Before I started there wasn’t a specific role, but then it became this massive position more about events, planning and sponsorshi­p.

“It became something bigger than just netball and that’s probably the big thing that people don’t get to see.”

One of Patten’s proudest achievemen­ts during her time working with CNA was being involved in the expansion of the Martyn St facility.

“The company has always been great, but it wasn’t always so glamorous,” she said.

“In the beginning, we were in the old shed building and we used to have to open the roller door if it got too hot to let the breeze in.”

In 2016, CNA unveiled d the largest netball facility upgrade grade in FNQ, expanding its six hard courts to 16 and adding ng a large carpark and new w club house.

“Being involved in the e build and all the construcct­ion process, even the tenndering beforehand, was so exciting and I always said aid that having that under my belt would benefit me in n the long run, and I feel like it has,” she said.

Patten believes the sport has a bright future in the Far North and she wants to see it continue to grow.

“We were actually growing this year before COVID, then we dropped off again,” she said.

“I’d love to see more people playing, more kids coming through and being more competitiv­e at the grassroots level.

“That’s the one thing that other sports nip us at — they get those kids in earlier than what we do.

“I’m a passionate umpire too, so I’d love to see more umpires out there. I wish kids loved it more.”

“Netball isn’t just friendship­s, it’s family.

“T “The people you meet down here are family to you and I’m prob probably going to miss that the most.

“Even though it’s a job an and we work in an office, it it’s so much more than that to me.

“Each and every single pe person involved in my years her here has shaped me to be who I am.

“T “This place has given me the b best start to my whole work working career and I couldn’t be m more grateful. It’s an environmen­t that you couldn’t ever not be involved in.”

Patten said it was time for someone else to take on the role and add their own flair. “I’ve done it for eight years — I’ve done what I can and I think I’ve left it in a better position,” she said. “It’s my baby, but I’m handing it all over now.”

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 ??  ?? FAREWELL: Cairns Netball Associatio­n competitio­n manager Darrien Patten is moving to Western Australia, ending an eight-year stint with the associatio­n as a player, umpire and administra­tor. INSET: Patten is given flowers by former Cairns Netball Associatio­n operations manager and Leprechaun­s coach Kym McPhee-Smith. Picture: Brendan Radke
FAREWELL: Cairns Netball Associatio­n competitio­n manager Darrien Patten is moving to Western Australia, ending an eight-year stint with the associatio­n as a player, umpire and administra­tor. INSET: Patten is given flowers by former Cairns Netball Associatio­n operations manager and Leprechaun­s coach Kym McPhee-Smith. Picture: Brendan Radke

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