Fiji Sun

Playing for a visa: How budget deal kept Kamikamica in the country

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Tui Kamikamica will come off Craig Bellamy’s bench at some point against Penrith, trying to play Melbourne into yet another grand final.

Deservedly so after playing his way into the Storm set-up and out of being deported five years ago. Twice.

Kamikamica – the friendly Fijian seemingly chiselled from granite – is out the other side of an injuryplag­ued 2020 campaign that left him bed-bound for a fortnight, and eventually consigned to 18th man duties for last year’s decider.

His well-documented back surgery was a result of training too

hard and too much when the NRL was put on hold last March.

That same old habit kept Kamikamica’s NRL career alive before it had even started when his Australian visa depended on a Storm contract in 2016.

Melbourne recruitmen­t officer Paul Bunn had Kamikamica on his radar long before that, clocking him at a Fijian schoolboys carnival while meeting Suliasi Vunivalu’s parents almost a decade ago.

He hasn’t got a selfish bone in his body. Whatever he does is what’s best for the team.

Parramatta scouts were at the same carnival and ended up signing a teenaged Kamikamica, who would end up on the Sunshine Coast via a brief stint playing rugby union in Canberra.

That 2016 pre-season was Kamikamica’s last chance to earn an NRL contract as far as both he and the Department of Immigratio­n were concerned.

“My visa was due to expire in the second week of February that year,” he recalls.

“I could only be on a working visa to start with to stay in Australia, and when that was up it meant I needed a sports visa to stay.

“You only get that with an NRL contract. I was training hard with the Falcons and we had a trial game before the Storm played against the Warriors at Sunny Coast Stadium.

“I remember thinking ‘this is it, Bellamy’s coming to this one, this is my chance’.

“Bellsa gave me a rap after that game against Easts Tigers and told me to keep going, and I had about a week to go on my visa and one more game against Burleigh Bears.

“We played on a Saturday and my visa was expiring on Thursday of the following week.

Court Hearing

“I was sitting there thinking ‘far out I’ve only got four or five days here’.”

Bellamy liked what he saw after being told by Bunn to watch “the big bugger”.

“We were impressed straight away,” Bellamy told NRL.com.

“There were a few rough edges but we knew it wouldn’t take too much to fix them given his attitude and work ethic.”

A big man with a big engine was what Melbourne were after, but they wanted to see if Kamikamica would perform in competitio­n games as well.

So he went to the courthouse the next week and wrangled a final three months to stay in the country.

“But I remember that was it,” he laughs.

“They said ‘no more extensions. If it doesn’t happen you go home’.

“The first six rounds of the season I didn’t know what was going to happen.

Surprise

“I was picked to make my Fiji debut on the Saturday in May which was a really proud day.

“And then I got a call from my manager on the Wednesday night saying ‘congrats, you’re an NRL player. You can stay in the country’.” NRL.com

 ?? Photo: ?? Fijian born Melbourne Storm forward, Tui Kamikamica.
NRL
Photo: Fijian born Melbourne Storm forward, Tui Kamikamica. NRL

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