Hawke's Bay Today

CPR on field saves player

Ex-AB star’s shock as teammates revive club veteran

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Aveteran Hawke’s Bay rugby player and former Magpies representa­tive was today reported to be well on the way to recovery after being revived by clubmates following a suspected heart attack during a Premier grade club match in Napier on Saturday.

Colin Mataira, 46, a stalwart of Hastings club Tamatea, lay motionless for at least 10 minutes on the field at Whitmore Park, Marewa, before being rushed by ambulance to Hawke’s Bay Fallen Soldiers Memorial Hospital in Hastings.

Hawke’s Bay Rugby Union commercial manager Dan Somerville said on Sunday morning Mataira had remained in hospital overnight and was able to talk with family before being taken to Wellington Hospital for further tests.

A Hawke’s Bay Magpies prop for a short time in 2003 and former Tamatea Premier captain, he had come on just before halftime as a substitute for Hastings club Tamatea in its match against Napier Technical.

Tamatea chairman Stewart Whyte said

Mataira had spent a few moments in the “blood bin” off the field after taking a knock to the head but returned to the field, with Tamatea having started a revival with a try.

Players were heading back to halfway for the restart when Mataira collapsed and the Maddison Trophy fourth-round match was

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called off with Tech leading 33-10 midway through the second half.

Whyte said club members and brothers Tane and Tama Cooper, a Hastings fireman, performed CPR to revive the player.

“It was pretty emotional, I understand he stopped breathing, and Tane and Tama worked on him, and a doctor tied up with Tech came in to help,” he said. “They were working on him right up to the time the ambulance arrived, it was touch-and- go, and it was a relief when the feedback from the ambulance officers was that he had been able to say his name when he was in the ambulance.”

Among those on the field was former All Black Zac Guildford — back with original club Tech and having played against Mataira several times over the years — who described it as “pretty sobering” to see “Big C” go down.

Players gathered around to help save their teammate, while the Cooper brothers worked on Mataira for at least 10 minutes before an ambulance arrived.

“They did a miraculous job to bring him around,” said Guildford, adding it brought back memories.

A teenaged Guilford was about to celebrate his New Zealand team’s win in the 2008 Junior Rugby World Cup in Japan when his father Rob, a Tech stalwart, died in the grandstand.

Dan Somerville was at the game and, while not close enough to see the response at close-quarters, said: “Teammates and medical staff did an amazing job to keep him alive, he was revived at the scene.”

Mataira has been regarded as a club stalwart, and, while continuing to play mainly in lower senior grades, also put his boots on to play — again as a substitute — when Tamatea, having finished at the bottom of the Premier competitio­n ladder in 2018, defended its status with a promotionr­elegation win over Otane.

 ?? Photo / Paul Taylor
Photo / File ?? Zac Guildford embraces a Tamatea player at the abandonmen­t of their match after the collapse of Tamatea veteran Colin Mataira.
Doug Laing
Colin Mataira playing for the Hawke’s Bay Magpies against King Country in 2003.
Photo / Paul Taylor Photo / File Zac Guildford embraces a Tamatea player at the abandonmen­t of their match after the collapse of Tamatea veteran Colin Mataira. Doug Laing Colin Mataira playing for the Hawke’s Bay Magpies against King Country in 2003.

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