Manawatu Standard

Milestone caps off stellar career Langman on brink of record appearance

- Brendon Egan brendon.egan@stuff.co.nz

Laura Langman is a chatterbox, just not about herself. The Silver Ferns captain is set to level retired shooting great Irene van Dyk’s record of most caps for the national side (145) in tomorrow’s Constellat­ion Cup opener against Australia in Brisbane. She is poised to overtake van Dyk in Wednesday’s second test in Townsville.

Langman is happy to speak about the Australian midcourt, how connection­s are coming together in the Ferns and where they need to improve, but won’t be discussing her looming milestone until it’s achieved.

Speak to those who know the centrewing defence best and that’s unsurprisi­ng. She doesn’t like a fuss being made about her .

‘‘That’s once again the type of person she is, humble and a good farm girl at heart,’’ Silver Ferns coach Noeline Taurua said.

Few people are better qualified to offer insight on Langman’s career than Taurua, her first elite coach with the Waikato-bay of Plenty Magic in 2003.

The duo have worked extensivel­y over the years and teamed up to capture the Australian Super Netball title last year with the Sunshine Coast Lightning.

Langman’s talent was evident from her early training sessions with the Magic as a seventh form student at Hamilton’s Hillcrest High. Despite her youth, Langman refused to take a backward step to her experience­d Magic teammates and didn’t care for reputation­s.

‘‘Because she was only 16 at that time, she didn’t give a beep at who she was playing,’’ Taurua recalled.

‘‘Usually when they’re young they get quite intimidate­d by a Silver Fern or somebody who’s been around like that. She was on a mission and she was out there to play ,and that stood out to me.’’

Langman and future Silver Ferns captain Casey Kopua (nee Williams) burst on the scene at the same time in the Waikato. Kopua (Matamata College) and Langman (Hillcrest) were secondary school rivals, their first encounter leaving a lasting impression on a 16-year-old Kopua.

‘‘I remember her being like an energiser bunny running back and forward everywhere. You always remember that blonde ponytail.

‘‘Right from then you knew she was going to be somebody that was going to be in netball for a long time.’’

Only seven Silver Ferns have reached the 100-game mark. To be on the cusp of overtaking van Dyk’s 145 matches spoke volumes about the durability of Langman, who debuted in 2005.

Langman would have snuck past van Dyk some time ago, had she not been barred from representi­ng New Zealand because she was extending herself in the Australian competitio­n. The 32-year-old didn’t wear the black dress for 695 days.

‘‘I’m really happy that she hasn’t been lost to our game because she’s got so much to offer,’’ Taurua said. ‘‘She’s just a phenomenal athlete and very profession­al both on and off the court.’’

Settling for just being good has never been Langman’s way. Her competitiv­e drive, supreme fitness levels, and work ethic have been hallmarks of her success.

She shows no signs of slowing down either, being named in Super Netball’s team of the year in 2017 with the Lightning, who’ll she’ll reunite with next year after a season off.

‘‘She’s sort of becoming like a fine wine,’’ Taurua said. ‘‘Every little improvemen­t she makes in her own small increments will make a big difference to her overall game.’’

Kopua, who is working her way back after a foot injury, said there was plenty she admired about Langman.

‘‘She’s somebody that has your back or you want to take to war, you’d take her,’’ Kopua said.

‘‘She just takes anybody or anything on, no matter what. So if you see her busting her gut and doing what she needs to do for the team, it’s just contagious to everybody else.’’

Christchur­ch-based lawyer Garth Gallaway has been Langman’s manager for 13 years since her Ferns debut in 2005.

Gallaway said she was a shining example not only to her Silver Fern team-mates, but young netballers.

‘‘She’s a player who does not come off looking for excuses when things go wrong and that’s always for me been her greatest value. She doesn’t criticise administra­tors, managers, and umpires. She looks within to see what she could have done differentl­y.’’

Langman played a staggering 141 tests in succession from 2005-16 before her near two-year exile from internatio­nal netball.

In the modern profession­al sports world where coaches rest and rotate players that is some achievemen­t – and one reason Gallaway believed Langman was the greatest Fern.

‘‘You can’t do that unless you’ve got great personal values and great commitment to New Zealand and she richly deserves the record.’’

Taurua agreed there was little doubt about Langman’s place in the pantheon of New Zealand’s finest netballers.

She was ecstatic Langman would eventually be able to finish her internatio­nal career on her terms.

‘‘I would like to believe she’ll go down as one of the greats of our sport and rightly so.

‘‘It’s around her longevity in the game and her contributi­on both on and off the court. Living to the standards and the standards that everyone would aspire to.’’

They’re standards that will be the benchmark for future Silver Ferns for decades to come.

Noeline Taurua on Laura Langman

Casey Kopua on Laura Langman

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Laura Langman is reluctant to talk about herself but plenty of other people are happy to extol her virtues of the Silver Ferns. Laura Langman, left, and Casey Kopua, pictured in 2005, have always had each other’s backs on court.
GETTY IMAGES Laura Langman is reluctant to talk about herself but plenty of other people are happy to extol her virtues of the Silver Ferns. Laura Langman, left, and Casey Kopua, pictured in 2005, have always had each other’s backs on court.
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