Otago Daily Times

From Canterbury to the Superbowl and missile defence

- GEORGE BLOCK george.block@odt.co.nz

A KIWI American football star turned missile defence advocate paid tribute to a rugby legend forebear in Dunedin this week.

Threetime Superbowl winner Riki Ellison, the first New Zealander to play in the National Football League (NFL), visited the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame in Dunedin on Monday.

He was joined by his secondcous­in, Otakou farmer and kaumatua Edward Ellison.

While there he viewed the display on his ancestor, Tom Ellison, the captain of New Zealand’s first official rugby team when it toured Australia in 1893, and donated a shirt from his playing days.

He also visited Tom Ellison’s grave at Otakou on the Otago Peninsula, and registered himself, his children and grandchild­ren at Otakou marae, including son Rhett who plays in the NFL as a tightend for the New York Giants.

Born in Christchur­ch, the Ngai Tahu football legend moved overseas with his family at a young age, and now lives in the US and speaks with an accent far closer to California than Canterbury.

But he maintains a soft spot for New Zealand.

‘‘I had a chance to drive that high road today [on the] Otago Peninsula and it was better than the Pacific Coast Highway between Los Angeles and San Francisco,’’ he reckoned.

He now lives in Alexandria, Virginia.

‘‘Across from the swamp in Washington DC,’’ in his words.

It is fair to say the 58yearold has had an unconventi­onal career since his playing days.

In 2002, he launched the Missile Defence Advocacy Alliance, a nonprofit organisati­on ‘‘with a singular purpose and mission to drive for the deployment, developmen­t and evolution of missile defence,’’ according to its website.

Missile defence systems track, intercept and destroy attacking missiles.

Mr Ellison speaks as enthusiast­ically about missile defence as he does about American football, citing the successful intercepti­on of thousands of rockets and artillery by the Israeli Iron Dome system, or the successful shootingdo­wn of missiles fired by the Houthi militia in Yemen at Saudi Arabia.

He acknowledg­es controvers­y can surround advocacy for missile defence systems, but says they act as a stabilisin­g force in trouble spots.

‘‘There’s a lot of controvers­y in it, but the basic concept is to stabilise the region that you put these systems in, to negate the type of of offensive capability that is killing people.

‘‘That capability today is . . . saving lives.’’

‘‘And most of all, it’s negating North Korea, and [has] given us an opportunit­y to have negotiatio­ns.’’

❛ And most of all, it’s negating North

Korea . . .

 ?? PHOTOS: PETER MCINTOSH & GETTY IMAGES ?? Sporting family . . . American football star Riki Ellison at the Sports Hall of Fame in Dunedin on Monday, beside a display on his rugby legend forebear Tom Ellison. Below: Ellison celebrates in 1990 when the Los Angeles Raiders beat the San Diego Chargers.
PHOTOS: PETER MCINTOSH & GETTY IMAGES Sporting family . . . American football star Riki Ellison at the Sports Hall of Fame in Dunedin on Monday, beside a display on his rugby legend forebear Tom Ellison. Below: Ellison celebrates in 1990 when the Los Angeles Raiders beat the San Diego Chargers.
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