Rotorua Daily Post

Tough road to Moana Pasifika

Journey takes in Auckland boarding school and seven years at the Warriors

- RUGBY Liam Napier

When I was growing up, we would find something to play rugby with — a flat

water bottle, jandals or climbing the coconut tree and throwing them down to catch it. They’re little things but they’re related to rugby.

Solomone Kata

The beauty of Moana Pasifika’s inaugural season is the unearthed stories of heritage and humble beginnings that would otherwise be lost in the sphere of another looming Super Rugby campaign.

Solomone Kata is a case in point. Most know Kata as the former Warriors centre who blazed a trail before switching to rugby union with the Brumbies two years ago. Few, however, appreciate the challenges he has overcome on his return to Mt Smart with Moana Pasifika.

Kata emerged from a household of nine brothers and three sisters in Tonga where life was simplistic and lean. Sporting equipment, opportunit­ies and food were scarce.

Yet the intangible dream of cracking the profession­al rugby ranks, of emulating childhood heroes such as Dan Carter, Ma’a Nonu and Luke Mcalister, burned within.

“As a young boy from Tonga with 12 siblings, we didn’t have any breakfast or lunch,” Kata tells the Herald on Sunday. “After school, we would come home and have taro. If you get tuna cans and mix it with the taro leaves, that would be a special treat on Sundays. During the week, we would go to school and hustle for something to eat.

“When I was growing up, we would find something to play rugby with — a flat water bottle, jandals or climbing the coconut tree and throwing them down to catch it. They’re little things but they’re related to rugby.

“I only went to school for rugby. That’s what drove me.”

On that front, Kata excelled. As a 16-year-old, he toured New Zealand with the Tongan under-18 side. After watching him score three tries from halfback in his first match, Auckland’s Sacred Heart College were quick to table a full scholarshi­p.

Moving to a foreign country without family to a boarding school is a daunting prospect for any teenager — much more so when you can’t immediatel­y converse.

“Sixteen years old as a fresh Island boy without any English at all, I wanted to find an opportunit­y to help my family and my future,” Kata says. “I was really grateful to be moving here.

“It was really hard without being able to speak any English. Training and profession­al rugby is easier than when I first got here with my communicat­ion with my schoolmate­s or coaches.

“Even when I started with the

Warriors, I still couldn’t communicat­e properly — only a couple of words. That didn’t stop me from what I wanted to achieve.

“Looking back at it now, I’m really proud that it didn’t pull me back, or I didn’t say ‘I can’t do it’. I was thinking of my parents the whole time. I kept reminding myself of them. I had courage to do my talking on the field.”

Kata played centre at Sacred Heart, only to make his first code switch after being scouted by the Warriors. They set him up with the Howick Hornets, and he signed with the Warriors under-20s in 2013 to earn his first pay cheque.

“When I first signed with the Warriors under-20s, I got some money to buy my parents our first car, a little ute, and I sent that back to Tonga, and then we built a house and I’m still helping them with the finances.” For the Warriors first-grade side, Kata played 93 games, scoring 46 tries. He also represente­d Tonga and the Kiwis, featuring in the 2016 Four Nations tournament.

Reflecting on his seven years in the NRL, he recalls former Warriors coaches Matt Elliott wanting him to play dummy half and Andrew Mcfadden giving him the chance to prove himself at centre.

Glancing around the Mt Smart gym that features his records, including the all-time best back bench press of 185kg, emblazoned on the walls evokes mixed memories.

“This place is where my profession­al career started. It’s good to be back. I enjoyed my time with the Warriors but it’s hard to feel comfortabl­e and learn when you keep changing coaches. We had to start again all the time.

“That made me lose interest in playing the game. I needed a new challenge to find the motivation, so that’s why I moved to the Brumbies.

“In the back of my mind, I always knew I was going to go back to rugby because that’s what I grew up playing.”

Kata savoured his two years at the Brumbies, where he largely featured on the wing, but with Covid affecting the ever-changing travel landscape and his first son due next month, he did not want to miss the birth, as he did with his 4-year-old daughter.

Returning to Auckland last year, Kata played two NPC games before Covid shut down their season. He is now embracing the chance to represent his Tongan heritage again, having debuted for the national rugby side — the ‘Ikale Tahi — against England at Twickenham in November.

“It’s very special to be part of the first Moana Pasifika team. The last week was really emotional. We focused on the connection­s and I got to know where the boys come from. They were sharing their experience­s, their family life. We are all Islanders; we know the humour of Islanders. Our connection off the field was really smooth because we understand each other.

“Looking back on my career and where I came from, for someone really fresh with no English, to achieve all those goals, it’s really special,” says the 27-year-old.

“I can tell my kids the story of where I came from. My main goal is to take them back to Tonga, so they appreciate what they have here. Now I’m living my dream.” — NZ Herald

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Helping his family was the main motivation for Solomone Kata’s move from Tonga to Auckland as a schoolboy.
Photo / Photosport Helping his family was the main motivation for Solomone Kata’s move from Tonga to Auckland as a schoolboy.

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