The New Zealand Herald

Red-hot Rooster Manu from heaven for rugby and ABs

NZ’s most influentia­l athlete and the massive challenge for Razor

- Trevor McKewen comment

During tumultuous times wracking the code, a gift from the heavens arrived at the doorstep of New Zealand Rugby this week. The footballin­g gods delivered 27-year-old Joseph Manu, an athlete nearing the peak of his remarkable powers, to rugby in the form of a multi-million dollar contract with Sir Steve Hansen’s Toyota Verblitz in Japan.

The All Blacks have been handed the best cross-code player since Sonny Bill Williams.

That’s if they don’t do a Roger Tuivasa-Sheck to him. Back to RTS and rugby’s mishandlin­g of another rare talent shortly . . .

A veteran dual-code observer who knows a lot more than me insisted that “Joey Manu is by a country mile” the best player in either game who calls New Zealand home.

That was four years ago. Manu was already coming off back-to-back NRL grand final triumphs with the Sydney Roosters in 2018 and 2019, after being lured across the Tasman as a raw teenage prospect from Tokoroa High School.

But it was before he became a force of nature for the Roosters, playing across every backline position bar halfback. And before his Golden Boot triumph in 2022 as the game’s best internatio­nal player.

Manu is arguably approachin­g his best football. He can do things few players in either rugby code can.

Even cold, hard statistics are capable of painting a vivid picture of his brilliance.

Last week, he ran for 370 metres with the ball in hand for the Roosters against the Newcastle Knights — an NRL record.

Think about that for a moment. That’s sprinting three lengths of a football field and then another threequart­ers on top of that. All with the ball in your hands, fending off and beating opponents. Most can only dream of achieving that milestone in a season. Manu does it in one game.

So Manu’s announceme­nt that the 2024 season would be his last in the NRL came as a massive blow to league — and a colossal opportunit­y for rugby, during a time when the game is finding it difficult to produce anything positive.

We should all be getting excited about the potential of Manu’s exquisite skills being added to an All Blacks outside backs mix already featuring the talents of Jordie Barrett and Will Jordan.

Come 2027 and a Rugby World Cup tournament played out on the hard and fast grounds of Australia, All Blacks coach Scott Robertson could have a backline to die for.

But here’s where it all gets a little murky — and where those who still shiver over how Tuivasa-Sheck’s time in rugby was squandered may have some justificat­ion for fear over the same thing happening to Manu.

Oh, the irony: Ian Foster set to be guiding influence in Manu’s transition to rugby

Manu is technicall­y available for the All Blacks (and also in rugby test terms the Cook Islands and the Wallabies*) in the sense he is a New Zealander and has said previously he would love to one day play for the All Blacks.

But his profession­al rugby contract is with a Japanese car manufactur­er and not New Zealand Rugby (NZR), as is required if you want to don a black jersey.

We all know Robertson would like NZR to relax those rules so he could select players such as Richie Mo’unga from the same Japan League One competitio­n that Manu will be rubbing shoulders with the top talent on show.

Razor now has a fresh incentive to keep pressuring NZR. In fact, Manu is arguably a stronger long-term World Cup prospect than Mo’unga and therefore more likely to become the first player to be selected as an All Black from overseas.

The challenge for the All Blacks coach is that he will have little to no control or influence over Manu’s immediate transition to rugby.

The irony is much of that lies in the hands of his predecesso­r Ian Foster and the man who has thrown him a coaching lifeline after last year’s Rugby World Cup campaign, Foster’s predecesso­r Sir Steve Hansen.

Foster held the All Blacks reins when Tuivasa-Sheck switched codes.

Rugby didn’t exactly cover itself in glory creating a clear pathway for a successful transition for RTS. He was starved of game time, shuffled around the Blues and Auckland backlines and mostly neglected by an All Blacks brains trust that had become wedded to a Jordie Barrett midfield bludgeonin­g option.

After two seasons, Roger got the hint and returned to the Warriors, electrifyi­ng Mt Smart every time he touches the ball (which is a lot more often than happened in rugby).

Manu is likely to flourish in the attack-minded Japanese competitio­n and will quickly find his feet without the NZR boffins looking over his shoulder.

Among his teammates at Toyota will be All Blacks test centurion, halfback Aaron Smith, and Springboks World Cup winner PieterStep­h du Toit. Hansen and Foster could do with some Manu magic. Toyota are mid-table this season and underperfo­rming relative to a stellar roster including Beauden Barrett.

Super Rugby unlikely to be on Manu’s wish-list

Manu’s departure from the NRL has been portrayed across the Tasman as a massive blow to the game.

And it is.

The wealthy and influentia­l Roosters rarely lose a player they want to keep and had not counted on Manu walking away from league and them.

They felt they could satisfy Manu’s desire to maximise his internatio­nal value with a couple of undemandin­g seasons in either French or Japanese rugby while readying himself for a return to the Roosters as the longterm successor to team captain and fullback James Tedesco.

Tedesco, the Australian captain, is an NRL and Roosters icon and the club has been very protective of managing his legacy, including replacing him at fullback, a position long coveted by Manu.

But the Roosters appear to have mismanaged Manu’s exit, perhaps testing his patience. There is no return plan.

Manu’s representa­tives say such is his respect for the Roosters that he would never play for any other club.

Yet no Kiwi Super Rugby Pacific franchise can possibly match what Manu will reputedly be paid over a two-season contract in Japan, beginning at the end of this year.

The Roosters were willing to pay him A$1 million ($1.088m) a season to keep him at Bondi Junction. The Dragons said they would pay A$1.2m.

Manu’s Japanese contract will eclipse any NZR offer under a central contract that included a Kiwi Super Rugby club stint.

It will be his priority and he is not going to sacrifice hard dollars for a lower wage playing Super Rugby for the elusive promise of All Blacks match earnings under flighty coaches (not that a Razor-led regime is likely to feature such characteri­stics).

Do you see where I am going here?

After two years in Japan and a Rugby World Cup within his sights, Manu will either extend his time further in Japan, or jump to an even bigger offer from a French club.

Manu is highly unlikely to play rugby in New Zealand or for New Zealand unless Robertson can convince NZR of some breakthrou­gh decision-making (that will create precedents which will be almost impossible to unwind once enacted).

But Manu is much too talented for the All Blacks to ignore.

The greatest tragedy would be if Manu played out his profession­al rugby career largely unseen in a corner of Japan or tucked away in France and never got to grace the test arena.

He — and we as rugby fans — deserve better.

(* Don’t panic over the reference to the Wallabies. Manu was born in Hamilton and is of Mā ori and Cook Islands descent. He would qualify for the Wallabies on Australian residency grounds from his time in the NRL but I don’t think even Joe Schmidt has persuasive enough powers to make that happen . . . although you never know).

Welcome to Wrexham: We have the Premier League in our sights

In the avalanche of content described as “reality fly-on-the-wall sports docudrama”, Welcome to Wrexham is an unlikely success story,

Hollywood stars buy down-on-itsluck Welsh football club and somehow revitalise an entire town — make that city, with Wrexham recently bestowed with that status post its unlikely newfound celebrity status.

In a morally bankrupt global sports world awash with corrupt Saudi petro-dollars and shifty club owners, fairy tales happen less often.

So when they do, they capture attention.

This week Welcome to Wrexham kicked a hat-trick. The stunningly successful Disney series has been filming and editing its third season on the run as Wrexham wrestles to achieve an improbable achievemen­t of back-to-back promotion in English football’s profession­al leagues. A 6-0 win over rivals Forest Green Rovers secured promotion to the League One championsh­ip, which is effectivel­y the English third division and just two tiers off Premier League status.

The rise of Wrexham under the opportune ownership of Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhanney is a

compelling sports story, not the least because it offers a seductive counternar­rative to the increasing­ly thuggish and corporate nature of top sport.

The business story is compelling enough in itself.

McElhanney, intrigued by a promotion-relegation route foreign to American pro sport, convinces Reynolds to co-invest with him as the pair pay around £2 million ($4.22m) in 2021 for Wrexham FC, the thirdoldes­t profession­al club in the world but who are languishin­g in the National League, the lowest of five nationwide profession­al divisions in English football.

Back-to-back promotions doesn’t just happen. The pair threw money at new players and a decent coach and latest filed accounts reveal the club owe nearly £9m to their owners.

But turnover is soaring, up to almost £10.5m annually and increasing rapidly.

Canny marketing — including the star duo joining TikTok in a club sponsorshi­p deal — has seen the value of Wrexham soar to £8 million, according to Saxo Bank — a 300 per cent increase in just three years.

Along the way, something else quite endearing happened. Reynolds and McElhanney seemed to genuinely fall in love with the Wrexham community and vice versa.

Season three will now include the current success and increased TV grant money as they climb leagues has suddenly made the bold claim of one day achieving Premier League status a lot less fanciful than previously thought.

Wrexham are now becoming a global phenomenon. League One status means regular coverage in America on EPSN. More power to Deadpool and his mate.

Team of the Week Kelly Slater

Chaired up the beach at Western Australia’s Margaret River, the world’s greatest surfer racked his competitio­n cue at age 52 after being knocked out of a World Surf League event in the round of 32. The defeat meant the 11-times world champion could not qualify for the end-ofseason WSL finals, prompting Slater to finally call time on a stunning 33-year career which began in 1991. He became the youngest world champion in history a year later when he claimed his first Pipeline Masters and the crown at age 20. A week short of his 50th birthday, he won the same event again in 2022, his 56th career tour victory.

Aussie Super Rugby teams

“New Zealand no longer the lions’ den” screamed the Aussie headline as the Ockers contemplat­ed a rare feat — five out of 12 wins by Australian Super Rugby Pacific teams against Kiwi opposition to date in 2024.

Gabriel Sloane-Rodrigues and Macey Fraser

Remember the names. Gabriel Sloane-Rodrigues is the youngest male Wellington Phoenix player to play in the A-League and, just three months shy of his 17th birthday, has signed for the next three seasons. And Macey Fraser has become the Phoenix’s first graduate to a major pro club from its women’s team after the Utah Royals smashed the A-League transfer record by signing the rising Football Ferns midfield star to a sixfigure deal to play in the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL).

Ruahei Demant

Wins a maiden Super Rugby Aupiki title with the Blues over favourites Chiefs Manawa and then rightfully calls on NZR for more investment and resource into the premier women’s competitio­n after a ridiculous­ly condensed season.

The greatest tragedy would be if Manu played out his profession­al rugby career largely unseen in a corner of Japan or tucked away in France and never got to grace the test arena.

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 ?? Photos / Photosport, George Heard, Mark Mitchell ?? Roosters super centre metre eater Joseph Manu is headed to Japan to play rugby (main); he will need better support than Roger Tuivasa-Sheck (above) received; All Blacks coach Scott “Razor” Robertson (middle) will need a magic wand to enable Manu to play for the ABs; Ruahei Demant (below) made the right call on investment in women’s rugby.
Photos / Photosport, George Heard, Mark Mitchell Roosters super centre metre eater Joseph Manu is headed to Japan to play rugby (main); he will need better support than Roger Tuivasa-Sheck (above) received; All Blacks coach Scott “Razor” Robertson (middle) will need a magic wand to enable Manu to play for the ABs; Ruahei Demant (below) made the right call on investment in women’s rugby.

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