The Post

Why Tonga should worry the All Blacks

- Hamish Bidwell of RNZ

It’s not just rugby’s administra­tors who’ve noticed the Tonga rugby league team. New Zealand Rugby tried to tap into the team’s phenomenal supporter base by staging a game between the All Blacks and Tonga ahead of the World Cup.

The turnout in Hamilton was fair, but no better than that, suggesting this small sporting revolution has more to do with men such as Jason Taumalolo and Sio Siua Taukeiaho and not just blind allegiance.

Mate Ma’a Tonga, or the Tonga Invitation­al XIII as they’re now known thanks to issues with their national body, are one of the greatest things to happen to sport in New Zealand.

Never mind them beating Australia at Eden Park on Saturday, or Great Britain the week before that. To see a fanbase mobilised from almost nowhere and to watch and hear the way they support their team has been truly incredible.

We don’t have a great fan culture here. The good folk from Yellow Fever try to generate a bit of atmosphere at Wellington Phoenix games, otherwise sport in this country is a quiet affair.

Sure, in the halcyon days (or is that daze?) of the Wellington Sevens, a combinatio­n of booze and booming music helped people shed their inhibition­s.

But Tonga fans don’t rely on props, or the guy on the public address system, when their team plays rugby league.

Someone simply starts singing a hymn and everyone else joins in. A hymn! The whole thing’s as moving as it is remarkable and it’s not been lost on some of our rugby players.

Again, it’s not just the results that have made this Tonga rugby league thing so special. Nor is it only the support.

It’s the fact that this was built by men who were establishe­d internatio­nals with bigger teams who said ‘you know what, I’d rather play for the nation that best represents me and how I feel and what I believe in’.

A team of true brothers who might not be as talented as the Kiwis or Kangaroos, but who share a culture and a bond that other teams can only imagine.

Andrew Fifita, Daniel Tupou and Michael Jennings all played for Australia, while Will Hopoate was a State of Origin representa­tive.

Others, such as Taumalolo, Taukeiaho, David Fusitu’a and Manu Ma’u were first-choice members of New Zealand’s side.

They all loved their experience­s with those teams, but playing for Tonga became something of a calling.

This is what All Blacks star Sonny Bill Williams is driving at when he says it might be nice to see Ma¯ ori or Pacific Island faces on the coaching staff.

It’s why, if the stories are to be believed, he’s considerin­g playing for Samoa should a move back to rugby league materialis­e. Another former Kiwi, Manly prop Martin Taupau, has already switched to Samoa.

All Black Ngani Laumape was in the stands when Tonga beat Australia 16-12 at Eden Park on Saturday. The son of Tongan migrants, Laumape has the Kingdom of Tonga seal tattooed on his shoulder and is a former league player himself. He’s also talked of being on tour with the All Blacks in 2017 and how he and team-mate Vaea Fifita spent hours together watching and revelling in Tonga’s march to that year’s Rugby League World Cup semifinals.

Then there’s halfback TJ Perenara who has spoken of his ‘‘shame’’ at not being bi-lingual and has now begun a ‘‘journey’’ to learn te reo Ma¯ ori.

These things are indicative of a cultural awakening that many of our profession­al rugby and rugby league players are experienci­ng and one the rest of us would be foolish to ignore.

When Williams says there are a lot of Ma¯ ori and Pacific Island players in the All Blacks, and that it would be good for the coaching staff to reflect that, he’s talking about things like respect and identity.

The next head coach of the All Blacks doesn’t have to be Pasifika and maybe not even the one after that. But New Zealand Rugby does need to make sure the players feel valued and that their cultures are given significan­ce.

If the Tonga rugby league phenomenon has taught us anything, it’s that some players will eventually go with their hearts and that huge numbers of fans will follow.

– RNZ

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Tongan fans created a sea of red at Eden Park as they cheered their team to a historic win over Australia last weekend.
GETTY IMAGES Tongan fans created a sea of red at Eden Park as they cheered their team to a historic win over Australia last weekend.

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