The Press

Cocksedge happy to keep the chat going

- Olivia Caldwell olivia.caldwell@stuff.co.nz

Adjusting to provincial rugby is a welcome change of pace for Black Fern Kendra Cocksedge after a media onslaught with the national team.

Cocksedge will slot into her Canterbury side for the defending champions’ opening Farah Palmer Cup match against Bay of Plenty tomorrow.

Last week in the leadup to the second Black Ferns-Wallaroos test in Auckland, the nuggety halfback was a tad taken aback at the media interest in the team.

The Black Ferns had more cameras and reporters surroundin­g them than when they returned home from the UK a year ago with the World Cup in hand.

‘‘Being in front of that many [media] I get a bit nervous. I already talk quite fast. I am always conscious I need to slow down . . . but that’s me, I guess,’’ Cocksedge said.

Promoted by coach Glenn Moore to share the vice-captaincy with Silica Winiata, Cocksedge is one of the more chatty players in the group.

One of the smarter brains of the game, she doubles as the Canterbury Rugby women’s developmen­t officer to round out a fulltime job in rugby.

‘‘For me I just absolutely love it, seeing all these young girls. We are role models for these girls. When we rock up to events these girls are like, ‘oh my God, Kendra is here’, or ‘we’ve got the Black Ferns here’. We never really used to have that and now it is constantly happening.’’

With her Black Ferns duties on hold until November, she is excited to get back on the field with her Canterbury mates. Canterbury hold the provincial silverware after claiming a maiden Farah Palmer Cup title and the JJ Stewart Trophy last year.

The competitio­n expands to 12 teams this season with the inclusion of Taranaki, but Auckland and Counties Manukau are considered the main contenders.

Cocksedge has taken it as her personal duty to nurture the younger Black Ferns coming through the ranks because she remembers how intimidati­ng it was when she first arrived on the national scene aged 19.

Twelve years later she feels like one of the more seasoned players.

‘‘You do feel old, but it means taking the younger girls under my wing and looking out for them. For me, being the vicecaptai­n and a leader of the team, I really enjoy it, making sure everyone’s settled in.

‘‘I remember coming in at 19 and you had some older girls who were a little bit scary, so you kind of just want to make sure you take these new ones under your wing, because it’s quite daunting.’’

Cocksedge is playing some of the best rugby of her life. In last Saturday’s 45-17 win against the Wallaroos she scored 15 points, including a try.

Job security isn’t a given, however.

‘‘You are never comfortabl­e in a position, it’s one of those situations where the jersey, you are a caretaker of it.’’

Cocksedge celebrated her 30th birthday last month, but her only thoughts around retiring is taking it ‘‘year by year’’.

‘‘If the body is feeling good and I am enjoying playing it . . . I love coming in to camp. I am still loving it and I still love training so why not keep going otherwise you are retired a long time.

‘‘If we get to see a World Cup in New Zealand I would actually be keen to try to stick around if the body is holding up. That would be cool, to play the World Cup on your home turf.’’

If there is one thing Simon Mannering won’t miss about profession­al rugby league, it’s the spotlight. Despite being on the eve of 300 NRL games, the first Warrior to do so and potentiall­y about to play his last game at a ground he has called home for the last 14 seasons, the shy kid from Motueka wishes everyone didn’t make such a fuss about it all.

In the opinion of his fellow players, Mannering is considered the ultimate Warrior. The club’s greatest ever.

He’s described by his peers as someone you love to play with, and by his counterpar­ts as someone you hate to play against; a benchmark of grit and consistenc­y for more than a decade in the toughest rugby league competitio­n in the world.

But to fully understand the man behind New Zealand league’s most decorated career, you have to understand where he has come from and the humble beginnings that helped mould him.

THE EARLY YEARS

Simon Mannering was born on August 28, 1986, in Napier before the family moved to Motueka.

Mannering and his two siblings attended St Peter Chanel School and it was there they first fell in love with sport – rugby union was Simon’s first love.

Father Bill Warwick was the parish priest at St Peter Chanel when the Mannerings first arrived in town. He remembers them as ‘‘warm and welcoming’’, and the family home was always overflowin­g with local kids running around in the backyard.

Most Saturday mornings, Warwick would head to the local park on Manoy St to watch Simon and brother Marcus play the 15-man code.

‘‘He [Simon] always had very quick feet as a young fella. He could run and was never shy on the tackle, that I remember,’’ Warwick said.

Over the years, Warwick and the Mannering family became close.

He said from a young age Simon was level-headed – though like all kids he wasn’t entirely against getting up to a bit of mischief.

‘‘I remember in 1997, the school was extending the pool,’’ Warwick said with a grin.

‘‘When it came time to open the pool we had a bit of grand opening ceremony.

‘‘We weren’t in there five minutes before Simon and Marcus pushed me into the pool, fully clothed, and started trying to dunk me under as everyone else laughed and cheered.

‘‘Simon was always a bit more quiet than his brother, but both enjoyed a good laugh.’’

Warwick said Mannering was a product of his environmen­t ‘‘through and through’’, and believed it was at Nelson College where the shy kid found his feet.

FIRST XV RUGBY

Before he became a league legend, Mannering was destined for greatness in the 15-man code and learnt his trade at Nelson College under the tutelage – both on and off the field – of Peter Grigg.

Grigg has been teaching at Nelson since 1996 and watched as Mannering came up through the grades before making the school’s first XV.

Though Grigg said he had seen plenty of more talented players come through the system, few could rival Mannering’s attitude. ‘‘Always head down working. More so than most I have ever seen, which is probably why he has gone on to have such success.’’

It was in 2003 when Mannering first tried the 13-man code.

Grigg’s side had finished eighth in its union competitio­n, so he put together a league team to ‘‘get some extra work in’’ following a disappoint­ing campaign.

He assumed he’d get his hands back on his players for the next season, refreshed and ready to go. But Mannering never returned.

After just three games it was clear league was his sport and Mannering was named in the New Zealand Schoolboys team before being invited to Wellington to play under-18s.

In a matter of months he was playing top-level league in Wellington for the Orcas before being signed to a part-time deal by the Warriors.

THE NRL

Mannering made his first grade debut on June 26, 2005 against the Broncos at Auckland’s Mt Smart Stadium.

In typical Mannering fashion, he didn’t even tell his mother he would be making his debut as he didn’t want to make ‘‘a big fuss about it’’, he said.

It was a Sunday afternoon. The night before had left conditions wet under foot, the eastern stand was even struck by

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 ??  ?? Before joining the Warriors, Simon Mannering worked in ceiling installati­on, pictured here in 2004. ‘‘It was a very grounding experience,’’ he says.
Before joining the Warriors, Simon Mannering worked in ceiling installati­on, pictured here in 2004. ‘‘It was a very grounding experience,’’ he says.
 ??  ?? Kendra Cocksedge will play a key role for Canterbury.
Kendra Cocksedge will play a key role for Canterbury.
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