Weekend Herald

Family first as Kopua calls it quits at test level

Former Silver Ferns skipper puts whanau ahead of the rigours of internatio­nal play

- Netball Dana Johannsen Shield goes down to wire Mountain Airs breeze into second Manly end Roosters’ unbeaten run Boyle out of nationals Weather disrupts opening round

Former Silver Ferns skipper Casey Kopua has ruled out an internatio­nal comeback, pouring cold water on the excitement over her early ANZ Premiershi­p form.

The star defender yesterday announced her retirement from internatio­nal netball, bringing the curtain down on a test career that spanned 10 years and 101 tests. It comes as Kopua was beginning to generate some buzz after an impressive start to the new domestic league for the Waikato- Bay of Plenty Magic after taking a year off for the birth of her first child.

As the inevitable speculatio­n over Kopua’s Silver Ferns future intensifie­d following her return to the court, the veteran defender thought it was best to make a call on it early.

Kopua said with a young daughter, she didn’t feel she would be able to commit to the Silver Ferns programme in a busy year.

“It was about my family in the end,” she said. “Internatio­nal netball is next level. It is next level intensity, next level commitment and more time away from home. I just felt I couldn’t commit to that.”

Kopua’s final game for the Silver Ferns was a shock 11- goal demolition of Australia in the 2015 Constellat­ion Cup decider in Perth. Weeks later she revealed she was pregnant.

The 31- year- old, who gave birth to her daughter Maia in May last year, held off making any decisions over her playing future until she had time to settle into motherhood.

“Once I had Maia that puts your whole life into perspectiv­e of what’s important and what you want to do. It made us think about it and I feel it is the right decision for our family.”

Identified as a rare talent early on in her career, Kopua [ then Williams] became the 135th player to represent the Silver Ferns when she made her debut in 2005 at 20 against Barbados, after winning gold with the NZU21 team that year. She took over the Silver Ferns captaincy four years later.

Widely considered one New Zealand’s greatest defenders, Kopua leaves the test arena as the Silver Ferns most capped captain ( 77).

But for all the accolades she received in her career, there is a sense that Kopua could have achieved more milestones had she not been hampered by chronic knee and ankle injuries over her decade- long stint in the black dress.

The cruellest blow came in late 2014 when the athletic star tore her patella tendon in her left knee. It was thought the injury would almost certainly rule Kopua out of the 2015 World Cup in Sydney, but the veteran defender showed incredible courage and determinat­ion to get back on court in time for the tournament.

Despite the setbacks she endured, she said she only looks back on her time with the Silver Ferns fondly.

“It has been an honour and a privilege to wear the black dress. The memories and friends I have made I will always treasure,” she said.

While Kopua has closed to the door on her internatio­nal career, it has not dented her competitiv­eness. She is loving being back in the Magic set- up and is thrilled with her young side’s early progress in the ANZ Premiershi­p. “It’s really cool to be back on court and back as part of a team and have that competitiv­e aspect again which is what I really love,” she said.

The Magic are setting the pace early in the competitio­n after two big wins in the opening round. A goal two minutes from fulltime saw Japan snatch a 2- 1 win over the Black Sticks women at the Hawke’s Bay Festival of Hockey last night. Motomi Kawamura opened the scoring from an eighth- minute penalty corner. After an hour- long delay because of a burst water main, New Zealand equalised with a low and strong penalty corner drag flick from Brooke Neal in the 54th minute. But a defensive error gave Japan a late penalty corner from which Yu Asai scored the winning goal. The Plunket Shield domestic cricket season is going down to the final day to find a victor. Canterbury hold the advantage, sitting seven points ahead of Auckland, with 12 points for an outright win. However, Canterbury's chances of outright victory are slim, holding a lead of 59 runs with four wickets in hand against Wellington, leaving them to rely on Auckland failing to topple Central Districts. Auckland lead that contest by 209 runs, with six wickets remaining. They will need a declaratio­n before bowling CD out for a dramatic title triumph. The Taranaki Mountain Airs have continued their strong start to the National Basketball League season, moving to 3- 1 after a 64- 61 victory over the Southland Sharks last night. The win lifts them into second, a game ahead of the Canterbury Rams, who are now 3- 2 following their tight 88- 86 victory over the Supercity Rangers. Southland fall to 2- 2 and Supercity are now 2- 1. The 3- 0 Wellington Saints lead the way, and they visit the 0- 3 Bay Hawks at 7pm tonight. A late Dylan Walker double ended the Sydney Roosters’ undefeated start to the NRL season, gifting Manly an 18- 12 victory last night. In a tough and gritty match at a wet Allianz Stadium, Walker broke a 12- 12 deadlock in the final two minutes when he burst on to a Brian Kelly ball to run through a yawning gap and 40m to score. Making matters worse for the Roosters, they could lose Queensland Origin contender Dylan Napa for several weeks after he succumbed to an ankle injury. Manly, who drifted close to wooden spoon favouritis­m after starting the season with two straight losses, have now won three in a row to sit within the top eight. In last night’s late NRL game, the Cowboys claimed their fourth win from five games with a 20- 6 victory over Souths after leading 14- 0 at the break. Lauren Boyle has withdrawn from the New Zealand Open Swimming Championsh­ips starting in Auckland on Monday. Boyle has been back training in Auckland since February but a hip injury that first came to public attention at the Rio Olympics has troubled her since returning to the pool last October. France’s Karine Icher shot a 5- under 67 to take an early lead before high winds shortened the opening day of the ANA Inspiratio­n yesterday. Half of the field in the LPGA Tour’s first major of the year was still on the course when wild winds in the Coachella Valley in Southern California forced an early halt to play. The first round was set to resume today. Four players on the Dinah Shore Course were one shot behind Icher. New Zealander Lydia Ko, the defending ANA Inspiratio­n champion and world No 1, was 2 under through five holes before play was suspended for the day.

 ?? Picture / Photosport ?? Casey Kopua has pulled the pin on test netball but will continue to play for the Magic.
Picture / Photosport Casey Kopua has pulled the pin on test netball but will continue to play for the Magic.

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