Fiji Sun

Emotional Sivo on NRL debut

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Three thousand kilometres from his seaside village via the truck stop town of Gundagai, with over 100 tries and a breakdown in Brad Arthur’s office along the way, Maika Sivo made the most unlikely of NRL debuts yesterday. Paramatta Eels defeated Penrith Panthers 20-12.

Sivo 25, and discovered rugby league four years ago.

Brown is 18, and was first unearthed at a schoolboy tournament by ex-Eels football manager Daniel Anderson around the same time. The softly spoken Fijian was picked up in his village of Momi by Don and Kathy Tuckwell.

Now affectiona­tely known as Sivo’s “Aussie family”, the Tuckwells sorted him out with a visa, accommodat­ion and a start with Group 9’s Gundagai Tigers. Four-pointers have flowed ever since as Sivo quickly progressed from bush footy to Penrith’s feeder system, to the point when he landed on Arthur’s radar last year.

Tears came too this week, at both Parramatta and back in Fiji, when Arthur told Sivo he would be debuting against his former club on yesterday’s western Sydney showdown.

“Brad called me into the office on Monday morning, I thought I was going there to do video,” Sivo told the Eels website.

“But he told me ‘turn around’ and I looked at the whiteboard and my name was there - number two.

“I was a bit emotional. I got emotional when he told me and I took a few minutes to get myself back together.

“…I called dad the other day, he was at home with mum and they were having dinner. He was a bit emotional and he told mum.

“I was going to bring them over but they don’t have any passports so maybe next time.

“I told them last year to do their passport [applicatio­ns]… but I didn’t know it was going to come this quick for my debut.”

At 105 kilos, 186 centimetre­s and with bucketload­s of Fijian flair, comparison­s with fan favourite Semi Radradra are inevitable.

Sivo wants to be known as his own man rather than Radradra reincarnat­e. But his penchant for topping tryscoring lists at Gundagai, St Mary’s and Mounties in successive seasons only encourages the connection, especially as he’ll be wearing Radradra’s old blue and gold No.2 number. Radradra’s journey took him via the glitz and glamour of the Rugby Sevens circuit with Fiji. Arthur notes Sivo’s was a different path.

“It’s been one of hard work hasn’t it?” Arthur said.

“He went and played in the bush and progressed up through the grades. I saw him last year, I was out watching a trial match [between] Penrith and the Roosters.

“Straight after the game I got on the phone to Sharpie [recruitmen­t manager Peter Sharp] and said there’s a good kid out here. “So we’ve been tracking him since then and he’s worked really hard and he’s progressed through the grades nicely. He gets an opportunit­y tomorrow against the club that gave him a leg up and gave him a start.”

 ??  ?? Young Parramatta Eels winger Maika Sivo during training ahead of round one Maika Sivo
Young Parramatta Eels winger Maika Sivo during training ahead of round one Maika Sivo

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