Hastings Leader

Invictus Games boost for archer with cancer

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Former Hawke’s Bay man Ihaka Matairangi stood and cried in Canada last year, as he watched a man with no arms and no legs compete in the Invictus Games Toronto 1500m event.

“By the time he was finished I was crying. I couldn’t believe how proud I was of this man I didn’t even know,” Royal New Zealand Navy Petty Officer Matairangi, a member of this year’s NZDF Invictus Games team, says.

“For those few moments when they’re running that race and crossing that line, you see people just glow. It is magic.”

The Invictus Games are the only internatio­nal adaptive sporting event for wounded, injured and ill active duty and former service members. This year’s event, in Sydney from October 20-27, involved competitor­s from 18 allied nations in 11 different adaptive sports.

Petty Officer Matairangi took team bronze in the archery at the Toronto Invictus Games and competed again in the event in Sydney, as well as in sailing and discus. But he’s quick to point out that the Games are not about medals.

“Just getting to the starting line is a win for some of the competitor­s. You just get total acceptance as soon as you walk through the door. Everyone on that level is the same — you’ve got so much commonalit­y because of the experience­s and the lifechangi­ng events that have happened to each individual.”

Petty Officer Matairangi’s lifechangi­ng event came in his mid20s, when he was diagnosed with lung and testicular cancer. It has left him with significan­tly reduced lung capacity, and it took him several years to get back to the level of fitness required by the Navy.

He needs every bit of that fitness in his day-to-day life — he and wife Emma are parents to Tyler, 8, Nate, 5, and Mia, 2, and all went to Sydney to watch him compete.

His parents, Errol and Annette, still live in his boyhood suburb of Flaxmere, and his father went to Toronto with him — something he describes as incredibly special.

Petty Officer Matairangi’s brothers Joshua, Rongomai and Jay Pomana still live in Hawke’s Bay, while sisters Tahlya and Vida are in Australia and Wellington respective­ly.

The six Matairangi siblings were among 20 cousins who grew up together in the Hastings area and Petty Officer Matairangi, who went to Flaxmere Primary and St John’s College, says some of his best memories were of the time he spent with them at Fantasylan­d.

“We were always together, which is something I treasure.

“The weather was always hot, so I was either at the beach, river or pool and playing sports,” he said.

That love of sport continues, and he says the Invictus Games has given him a better quality of life through sport and fitness.

“I’m now the fittest I have been in 10 years. I won’t ever be how I was before treatment but I’m definitely in a better place, physically and mentally.”

 ??  ?? Petty Officer Ihaka Matairangi, one of four NZDF Invictus Games team members who have had cancer, holds daffodils for Daffodil Day 2018.
Petty Officer Ihaka Matairangi, one of four NZDF Invictus Games team members who have had cancer, holds daffodils for Daffodil Day 2018.
 ??  ?? NZDF Invictus Games team member Petty Officer Ihaka Matairangi says the competitor­s have so much commonalit­y because of the experience­s and the life-changing events that have happened to each individual.
NZDF Invictus Games team member Petty Officer Ihaka Matairangi says the competitor­s have so much commonalit­y because of the experience­s and the life-changing events that have happened to each individual.

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