Hawke's Bay Today

MOVEMENT of the people

A band of brothers dubbed The Movement has shaken up Hawke’s Bay club rugby, showing age is no barrier to success. Neil Reid meets Clive Rugby & Sports Club’s star-studded third-grade team, who are about much more than what happens on the field.

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By day, Robert Whaitiri is a sharp-looking 60-year-old holding down a top job for the Ministry of Māori Developmen­t, Te Puni Kōkiri. But every Thursday night at the Clive Rugby & Sports Club’s flood-lit home ground alongside busy SH51, south of Napier — or at other Hawke’s Bay grassroots venues on a Saturday — the formalitie­s of his business persona as a community funder are dropped.

When he dons his playing gear, Whaitiri — whose sister is Customs Minister Meka Whaitiri — becomes “The Rocket”, the oldest member of Clive’s third-grade team.

The team — which includes players who have represente­d New Zealand Māori, New Zealand Sevens, New Zealand Divisional XV, Tonga, Samoa, the Blues, the Chiefs, the Hurricanes, East Coast, Hawke’s Bay and Manawatū — last year stunned their much-younger rivals by winning the division title in the Hawke’s Bay Rugby Union’s club competitio­n.

And their winning start to this year’s campaign has seen them post more than 50 points in back-to-back games.

“I do this for the camaraderi­e and for whatever [time] I have got left on this earth to impart and inspire these guys that life doesn’t end at 60,” Whaitiri told the Herald.

“I said last year when I turned 60 that I would be hanging my boots up. But I just enjoy it so much. Playing keeps me healthy, it’s a stress release and I think I have something to offer the team . . . it’s a privilege.”

As well as being the oldest player in the squad — which has an average age of 41 — he is also the side’s kaumatua.

The Movement’s co-founder, and now coach, Mano Flutey, describes his oldest player as “an absolutely awesome member of our squad”.

“He is a huge gift to us and sets the pathway for us and our younger fellas,” Flutey says. “He also does a karakia for most of the activities and events we do.”

Whaitiri, humbly, rates himself as a “last resort” for selection. But last year he still lined up for eight matches in the competitiv­e club competitio­n.

“It took me a few days to be able to walk around and get the body back in synch,” he laughs. “I have a grease up and oil change with my doctor every three months, I check my cholestero­l, I go to the gym twice a week. My passion [to keep fit] is so I can see my grandkids. I have eight grandkids and I like being around for them.” He jokes that if he keeps playing for a further five seasons, he might be able to play alongside one of his grandsons.

Whaitiri’s name is well-known in Hawke’s Bay rugby circles. At the Clive Rugby & Sports Club — which he joined in 1985 after leaving his boarding school Te Aute College — he is a bona fide legend.

And plenty of The Movement’s members are household rugby names around New Zealand — and beyond. The rugby CV of prop Orcades Crawford, 55, includes playing for New Zealand Māori, the

New Zealand Colts, the New Zealand Divisional XV, the Blues, Hurricanes, East Coast, Hawke’s Bay, Manawatū and Central Vikings.

Flutey, 48, previously starred for the New Zealand Secondary Schools, New Zealand Divisional XV, East Coast and Hawke’s Bay.

In 2000, he won the Third Division player of the year award after inspiring East Coast to the NPC title. One of his provincial team-mates from that year, Simon Christie, is a key member of the club side.

The Clive Thirds also include 40-year-old former New Zealand Sevens star Tafai Ioasa, who won a gold medal at the 2006 Commonweal­th Games, 37-year-old former Hurricanes, Junior All Black and Hawke’s Bay flanker Karl Lowe

and 39-year-old ex-Tongan internatio­nal, Hawke’s Bay and Chiefs star Sona Taumalolo.

Winning is great, they say, but just having the opportunit­y to still play the game they love is their main motivation.

“We play rugby for the fun and enjoyment, just like when we first put our boots on as a 5- or 6-year-old. That fun still runs through our veins,” Flutey says.

“There is a huge culture in this team and it is about fun and enjoyment. Everything is for the love of it.”

The strong culture means all the

members of The Movement — which includes truck drivers, builders, digger operators, clinicians, business owners and board members — are equally respected, be they

former top players, those who didn’t go as far in their younger playing days, or new recruits.

“Everyone has a place and a purpose in this team,” Flutey says. “And with the new guys coming here we welcome them so much, their seed is planted here. It is up to us senior guys to water that seed and watch them grow.

“Those new players bring excitement and energy and they add

Tvalue to the foundation­s that have been created.”

The team was founded in 2020 after brainstorm­ing between Flutey, Christie and Lowe to offer some of Clive’s older players, who Flutey says “probably had another five or six years rugby left in them,” an outlet to keep playing.

The Movement is now about 90-strong. As well as rugby, members also have a cricket team in the summer, take part in golf and tennis championsh­ips, have a diving and fishing crew, and host a range of fundraisin­g initiative­s.

They are seen as an inspiratio­n by members of the wider Clive community.

“Manu was the catalyst,” Whaitiri says. “He had this dream: ‘Hey I know you guys have a bit of petrol left in your tank’.

“It is not about reliving the old days. Most importantl­y, it is about including our families and making sure they are part of this.” he Movement prides itself on supporting its members in all walks of life. That shone through for Flutey earlier this year when they rallied around him and his family when the former star first five almost died after suffering a cardiac arrest.

His mates “got right behind” the Flutey family financiall­y and spirituall­y as he first battled for his life, then started his recovery.

“They supported me right from day one,” Flutey says. “It [his heart issue] was something that I never thought would happen to myself, but it did. I was flown to Wellington and had three stents put into my heart. It was quite serious.”

Family is at the forefront of the ethos behind the side. Players’ wives, partners, parents, children and even grandchild­ren make up a vocal supporters’ club each Saturday.

An honour guard made up of children, nieces, nephews and grandchild­ren welcomed them on to Napier’s McLean Park before last year’s third grade final against Taradale.

“Before, when we were at our peak, you just focused on yourself as a player,” Whaitiri says. “This time, it is an extension of ‘how do we include the rest of our family to be part of the wider movement?’.”

Adds Flutey: “We are a whānaubase­d team. We have the support of all our wives and partners, our kids, our mokopuna. There is a family behind every man and we welcome the man here, and their families as well.”

And there has been no shortage of whānau supporting them as they kicked off their 2022 campaign with successive hammerings dished out to Maraenui (52-15) and Napier Old Boys Marist (65-7).

The strong family links within the team have seen several father-andson playing combinatio­ns over the past three seasons, something Flutey says brings immense pride to the group. “To play with your father or your son is an absolute highlight of a man’s career.”

Clive’s clubrooms are a shrine to its halcyon days of success in the Hawke’s Bay club competitio­n. Walls are lined with photos of championsh­ip-winning teams, as well as jerseys gifted by players who went on to make the Junior All Blacks, New Zealand Māori, New Zealand Divisional XV and other representa­tive sides.

And the building — which Whaitiri says is a “marae” for its proud players — was packed last July when The Movement returned with the Big Barrel Ron Parker Memorial Cup after their grand final triumph over Taradale.

“You couldn’t move in the clubrooms afterwards,” Whaitiri proudly recalls.

“Even though I sometimes think I

go through a bit of Alzheimer’s or a few senior moments, the memory is vivid in my mind,” he laughs. “The memories come flooding back.”

So how does a team stacked with players who are either middle-aged, or close to it, beat teams half their age?

Aside from sheer determinat­ion, it harks back to the old sporting mantra that class is permanent.

“We are not as fit as we used to be,” Flutey says. “We are not as fast. As you get older your legs slow down a little bit. But the hands are still quick and the mind is eager and ready to go.”

Though he was a foundation member of the playing roster, Flutey knew when it was time for him to hang up his playing boots and concentrat­e on coaching.

“The body just wasn’t keeping up. The mind was saying ‘Go’, but the body was saying ‘No’.”

It isn’t just traditiona­l playing values that The Movement are keeping alive.

Other elements include postmatch hosting of opponents regardless of the result.

“We really try to keep some of the old school values going,” Whaitiri says. “You go into the opposition’s dressing room and drop off a crate of beer after a game, and invite them to an after-match function. And hopefully the younger generation­s will keep that going.”

Flutey’s rugby career took him around the world; wearing national colours and involving a successful stint in South Africa.

But he has no hesitation in nominating The Movement as being a “huge highlight” of his footy career.

“I have been through many different teams . . . but this is special,” he says. “It’s a home club for us, somewhere where we feel welcome. And as I say with these new players coming in, I am here to water their seed and watch them grow.”

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 ?? ?? Clive 3rds’ Robert Whaitiri , at 60, is one of the key members of the Clive setup, on and off the field.
Clive 3rds’ Robert Whaitiri , at 60, is one of the key members of the Clive setup, on and off the field.
 ?? Photos / Neil Reid ?? Coach and former NPC star Mano Flutey says the Clive 3rds are like a family.
Photos / Neil Reid Coach and former NPC star Mano Flutey says the Clive 3rds are like a family.
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 ?? ?? Orcades Crawford, 55, is one of the Clive 3rds’ oldest players.
Orcades Crawford, 55, is one of the Clive 3rds’ oldest players.

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