Horowhenua Chronicle

Levin brothers in Black Sox

Proud sporting moment for siblings’ Levin connection­s

- SOFTBALL Paul Williams

Horowhenua might not have much of a softball scene at the moment but the region has every right to be proud after the naming of the Black Sox softball team earlier this week.

Two brothers named together in the Black Sox team were born and bred in Levin and have continued a strong wha¯nau tradition in the game stretching back generation­s.

Dante Makea-Matakatea, 25, and younger brother Reilly Makea, 23, have both been named by coach Mark Sorenson in the Black Sox squad for the upcoming World Series in Rosedale next month.

The Horowhenua connection comes through their grandfathe­r Mua Matakatea, a former Horowhenua rugby representa­tive who along with his brothers and cousins, nephews and nieces, played softball in Levin for many a summer.

It was a golden era of Horowhenua softball that produced NZ pitching legend Chubb Tangaroa, among others.

Dante and Reilly grew up in Levin for a time until their parents Thomas and Kara moved away when they were toddlers, and their softball journey was only just beginning.

To have two sons named in the Black Sox squad earlier this week was a proud moment for the wha¯nau.

Kara Makea said as both Reilly and Dante were unaware who else had made the team, they each rang their

mum with the news, both of them dearly hoping the other had made the team too.

“They didn’t want to tell each other. Dante rang me first and I burst into tears, then Reilly rang too,” she said.

“We are extremely proud. They work hard and it means so much to both of them.”

Thomas Makea, who needs no introducti­on as a Black Sox legend with four world titles, also played a season of NPC rugby for Horowhenua-Ka¯piti at second fiveeighth, and played a season of club rugby for Levin Wanderers.

Kara was a talented sportswoma­n in her own right and a Horowhenua netball representa­tive, too.

The Makea wha¯nau now live in Wellington. Dante and Reilly play for the Poneke-Kilbirnie club and also for the champion Wellington team that

beat Auckland in the national finals last weekend.

Softball had been a huge part of their lives growing up and Kara said the boys had learned their craft from watching their father each weekend, especially when they had travelled overseas to watch internatio­nal games.

As youngsters they would play make-believe internatio­nal games against children from other countries, pretending to play for the Black Sox.

The Horowhenua influence in the current Black Sox doesn’t end with the Makea brothers. Also named in the squad was Jerome Raemaki, whose mother Christine was originally from Levin.

Supporters will have a rare chance to see the Black Sox in action with a warm-up tournament in Palmerston North starting on November 19, involving defending world champions Argentina, Australia, Canada, Japan and Czechoslov­akia.

The opening World Series match for the Golden Homes NZ Black Sox is on November 26 against the Czech Republic at Rosedale Park in Auckland.

The Black Sox finished fourth at the 2019 World Cup, held in Prague.

 ?? ?? Black Sox softballer­s Dante and Reilly with their grandfathe­r Mua Matakatea, taken in 2019.
Black Sox softballer­s Dante and Reilly with their grandfathe­r Mua Matakatea, taken in 2019.
 ?? ?? Black Sox brothers Dante and Reilly.
Black Sox brothers Dante and Reilly.

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