Taupo & Turangi Herald

Taupo¯ player selected for NZ hockey squad

Cam Maclean now has his sights on the Black Sticks

- Laurilee McMichael1

Attending a local school and working towards playing hockey at internatio­nal level? The doubters said it couldn’t be done — that if Cam Maclean wanted to excel at hockey, he’d have to leave Taupo¯ .

But Cam, 20, has just proved them all wrong, being selected for the men’s hockey national under-21 squad.

It’s just one step shy of the Black Sticks men’s New Zealand hockey team and the latest progressio­n in Cam’s hockey career, which started when he switched from football to hockey as a Year 4 student at Wairakei Primary School.

The Great Lake Taupo¯ Hockey Club runs a grassroots junior programme, with under-11 and under-13 developmen­t programmes focusing on fundamenta­l skills, enjoyment and promoting a love for the game, and Cam progressed through both programmes as well as playing for his school.

“I was always really keen on sport at a young age and I played soccer for a long time and was just playing lots of sports,” Cam says. “At the end of intermedia­te, hockey was what I enjoyed the most so that’s why I kept going with it.”

At Taupo¯ Intermedia­te, Cam was named in the hockey team to play at the largest middle schools sporting tournament in the country, the AIMS Games, where the team won bronze. He continued to go from strength to strength, being selected to play representa­tive hockey for the Bay of Plenty under-13 Hatch Cup team and progressin­g through the age groups to represent Bay of Plenty at under15 and under-18 level. The under-18 team won the National Associatio­n tournament in Invercargi­ll in 2017.

From there, regional selectors noticed Cam’s talent and he was picked to play in the Midlands (Bay of Plenty, Counties-Manukau, Tauranga, Thames Valley and Waikato) under-18 representa­tive team and then the under-21 team, with the under-18s winning a bronze medal at the National Regional tournament in Dunedin. He was also invited to two Hockey New Zealand under-18 camps.

At the same time, Cam was playing hockey for the Taupo¯-nui-a-Tia College 1st XI, which went from strength to strength and earned a spot in the tier 1 Aon Rankin Cup tournament for the first time in the school’s history, making them the 17th-best team in the country.

After leaving school, Cam was awarded a Sir Edmund Hillary

It was the first time I’d played at that level of hockey, playing with Black Sticks. I wasn’t really thinking about the High Performanc­e Network, it was more just about trying to take everything in.

Cam Maclean

scholarshi­p, which is awarded to students performing at national level in sports, culture or academics. It has supported Cam to continue with his hockey as well as studying for a Bachelor of Science degree in environmen­tal science at the University of Waikato. He is now in his third year and has played club hockey for the Waikato University Premier team for the last three years, becoming captain this year. Last year he was named Waikato Hockey Associatio­n’s young player of the year.

It hasn’t always been easy juggling playing at a high level with university studies — and Cam says it took him until his second year to develop a routine to balance both — but hockey gives him a break from the stresses of study.

“Once I started uni, when you get lots of other commitment­s in life it’s quite a good escape from quite a lot of things. Especially when you’re studying, being able to go and train is nice, to be able to go and clear your head.”

With no internatio­nal hockey competitio­n on at present, Cam was invited to play in the inaugural Premier League held in Hamilton in December, where the top 80 players in the country were split into four regional teams, giving Cam, as one of the younger players, the chance to experience playing hockey at the highest level with all the current Black Sticks team.

That led to a two-year contract with Hockey New Zealand to become part of its High Performanc­e Network, the developmen­t pathway for future Black Stick players.

Cam says although he knew there was the potential for selection for the Hockey NZ High Performanc­e Network, that wasn’t foremost in his mind during the Premier League.

“It was the first time I’d played at that level of hockey, playing with Black Sticks. I wasn’t really thinking about the High Performanc­e Network, it was more just about trying to take everything in.”

The under-21 North-South Series was held in April and following that, Cam was named in the 25-strong national under-21 squad. From that squad, a team will be picked to play in the Junior World Cup in December in India. Naturally, Cam hopes to be included. Longer-term, his goal is to eventually play for the Black Sticks.

Cam says he wouldn’t have got where he is without the support he has had, both locally through the Great Lake Taupo¯ Hockey Club and also via the Bay of Plenty Hockey Associatio­n, which has continued to help and support him. As part of giving back to the sport, he is currently assisting the coach of the Bay of Plenty under-18 men’s team on their campaign towards the national tournament in Hamilton in July.

He also was a recipient of the Team Taupo¯ scholarshi­p, which mentors local Taupo¯ athletes in their chosen sport, and given funding assistance by the Taupo¯ District Council and Taupo¯ Sports Advisory Council, which helped with the costs involved in playing hockey at a high level.

People told Cam and his mum Sue at the end of his intermedia­te schooling that if he wanted to play hockey at internatio­nal level, he would have to go to school in Hamilton or elsewhere.

But Cam wanted to stay in Taupo¯ and he says his decision to do so has been vindicated.

“I was quite lucky with the group that I went through [school] with, there were lots of us that were keen on hockey and we had pretty good coaches and were pretty motivated.”

He says when young people leave school for work or study, it can be easy to give up sport.

“People move away from playing sport but if you can keep going, you don’t have to play at a high level, but if you can have sport in your life it’s really beneficial.”

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 ?? Photo / Laurilee McMichael ?? Cam Maclean playing for the Waikato University Premier League team. Photo / Kim Wihari Pics Cam Maclean pictured in 2018 when he was named in the Midlands under-18 men’s team.
Photo / Laurilee McMichael Cam Maclean playing for the Waikato University Premier League team. Photo / Kim Wihari Pics Cam Maclean pictured in 2018 when he was named in the Midlands under-18 men’s team.

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