Te Awamutu Courier

Japanese rugby player discusses his big Kiwi experience

Kitamura ever-present for haupō in 2023

- Jesse Wood

Akira Kitamura, 27, recently returned to Osaka, Japan after 11 months of soaking up the New Zealand culture and rugby scene. Kitamura found a flat in Kihikihi and a home away from home at the

haupō Rugby Sports Club thanks to head coach Jordan Farrington.

Several years in the making, Kitamura emailed around the New Zealand provincial unions in 2020 hoping for an opportunit­y to learn to be a rugby coach.

Farrington, an employee for the Waikato Rugby Union at the time, offered him the best option but then Covid hit the planet. Picking up the conversati­on in 2022, Farrington helped make the offer a reality and Kitamura flew over in October.

“The main purpose was to play rugby and to take coaching courses to coach high school students back home,” Kitamura says.

“I was so lucky to get the connection to Jordan.”

Nothing was the same as Japan but the rugby culture was the biggest difference.

“I arrived just before sevens season. I joined the practice and everyone was kind and welcomed me. I was so happy.

“I was so nervous because I had never experience­d being a foreigner and still didn’t have perfect English. So, I couldn’t tell what I thought and I couldn’t understand when people were talking fast. But I could feel that everyone was kind and everyone helped me.

“I feel that New Zealand club teams are really close to the community but in Japan, it’s not like that. We belong to a provincial union but it’s not a community thing. We don’t have our own field, no clubhouse, no van. Being a member of a big community

In Japan, people like to play more structured but in New Zealand, it’s so different. They get the ball and play more freely . . . it’s a lot more physical. Akira Kitamura

is a big difference and I like that.”

A hooker and prop, Kitamura played all 15 games for haupō in 2023, playing almost every minute.

He says that’s more than double the games his team in Japan, Rokko Rugby Football Club, play in a season.

Kitamura said New Zealand club rugby is played with a lot more freedom.

“In Japan, people like to play more structured but in New Zealand, it’s so different. They get the ball and play more freely. Everyone enjoys rugby and it’s a lot more physical.”

A highlight for Kitamura was proving himself on the field — proving that size doesn’t matter.

“I wanted to prove that a small Japanese guy can tackle the bigger boys.”

His experience as a whole was that New Zealanders were very kind.

Rugby teammates and his Lawn and Turf Contractin­g workmates were more than happy to drive him around when he didn’t have a car.

On October 1, Kitamura will have his first match of the season for Rokko with four matches to follow for the As and three games for Bs.

“If we win the local league, we will play in a national club tournament.”

Hoping to return to haupō for the 2024 season, Kitamura said, in the meantime he would miss his rugby family and culture but most of all, L&P.

“I want to thank every Kiwi, even the people at haupō bakery. They’rēO so nice and every morningŌI would stop for a pie and V.

“I really appreciate everyone. Workmates, teammates and especially Jordan Farrington — thank you for making it all possible, a big experience just from one email.”

Kitamura wants to be a coach that provides players opportunit­ies in rugby, which is what Farrington did for him, paying it forward to the next generation.

 ?? Photos / Arthur Uden ?? haupō hooker Akira Kitamura in action against Leamington during 2023.
Photos / Arthur Uden haupō hooker Akira Kitamura in action against Leamington during 2023.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand