The New Zealand Herald

Vatuvei How game saved my life

Manu Vatuvei reflects on 14 years at the Warriors

- David Skipwith

Departing Warrior Manu Vatuvei has achieved so much in league but as he prepares to exit the NRL he remains eternally grateful to the game that saved his life.

The 31-year-old leaves New Zealand on Sunday to join UK Super League side Salford, after a 226-game career that included an NRL grand final appearance along with numerous successes on the internatio­nal stage in 29 tests for the Kiwis and a lone outing for Tonga.

As the Warriors (152) and Kiwis (22) all-time leading try-scorer, and the only player in NRL history to score 10 or more tries in 10 consecutiv­e seasons, there is little more the Otara Scorpions junior could give to the sport.

But it’s what the sport has given to Vatuvei that’s more important: he credits league for transformi­ng his life, by equipping him with personal skills and providing a broader world view that helped him to avoid a path less desired.

“Definitely the game has done a lot for me as a person,” said Vatuvei.

“Just mentally and in knowing how to look after myself and how to deal with things in life and how to treat people well.

“If I was going back to when I was a kid, and all of the things that I used to see, the game kind of saved me from becoming a different person.

“I think I would have been doing bad things and I know I wouldn’t be around too much.

“I think I’d be inside [ in jail] or something. I’m not too sure, but just the way I’d been going as a kid, the game kind of saved me from all of that stuff.”

Since making his debut against Souths in round five of the 2004 season, Vatuvei has endured the highs and lows in a career that tended to epitomise the Warriors’ fluctuatin­g fortunes.

Despite achieving icon status, he remains harshly judged by some league supporters and New Zealand’s wider sporting public, who tend to view his unique skill set from a glass half-full perspectiv­e.

Much maligned for his handling and defensive lapses, Vatuvei often copped the brunt of criticism from fans and media during the Warriors’ darkest times.

But teammates and coaches, past and present, argue the positives in his game always outweighed the nega- tives, while his rare combinatio­n of size, speed and power made him a genuine match-winner.

“He had his moments with mistakes but he got a pretty bad rap at times, especially from some of the Australian media,” says former Warriors coach Ivan Cleary.

“But it was always pretty obvious to everyone at the Warriors that the strengths in his game far outweighed the weaknesses and I think his career has proven that no doubt.”

Many fans will remember the horror night Vatuvei endured against Parramatta in 2007, when he coughed up the ball on several occasions, but Cleary says that traumatic experience helped him to grow as a player and person.

“It might have been a real turning point in his career,” he said.

“What I think he learned to do was not carry baggage around and just get

I know people will say ‘oh, nah, you’ve never let us down’ but I know I have. And I know I have, at some stage in my career, let a lot of people down Manu Vatuvei

on with it and that was the real thing that helped him.

“Because any time he did make a mistake you couldn’t get the ball off him after that and it would just make him want to contribute more.

“And that’s a really great trait to have, for anybody, not just in sport but in life.”

Warriors coach and former New Zealand test coach Stephen Kearney remains one of Vatuvei’s biggest fans and rates his performanc­es in the Kiwis 2014 Four Nations final win and the following year’s Anzac test victory — his last two appearance­s in the black and white — as being among the best he has seen from any wing.

“That’s how I remember him and I think that’s how he should be remembered,” said Kearney.

“I know that a lot of the significan­t victories that New Zealand have had, he’s played a huge part in a lot of them.

“On those big occasions, more than likely he knew when to deliver and that’s what I admire about him.”

Despite the praise that has been sent his way this week, Vatuvei himself appears to be one of his harshest critics.

In an emotional interview on the Warriors website, he took time to apologise for anything he may have done to disappoint the club’s fans, sponsors and his family.

While most followers of the game have forgiven his involvemen­t in the sleeping pills and energy drinks scandal that rocked the club last year, it’s clear he remains bitterly disappoint­ed with his actions that preceded what he describes as “the hardest period of my career”.

Vatuvei and five other Warriors were stood down from representa­tive selection and dropped to reserve grade after admitting to mixing pills with energy drinks during a night out following the team’s embarrassi­ng 42-0 Anzac Day defeat to Melbourne.

“I’ve always tried to make up for it any time if I did something bad. That’s the real reason why I said that [apology] and I truly mean it.

“I know people will say ‘ oh, nah, you’ve never let us down’ but I know I have. And I know I have, at some stage in my career, let a lot of people down, but it was just a way for me to apologise for it. And I’ve done that and can move on now.”

Reflecting on his career, his debut club and test outings, the Warriors 2011 grand final appearance, and test victories over Australia rank among the most special.

Vatuvei remains humble about his achievemen­ts and says his proudest moments in the game centre on his family .

“It’s hard to pick. I’m just proud of myself that I got to where I am right now. From when I first started at the club in 2002 and just growing as a person and going from there.

“My first games for the Warriors and Kiwis will always be memorable because me and my family had worked hard for me to be able to do that. To see it pay off and the smiles on their faces made me feel really good about myself.

“And I’m just proud of what my parents and my family have done for me.”

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 ?? Picture / Photosport ?? Manu “The Beast” Vatuvei is the Warriors (152) and Kiwis (22) all-time leading try-scorer.
Picture / Photosport Manu “The Beast” Vatuvei is the Warriors (152) and Kiwis (22) all-time leading try-scorer.

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