Whanganui Midweek

One way traffic at Country Club

- Kaierau smash Marist to take Paul Mitchell Cup

Surprising­ly it was one-way traffic when top-of-the-table city clubs Kaierau and Marist shared the premier and senior honours at the Devon Road Country Club last weekend.

Whanganui Car Centre Kaierau took Dave Hoskin Carriers to the cleaners, out-scoring the visitors seven tries to one to clinch the Paul Mitchell Cup and Barracks Bar $500 voucher 43-5 in the feature Tasman Tanning premier match.

In the curtain-raiser Ali Arc Marist Celtic, the defending senior grade champions, had thrashed fellow unbeaten Gemini Pepper Kaierau 64-5.

A feature of the Mitchell Cup deciding clash was the dominance of the Kaierau forward pack with all three front rowers, for example, scoring tries with Marist placed under continuous pressure.

The winning backline also impressed which will make for a very interestin­g encounter when Waverley Harvesting Border visit the Country Club on Saturday.

Border, seeking a record fourth successive championsh­ip title this season, scored eight tries including a hat-trick from new winger Luke Myers, and beat McCarthy Transport Ruapehu 46-24 in Ohakune last weekend.

If the Kaiwakas are able to repeat their 18-15 first-round success at Dallison Park it will be the only time they will have completed double success over Border since the South Taranaki club returned to the local union in 2011. Border have won 19 of 24 games since then.

Byford’s Readimix Taihape, 45-10 first-round home victors over Ruapehu, travel to Rochfort Park for the return fixture on Saturday with Marist sitting out the premier bye.

Final Mitchell Cup points — Kaierau 15, Border 14, Taihape 9 (19 points differenti­al), Marist 9 (-6), Ruapehu 1.

Top seniors Celtic (24pts — 228 pts diff) are away to third-placed Bennett’s Taihape (17 — 125) on Saturday and also travelling are Kelso Huntervill­e (16 — 86) v Kaierau (20), Black Bull Liquour Pirates (17 — 104) v Utiku OB (16 — 60), Border (0 — -279) v Tamatau Haha Ratana (16 — 22), McCrea Scanning Counties (5 — -127) v Castleclif­f Hotel

Mustangs (0 — 267) on the Racecourse and J J Walters Marton (4 — -77) v AGC Marist Knights (15 — 32).

Scored against ABs

The only player to have scored a try against the All Blacks at Spriggens Park has died with the sudden death of 72-year-old Ohakune lock Robin Pearson.

He played 38 times for the Butcher Boys between 1972-76 highlighte­d by his memorable try in a spirited 39-21 loss to the All Blacks in the national team’s one and only appearance in Whanganui, played 51 years ago on May 23, 1972.

“New representa­tive Pearson and the promising John Knofflock were a reliable pair of locks” was how the NZ Rugby Almanack summed up the two main Whanganui locks that season.

Fullback Bob Barrell, later to become an All Black trialist in 1976, converted Pearson’s try and landed five penalty goals against the ABs.

The Whanganui team comprised Bob Barrell (Marton OB); Rangi Paki, (Ohakune), Buff Milner (Waiouru), Ray Southam (WHSOB); Geoff Neilson (Bulls), Warren Swain (Tech COB), Doug McKenzie (Tech COB); David Bydder (Marton OB); Maurice Rush (Ohakune, capt), Robin Pearson (Ohakune), John Gray (Marton OB), Inky Wilson (Ohakune); Sandy McNicol (WHSOB), Tom Spry (Karioi), Len Clode (Raetihi).

Whanganui made a great start to the 13-match 1972 season with selectors Brian Murphy, Ron McPhun and Ray Parr producing a team that upset Taranaki 21-19 at Rugby Park on Anzac Day and Wellington 6-4 here as lead-ups to the All Black clash.

Pearson, who made his first class debut on Anzac Day, played in 10 of the union’s 13 fixtures. Whanganui won eight matches with the squad also including players of the calibre of backs Bob Griffiths and David Selby (Kaierau) plus forwards John Transom (Waverley) and Snow Chase (Taihape Pirates).

Came 1973 and Pearson and Rush were the only two players named in all 17 fixtures in the union’s heaviest ever rep schedule.

Ian Strachan replaced Parr on the selection panel with Barrell landing all 17 points (a hat trick of tries, penalty and conversion) in a 17-3 repeat Anzac Day victory, one of seven wins that year.

Whanganui beat the touring Victorian side 22-12 and travelled to the South Island three times with defeats including a heavy 65-16 loss to Canterbury and 30-6 in a Ranfurly Shield challenge against Marlboroug­h.

“Pearson, 21 years of age, and 6ft 4in (Curly) Coleman, 20 years of age (to become a 1974-76 All Blacks trialist), were a promising pair of locks,

the former showing up in strong driving play,” were NZ Almanack comments.

In 1974 the Almanack claimed “Pearson and Knofflock were solid workers”, a season when the Butcher Boys won only four of 13 games with Pearson playing nine times including 16-9 locally on Queen’s Birthday Monday morning against Taranaki.

His last two appearance­s for Whanganui were Anzac Day losses at New Plymouth in 1975 (16-12) and 1976 (18-9).

But with 1972 and 1973 Anzac victories and the 1973 Queen’s Birthday success Pearson had helped Whanganui claim three “Ferdinand” scalps.

During his working life Robin Pearson drove trucks, including with his own company at one stage, and later also operated the coffee caravan at Bulls.

There were more than 250 mourners at his funeral in Palmerston North headed by a large contingent from Ohakune and Raetihi.

Whanganui reps attending included 20-cap 1981-84 All Black and 118 local-cap 1976-86 halfback Andrew Donald, Bob Barrell (1976 NZ trialist and 139-game 1963-77 rep), Tom Spry (1968 NZ trialist, 1971 North Island and 34 times 1970-73 local caps), John Transom (65 rep games 1968-75), Grant Mitchinson HB (53 local caps 1974-78), Bruce Cranston (51 rep games 1981-86), Nick Cranston (29 matches 2009-13 — who was Pearson’s godson and was a pallbearer), former King Country rep John McIlroy (ex-Raetihi player who was second five when Colin Meads’ 1966 Wanganui-King Country combined team upset the British Lions 12-6 before a crowd of 16,000 on Spriggens Park) and new WRFU vice-president Alan Proude.

Mitchell Cup Champions

Kaierau has taken over as the leading Paul Mitchell Cup winner since the turn of the century with a sixth title success at the weekend.

The maroon and golds head off Ruapehu and Ratana with five reigns each, Pirates three, Border twice and Marist and Taihape once each.

Seventeen trophy victors have emerged unbeaten during the first round series since 2000 although three have included a drawn fixture.

The highest average winning scores have been 66-9 by Kaierau in 2005 and 50-7 from Ruapehu in 2010, both during eight-team competitio­ns.

Cup champions and average winning scores since the turn of the century:

2023 — Kaierau (3 wins,1 loss 15-12 v Taihape away). 33-16.

2022 — Taihape (4 wins). 45-15. 2021 — Border (5 wins). 42-13. 2020 — Kaierau (4 wins, l loss 18-36 v Border away). 36-9.

2019 — Ruapehu (7 wins). 45-14. 2018 — Pirates (6 wins, I draw 19-all v Kaierau home). 21-12.

2017 — Border (7 wins, 1 loss 30-22 v Marist away). 39-17.

2016 — Taihape (7 wins). 36-14. 2015 — Pirates (6 wins, 1 loss 19-18 v Taihape away). 30-17.

2014 — Pirates (7 wins, 1 loss 25-20 v Kaierau away). 26-13.

2013 — Ruapehu (7 wins, 1draw 16-all v Pirates away). 43-9.

2012 — Ruapehu (7 wins, 1 loss 16-13 v Pirates home). 29-12.

2011 — Ruapehu (7 wins). 41-13. 2010 — Ruapehu (7 wins). 50-7. 2009 — Kaierau (7 wins). 40-12. 2008 — Marist (7 wins). 39-6. 2007 — Kaierau (7 wins). 38-15. 2006 — Ratana (7 wins). 25-10. 2005 — Kaierau (7 wins). 66-9. 2004 — Kaierau (8 wins). 40-12. 2003 — Ratana (7 wins, 1 draw 15-all v Taihape away). 25-9.

2002 — Ratana (7 wins, 1 loss 17-16 v Taihape away). 39-7.

2001 — Ratana (9 wins). 43-8. 2000 — Ratana (8 wins) 34-11,

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Kaierau and Marist shared the premier and senior honours at the Devon Road Country Club last weekend.
Photo / NZME Kaierau and Marist shared the premier and senior honours at the Devon Road Country Club last weekend.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand