In the professional era of sports the pathways are now very clear, albeit with a narrow lens that is reflected in the drastic dropout of players entering, during and post secondary school. MANUKURA ensures that our students and whanau are connected to the many avenues of promotion in rugby and rugby league, as well as ensuring young and sometimes vulnerable whanau are educated to ensure sound decision making in this sometimes brutal edge of professional sports.
2011 was the inaugural year for Rugby at MANUKURA (TŪ TOA). Starting with one U15 team we established a plan to infiltrate the bureaucracy and politics of local and national schoolboy rugby. Winning our respective local level competition announced our arrival, albeit some good lessons along the way against some of NZ’s premier schools. In 2012, a year wiser we won the Hurricanes U15 tournament and further proclaimed our intentions to establish ourselves as not only a strong competitor nationally, but also to provide a programme determined to not allow rugby to deny our boys the right to a quality education as well as an enriched experience culturally. Raising the academic achievement levels of boys (Maori) continues to be a strong underpinning focus of MANUKURA. MANUKURA rugby took a new turn in 2015 with the re-establishment of our programme, including the introduction of our first ever girls rugby team. With all three boys teams winning their respective grades and our girls signalling their determination to grow, MANUKURA Rugby was determined to ensure that our students could win on and off the field.
With extensive experience as a player at regional, national and international level, MANUKURA are well resourced through the employment of Kristina Sue to drive our girls rugby programme. With consecutive national top 4 placings as well as featuring strongly in the rugby 7’s arena, She continues to guide our girls rugby programme both on and off the field. More than a game, this new facet of MANUKURA reminds us of our responsibility as coaches / teachers of promoting values pertinent to sports but equally our social responsibilities. Over 30 years of coaching at secondary and representative level including some of NZ’s premier rugby schools has reinforced a belief in the need for secondary school rugby to be cognisant and explicit about the importance of balance in terms of education and sporting enjoyment.