NZ Warriors captain Roger Tuivasa-Sheck at the NRL season launch event. (Photo: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)
NZ Warriors captain Roger Tuivasa-Sheck at the NRL season launch event. (Photo: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

SportsMarch 12, 2021

Every NRL team, ranked (plus all their latest scandals revealed)

NZ Warriors captain Roger Tuivasa-Sheck at the NRL season launch event. (Photo: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)
NZ Warriors captain Roger Tuivasa-Sheck at the NRL season launch event. (Photo: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

What has more drama, excitement and intrigue than the Bachelor, Married at First Sight and the Amazing Race combined? That’s right, it’s the NRL. Warriors-stan Justin Latif gives his season predictions and a run down on the latest dramas encircling each club. 

The NRL season kicked off last night, the start of what promises to be another 29 weeks of gloriously brutal, emotionally charged, gladiatorial battle.

And beyond the pitch, there are bound to be enough dramatic storylines that play out between players, coaches, their families and fans to fill up the scripts on any daytime soap opera. Drug scandals, brawls, arrests and jilted lovers all featured during this off-season. But yesterday, all the off-field shenanigans of these highly paid young men became a distant memory (apart from those still awaiting scheduled court appearances), as the focus returned to watching 26 players chase a Steeden ball around a 68m by 100m grassy field in some suburban backblock of Sydney.

It’s worth noting that the women’s four-team competition, which doesn’t start till October, is just as tough, given the players are paid considerably less, as well as having less time and resources to prepare for what is an equally brutal competition. 

So who has a chance this year in the men’s comp – and beyond the NZ Warriors, who are the teams to watch, particularly from a Kiwi perspective? Here’s my totally unscientific predictions of who’ll finish where at the end of the season, from last to first place, as a well as a round-up of some of the latest scandals. 

The 16 NRL team captains pose during the 2021 NRL premiership season launch (Photo: Spencer/Getty Images)

16. St George Illawarra Dragons

It will be all about rebuilding for the Dragons this year, after a stuttering 2020 saw the club sack talismanic coach Paul McGregor, replacing him with ex-Broncos coach Anthony Griffin. Griffin, who hasn’t had a head coaching gig since 2018, needs to find a way to get former Broncos stars Corey Norman, Ben Hunt and Andrew McCullough to play like they did for their old club. Unfortunately for the supremely talented Norman, he will miss the opening match after getting suspended for his role in a late night street fight while defending a friend who was being racially abused in Cronulla. 

15. Brisbane Broncos

Oh how the mighty have fallen. This once-great club finished last in 2020, sacking their coach Anthony Seibold, and off-loading a number of star players. Before Seibold’s departure, he was the subject of wild and unsubstantiated rumours about himself and his family, leading Seibold to employ European cybercrime experts to investigate their source. Despite Seibold’s departure, the Broncos’ latest off-season hasn’t gone much better, as reports of punch-ups between staff continue to plague the club. 

14. Manly Sea Eagles

The former club of NZ reality TV regular Matthew Ridge finds itself in the unenviable position of being very reliant on a very injury-prone superstar by the name Tommy “Turbo” Trbojevic. The brilliant fullback, with chronic hamstring issues, pulled a muscle in a “bathroom” accident. However, it didn’t help that footage also emerged of him racing a member of the public following a Saturday night drinking session. Both the club and Trbojevic deny his injury was caused by the late-night high jinks, but it’s not a great look. Fun fact: the club’s tough-as-nails five-eighth Kieran Foran is the son of Air New Zealand chief executive Greg Foran.

13. Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs

This is a club stacked with stars of the future who probably need another year of development. However, with newly appointed Trent Barret as coach, they are expected to improve quickly. One interesting storyline to follow is the falling out Barret has apparently had with his old mate Ivan Cleary since leaving the Penrith Panthers, where the pair worked together, which is being exacerbated by Barret trying to sign Panthers players to his new club. 

12. North Queensland Cowboys

This talented side has the added bonus of playing in the uninhabitable sun-drenched climes of Townsville. They also pinched the Warrior’s superb interim coach Todd Payten. However, the club relies heavily on the enigmatic Michael Morgan and inconsistent Valentine Holmes, who were both well below their best last year. If these two can rediscover the kind of form they showed in 2015 and 2016, maybe they’ll make their way into the top eight. And the only drama swirling around the club of late, is a bizarre story involving the club’s doctor, who allegedly provided anti-anxiety medicine to the husband of a club employee, after the man found text messages about a toilet tryst between his wife and a Cowboys player. 

11. Cronulla Sharks

The Sharks are the competition’s perennial battlers, who have been blighted by sex scandals, drug cheating allegations and money woes in the past, but seem to have avoided the gossip pages in recent years. This season, with an ageing forward pack and the absence of their Kiwis’ halfback Shaun Johnson to a long-term injury, I think they’ll struggle to score points, and as a consequence fall outside the top eight. 

10. West Tigers

The Tigers, led by Kiwis’ coach Michael Maguire, have assembled a quality side, with strike power across their line-up. However, question marks remain over young halfback Luke Brooks, whose slated potential to be one of the competition’s best is yet to materialise. If he plays well most weeks, then a playoff spot beckons, otherwise, it might be another disappointing season for the western Sydney-siders. What’s even more disappointing has been a recent homophotic social media post made by Tigers’ player Shawn Blore, leading Auckland trans activist Jaycee Tanuvasa calling out the player to publicly apologise. 

9. Newcastle Knights

This prediction may surprise some, given the talent filling up the Knights’ roster, but I suspect the Mitchell Pearce scandal over the summer may have rocked the club more than we realise. Pearce, the club’s pivotal halfback, was forced to relinquish his captaincy after a sexting scandal involving a club employee, which resulted in his wedding being cancelled. It’s also rumoured Pearce broke his thumb in a street fight. Such a disruptive off-season is bound to impact the rest of the club. 

Canberra’s Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, Melbourne’s Brandon Smith and South Sydney’s Benji Marshall are Kiwis to keep an eye on this season. (Photo: Getty Images)

8. New Zealand Warriors

In some ways it’s hard to justify this prediction, given all the external factors detracting from the Warriors’ chances. The club is currently based out of Terrigal on New South Wales’ central coast, due to there being no two-way travel bubble between Australia and New Zealand. The side isn’t expected to play at home until July 2, which will be 673 days since their last home game. But given the number of savvy off-season buys, this could be “the year” (we do say this every year though) we see the side return to the playoffs. One other factor in the Warriors’ favour is having 14 players on the final year of their contracts. Hopefully the incentive of wanting to prove their market value will ensure a number of players produce career-best form. 

7. Gold Coast Titans

With rugby league legend Mal Meninga pulling the strings, the Titans have assembled a stellar line-up of up-and-coming super stars, namely Tino Fa’asuamaleaui and David Fafita. This won’t be their year to win it all, but they certainly have the firepower to beat most teams and with highly rated Justin Holbrook as coach, many are expecting big things from this regular under-achiever. The club will also be sweating on the NRL’s latest salary cap investigation into its dealings, and hoping Fafita can stay out of any further off-field trouble, after he was caught trespassing on private property late last year. 

6. Parramatta Eels

For whatever reason, the Eels seem to melt under the pressure of Sydney’s media spotlight more than most. So despite dominating large chunks of last season, the boys from Parramatta fell away badly towards the end of last year, while still finishing a credible third. Scandal never seems to be too far away from this club, and currently star centre Michael Jennings is fighting allegations he used performance-enhancing drugs. But even without Jennings, the side still has one of the NRL’s best coaches and is full of quality players who should be able to guide this team back into playoff contention. 

5. Penrith Panthers

The Panthers won an incredible 17 games in a row last year and fell agonisingly close in the grand final. The pressure to repeat this stellar season might be too much for this young side. Another difference from last season is that the club was rocked by off-field scandals during their 2019/2020 off-season, but this year they’ve only had one player embroiled in drug-related dramas. Given their incredible success last year, the lack of disruption this time around might have a counter-intuitive effect on the side. 

4. Sydney RoostersThe biggest story at the Sydney Roosters this off-season was whether a 17-year-old school kid will be allowed to play for them. Under current rules, Joseph Suaalii is not able to play until he’s 18, but such is his talent, the club has applied for an exemption for him to suit up for the first grade team. The club has even employed the services of a former junior phenom by the name of Sonny Bill Williams to mentor Suaalii. Regardless whether the monstrous winger does play or not, the Roosters already boast a side dripping with talent and should be a lock for one of the top four positions. 

3 – Melbourne Storm

Despite winning the competition last year, I can’t help thinking that losing the G.O.A.T. to retirement (Greatest Of All Time – Cameron Smith) will have a discernible impact and they’ll only get to third on the table, which would be seen as a failure by Storm standards. Key to their success is Waiheke-born Brandon Smith. Smith, whose parents were cleaners, moved to North Queensland as a 14-year-old to pursue his NRL dream. While he’s a larrikin off the field, on it he’s the ultimate competitor, who plays multiple positions and has the potential to drive the Storm back into another grand final. If he stays fit, alongside fellow party-boy Cameron Munster, watch out. 

2. Canberra Raiders

The Raiders have gone for an interesting recruitment strategy of picking a lot of Kiwis and British players. Combine that with Ricky Stuart’s street-fighter mentality to coaching, and you have a team that loves to be the underdog and uses that tag to great advantage. They also possess a number of young players entering their prime. I predict they will finish second, and potentially win the grand final. The only major scandal at the club this off-season was four development players had to be sacked after getting into a drunken brawl and then lying about it. 

1. South Sydney Rabbitohs

The Rabbitohs have been building for a few years now and with Wayne Bennett in his second year at the club, they are ripe for taking that next step towards being title favourites. They also have great depth, so injuries won’t hurt them, like other clubs. The biggest scandal surrounding the club was the potential for their former captain Sam Burgess to return this season. But following a positive cocaine test and being sentenced to a two-year community corrections order after a fiery run-in with his ex-wife’s father, the club might be relieved he’s decided to take up a role on an Australian reality TV show instead. If the Rabbitohs win it will also deliver the best fairy-tale finish for New Zealand rugby league fans, as Whakatāne-born Kiwis legend Benji Marshall is hoping he can win a second premiership in his last year in the NRL.

Keep going!
Jane Tehira (Photo: Scratched)
Jane Tehira (Photo: Scratched)

SportsMarch 11, 2021

Every New Zealand sports fan should know the name Jane Tehira

Jane Tehira (Photo: Scratched)
Jane Tehira (Photo: Scratched)

In the 1950s she was one of New Zealand’s greatest athletes, representing the country in three different sports – but even then, few knew her name.

Watch more episodes of Scratched: Aotearoa’s Lost Sporting Legends here.

Jane Tehira’s great-grandchildren are admiring old photos taken during her playing days. Her great-grandson spots her in one image showing a group of hockey players, airborne at the end of a haka, which Tehira led at Eden Park. “Found her,” he says. “She’s so recognisable.”

“Yep. I’m number four,” Tehira adds. It’s the same number her grandson, former Tall Black Lindsay Tait, wore. Tehira may be instantly recognisable to her family, but sadly not to many others.

In the 1950s the now 92-year-old was one of New Zealand’s greatest athletes, dominating the national scene and becoming the first woman to represent the country in three sports – basketball, softball and hockey.

Growing up on a farm in Maungatapere, north of Whangarei, Tehira and her siblings spent hours looking for manuka branches with the right shape to make hockey sticks. “We used to climb up the tree and get the right angle or we’d go into the bush.”

When she was 17, Tehira and her family moved down to Auckland. In the city she honed her basketball and softball skills at the Akarana Sports Association, based in the Māori Community Centre opposite Victoria Park. She also played netball and rugby for Akarana, juggling all her sporting commitments with her job at a shoe factory.

Akarana dominated the regional competitions and when Tehira represented Auckland, the results were much the same. “We always won. Auckland always beat most of the teams,” she says from her daughter’s home in New Lynn. Playing for the Auckland basketball side, Tehira won North Island championships in six consecutive seasons from 1951-1956. They were crowned national champions in 1954. Tehira also went on to clinch national titles in 1953 and 1954 for the Auckland women’s hockey team.

Softball Jane Tehira (left) (Photo: Scratched)

Tehira was always on the go. When the opportunity arose to compete in any game, she was there despite her many responsibilities. “I was always the captain of the different teams,” she remembers. “But I’d say to them ‘I don’t want to be captain for every team because I haven’t got the time to’. I had to do other things too.”

There weren’t many women playing sports in those days. But one thing that stood out was Tehira’s natural ability in all sports. Her daughter Moana can attest to this. “I can remember going to hockey and we would watch her play, she used to play fullback. You just couldn’t get past her no matter what. She had a nose for the ball. She was like a big blockade that used to be down the back of the field.”

While Tehira’s achievements, which include winning seven national titles across her three respective codes, are impressive, she doesn’t consider them anything special. “Well, it was just something to do I suppose,” she says. “Something to do other than just sit at home.”

Tehira’s flair for sports flows through the branches of her family tree. She’s part of a sporting legacy that spans three generations – her brother Henry played league for the Kiwis, New Zealand Māori, and Auckland, and her sister Sylvia played for Akarana Basketball and represented Australia in athletics and basketball. Sylvia was at one point a world record holder in the javelin.

Carrying on the family tradition, Tehira’s grandson Lindsay was part of the Tall Blacks team that won a silver medal at the 2006 Commonwealth Games. He is also a seven-time NZNBL champion and three-time MVP.

Basketball Jane Tehira (second from left) (Photo: Scratched)

For Tehira, family was the only thing more important than sports. “She would cook, clean and so she would buy material and make us all the same shorts and tops,” says daughter Tui. She did all those things, but she still played sport.”

As Lindsay shares memories of his grandmother, he remarks that there is “lots of fuss today”. Neither Tehira nor her family are used to the attention. For her entire career, and long after, Tehira didn’t get the recognition she deserved. It wasn’t until 2006 that she was inducted into the Māori Sports Hall of Fame. She is still not in the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame.

“It’s a shame that maybe she didn’t get some of [this] earlier when it could’ve all been taken in, but knowing my grandma, the trophy would be sitting under a bed somewhere,” says Lindsay.

Tehira is now old enough to watch her great-grandchildren play basketball together. Inside at the dinner table, the children crowd around her, mesmerised by the old photos. Soon, with any justice, it won’t just be Jane Tehira’s family that recognise her.