New cricket scholarship for Maori

New Zealand Cricket has announced it will launch a Maori Cricket Scholarship to help New Zealand's most promising Maori players.

The scholarship known as Kirikiti Aotearoa Karahipi o Te Tohu Taakaro o Aotearoa Scholarship is a partnership between New Zealand Cricket and the Maori Sports Award.

The 2015 recipient is Zak Gibson, a promising 18-year-old fast bowler from Te Awamutu.

New Zealand Cricket chief executive David White congratulated Gibson on being the first recipient of the new initiative that he hopes will help dispel the notion cricket is not popular among Maori.

'The reality is that Maori have a long and distinguished history in cricket, but it is simply not that widely known,” David says.

'Recent Maori high achievers in international cricket have included Shane Bond, Trent Boult, Kyle Mills, Suzie Bates, Sara McGlashan, Ben Wheeler, Doug Bracewell, Lea Tahuhu and umpire Kathy Cross — and there are many more names we can reel off from decades past.

'Even when the New Zealand White Ferns played their first ever Test match in 1935, the team included two Maori Test players — the late Agnes Ell and Hilda Buck, of Ngati Mutunga descent.”

The scholarship was presented as part of the 25th annual Maori Sports Awards, held at Turangawaewae Marae last night.

The Awards also saw three of New Zealand's international cricketers acknowledged with White Ferns captain Suzie Bates (Ngai Tahu) a finalist for Maori Sportswoman of the Year, Black Caps Trent Boult (Ngati Porou and Te Arawa) a finalist for Maori Sportsman of the Year and former Black Caps bowling coach Shane Bond (Ngai Tahu) a finalist in the Maori Sports coach of the year category.

Zak, who represents Waikato Valley at District Association level, has been a member of development teams in the Northern Districts High Performance programme since he was at primary school, and has represented Northern Districts at National Under-19 level.

The 18-year-old has also stepped up for Northern Districts A this month, is a member of Northern Districts' ground-breaking Northern Maori team and is in contention to make the New Zealand Under-19s squad heading to the ICC Under-19 World Cup, to be held in January and February 2016 in Bangladesh.

Of Ngati Raukawa descent, Zak grew up playing club cricket and rugby from a young age in Te Awamutu and was a member of the Chiefs Rugby under-18s last year, until he broke his collarbone after being tackled by Super Rugby prop Taniela 'the Tongan Thor” Tupou.

'Up until then I was juggling cricket and rugby, and the injury made the choice clearer for me this year,” Zak says.

'I'm very grateful for this scholarship, my parents are stoked and it's good to see Maori cricket being recognised."

Records reveal that Maori have played cricket in New Zealand since the early 19th Century — as early as 1832, but David says New Zealand Cricket is committed to improving its pathways for Maori, as part of its new strategic plan to build participation in the wake of the 2015 ICC Cricket World Cup.

It's the first time in the 25-year history of the Maori Sports Awards a cricket scholarship has been presented, and Dick Garratt, chief executive of Te Tohu Taakaro o Aotearoa Charitable Trust that runs the annual awards, says he was delighted by the initiative.

'No matter what code, the key is that we encourage as many young Māori as possible into the positive and healthy pathways that sport provides.”

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11 comments

Utterly shameful

Posted on 29-11-2015 14:46 | By How about this view!

For many years we have had youngsters and their very enthusiastic parents around the B.O.P. region, roaming the country and giving of themselves in time and effort for the love of their sport and to keep teams going (Particularly young girls, who often have to play for boys teams for lack of competition) and we suddenly start handing out financial support and scholarships based on RACE????? THIS ISN'T ABOUT SPORT!


Carcass

Posted on 29-11-2015 16:02 | By Carcass

All my efforts were in vain taking kids around Auckland to play cricket umpiring going to meetings at Eden Park supporting Auckland kids cricket now this separatisim in cricket


Overit

Posted on 29-11-2015 16:47 | By overit

Its not cricket eh.


NZ today

Posted on 29-11-2015 16:57 | By Fonzie

Every organisation in this country now has to have a seperate section that hands out support to Maori and yet we still hear how Maori are disadvantaged and anyone who says otherwise is racist


shame

Posted on 29-11-2015 17:18 | By Captain Sensible

Shame on whoever is responsible for yet another race based handout...that incidentally discriminates against 85% of kiwis.


Overit

Posted on 29-11-2015 20:41 | By overit

I used to watch this sort of thing on Code on Maori TV. Pulling out the Maori descendent players to interview-hey its a Team Effort no matter what ethnicity.


SEPARATISM and WORSE

Posted on 29-11-2015 20:51 | By ROCCO

Welcome to NZ sport embodying all that was wrong with South Africa- its promoting aparthied in reverse. FITH


last game

Posted on 29-11-2015 21:27 | By Captain Sensible

I have watched my last cricket game. I do not support race based sports so I shall never be seen on the sidelines again. Shame.


Well that's good !

Posted on 30-11-2015 06:50 | By groutby

Now that David White has informed us that Maori do in fact participate in cricket, the country can indeed rest easy in this knowledge. Since we "live as one" I thought that emphasis and promotion would normally be given to whichever NZ'er showed promise in his/her field to perhaps represent our country regardless of ethnicity? Look, good on all sportspeople for having the drive and ambition to wish to represent NZ, but as long as a seperatist culture is promoted by many organisations, how can we "live as one"?, hence I guess comments as such posted by other writers on this article.Perhaps it may have been advisable to promote this as a way of staying/getting fit and having regular exercise to help stem the obesity "epidemic" we are continually being told about, rather than the final sentence tacked on the end for I would suspect "PC" reasons?


seesee

Posted on 30-11-2015 09:22 | By SeeSee

Surely this can't be called reverse racism, could it


is it cricket

Posted on 01-12-2015 12:45 | By surfsup

If the powers that be determine that we will have separate maori sports teams then introducing a separate roll for sportspeople similar to the general and maori electoral role should not be a problem. This would allow the sportsperson to decide which role they registered for and this would be used for all the award ceremonies that take place thus ensuring that any maori could only be nominated on one roll. Racist? not at all simply ensuring that a level playing field( no pun) is there for everybody, at the moment maori can be nominated for a sports award twice. imagine the outcry if a non maori scholarship was introduced. Susan we need you.


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