marlins2.0
Juniors
- Messages
- 343
Yep I clocked that about a month back.
NRL is on Sky sport 4, but even last week, one had to change the channel to sky sport 1 when the Wahs came on.
Yep I clocked that about a month back.
Wahs Friday night
I’d make those 3 stars into 4 to make the southern cross from the NZ flag and place them n the abdomen, probably loose the shield too.
As much as I don’t mind the name Katipo they are rarer in the South (particularly southern south) and more of a North island Spider

Super Rugby 2026: The exit of Moana Pasifika won’t be the end of the problems for ailing competition https://share.google/dbj9nKonXqFBLIVtt
Anyone got the full article?
Of course, Super Rugby’s obituary has been written countless times before. It has been a great survivor, despite the countless format changes and frequent complaints.‘Since Super Rugby Pacific was formed, we have had only eight different teams in the top six.’
Coach Umaga calls for more support for union in Samoa and Tonga
Super Rugby club’s future in grave doubt beyond this season
Australian Associated Press
Sat 18 Apr 2026 00.43 BST
All Blacks great and Moana Pasifika coach Tana Umaga fears the region’s talent will gravitate to league and derail the Tongan and Samoan Test sides without a Super Rugby presence.
The Super Rugby Pacific franchise is set to be disbanded after ownership on Wednesday confirmed it would not continue funding the “unviable” operation beyond this season.
Introduced in 2022 alongside Fijian Drua, Pasifika was designed to represent Samoa, Tonga and the Cook Islands.
But plans to base the club in Samoa never eventuated and, apart from a single game in Apia and another in Tonga in five seasons, have instead operated in obscurity in Auckland.
A World Rugby package initially funded the franchise before Pasifika Medical Association became a majority owner in 2024.
License holders New Zealand Rugby insist there is hope fresh investors – the operation reportedly costs upwards of $7m annually – can resuscitate the team that sits last after an eighth successive loss, in Sydney to NSW Waratahs on Friday night.
But the likelihood is a 10-team competition without a Pasifika presence for 2027 and Umaga, the first All Black captain of Samoan descent, is concerned.
“We understand why we’re here and for people that look like us, have our background, that’s important,” the coach, set to take up an assistant role for the All Blacks next year, said.
“A professional environment created by us; that means a lot.”
Of particular concern is the future for the Samoan and Tongan Test teams battling to develop into competitive rugby nations.
Many of their emerging players are currently on the Moana Pasifika roster.
“The gap between where we [Samoa and Tonga] are currently, internationally, to where we need to get to, is very big,” Umaga said. “Without Moana to bridge that gap, it’s going to be tough.
“If we keep going the way we’re going, the possibility [is that] they might not make the next cycle of the World Cup.”
Players currently reaping the benefits are devastated by the news and how it will affect others in a similar way.
“This team gave me a chance in Super Rugby and I got to debut for my country, my dad’s country of birth and then I got to go to a World Cup,” said utility back William Havili.
“It is tough because I feel for my Samoan and Tongan brothers that we have in our team.
“They’ve come straight from Tonga or Samoa, but they might not get a chance next year now and there’s some really exciting kids that we have training with us that might just get overlooked now.”
The looming threat is that Pacific players could be lost to rugby league as the rival code continues to strengthen its hold in the region.
“That’s the real risk,” Umaga said. “What is the answer if it’s not us, then what? If we’re not there, then what for Samoa and Tonga?”
As talk naturally turns to the future, players and staff at Moana Pasifika are refusing to give up hope that the team’s license could be snapped up by a new investor dedicated to their cause.
“There’s a glimmer of hope for us and that’s what we’ve got to look forward to and we’ve just got to keep pushing forward,” said Umaga.
“We’re still holding onto hope for Moana for next season, it’s not all doom and gloom,” Moana’s Sydney-born, Tongan flyhalf Patrick Pellegrini said.
“We’ve all said you’ve got to make a decision what’s best for you and your family at the end of the day, whether that’s moving on or holding on.”
Cheers mateThe grim reaper is stalking rugby ... again
![]()
Paul Cully Rugby columnist
April 18, 2026 — 9:30am
Last year, the chair of a struggling Super Rugby club told this masthead: “Everyone wants to go to heaven, but no one wants to die.”
The line referenced his ultimately doomed attempt to get an early release for a player who wanted to move from a stronger club, but it could also apply to Super Rugby as a whole.
![]()
Moana Pasifika performing the Tau Moana for Abraham Pole’s 50th match in March.Getty Images
Everyone wants Super Rugby to thrive, or at least claims to, but no one is prepared to make the necessary sacrifices. (The player in question remains on the bench this weekend for the club that refused to release him, stuck behind a Test player.)
The irony of this stubbornness is that resistance to real change could kill Super Rugby completely. The Grim Reaper has everyone in his sights, not just Moana Pasifika, whose demise was effectively confirmed earlier this week.
In fact, as the Super Rugby heavies prepare to gather in Christchurch next weekend for Super Round, they would be well advised to dismiss the delusion that Moana Pasifika’s exit can be easily overlooked.
If the answer to this latest crisis is a lick of paint – a format change or a 10-team full round-robin – they are kidding themselves.
![]()
Rugby fans at the Crusader’s game against the Reds.Getty Images
While a full home-and-away set of fixtures would improve the competition, the gain would be fractional, not transformational, if the longer season simply produces the same old group of teams in the playoff positions.
Super Rugby is ill because, for the best part of the decade, it has produced only one winner. Furthermore, in its latest iteration, Super Rugby Pacific, six teams are effectively playoff-bound the minute the squads are announced months before a tackle is made.
Here’s something else to consider regarding the connection between fan interest and competition unpredictability.
This week, former Super Rugby side the Stormers announced they were on track to average 27,000 fans for each home game in the United Rugby Championship (URC). Clearly, they aren’t pining for Super Rugby.
![]()
The Crusaders lifting the trophy after winning the 2025 Super Rugby Pacific grand final.Getty Images
Now, we can argue until we’re blue in the face that the Brumbies or Hurricanes would offer the Stormers sterner opposition than the four struggling Welsh sides or Zebre in the URC, but South African fans have clearly been invigorated by being part of a competition they believe their sides can win.
Some South African derbies in the United Rugby Championship have attracted more than 53,000 fans. Those traditional rivalries obviously hold appeal on their own, but they are being played in a competition featuring a genuine race for the coveted top two spots and the top eight as a whole.
We’re not seeing that in Super Rugby, and I make no apologies for sounding like a broken record when I repeat the following fact: since Super Rugby Pacific was formed, we have had only eight different teams in the top six, with Waratahs and the Highlanders sneaking into sixth place on one occasion each.
That’s a death warrant for any sporting competition in this part of the world.
Of course, Super Rugby’s obituary has been written countless times before. It has been a great survivor, despite the countless format changes and frequent complaints.
But the big difference this time is that the Wallabies are effectively in the international wilderness at the moment, ranked No.8 in the world in the same neighbourhood as Italy, Fiji and Scotland.
The All Blacks are No.2, although Scott Robertson’s recent sacking shows that not even NZ Rugby believes this ranking to be accurate.
Related Article
![]()
Veteran class: Why a World Cup winner wants experienced playmaker to kick on at Tahs
The great defence of Super Rugby over the years was that, yes, it was an imperfect competition but tolerable because it produced strong Wallabies, All Blacks and Springboks sides.
If this is no longer true, the competition will be a high-performance failure, not just one that struggles to get fans through the gate (though broadcast numbers have been encouraging in the past few years).
Therefore, the need for change is pressing.
Surely, those who run and play in the competition can now accept that the rinse and repeat nature of Super Rugby Pacific is a fundamental problem.
Earlier this year, Rob Nichol, the powerful head of the New Zealand Rugby Players Association, suggested to the Herald that the Kiwis returning to the NPC might not be such a bad thing. Super Rugby should be careful about which way the wind is blowing.
Watch every match of Super Rugby Pacific live and exclusive on Stan Sport.
Think it’s more of gaining plenty of ground as opposed to taking over from my experience.Question for those on the ground, is the RL taking over RU in NZ noise we are hearing the same noise about AFL taking over RL in Queensland or is it something more?
Does the 'New Zealand national rugby union team' include searches for 'All Blacks' out of interest?
I don't have the ability to like posts for some reason but thanks for thisThink it’s more of gaining plenty of ground as opposed to taking over from my experience.
It’s very different from and ‘us or them’ scenario where it’s one or the other- most fans even if they prefer one will support both. League is definitely the better viewing product at the moment and NZ doesn’t have the economic backing that NRL enjoys which plays into it a lot.
Always wondered how long NZ could compete once the game turned professional and I’m honestly surprised they’ve held on this long.
Even with NRL winning the spectator battleground league still has a lot of ground to gain to get people playing it.
Personally watch and have played both, Warriors are my first love and they trump my viewing but playing I prefer to play union. I’m a prop in union and was a 2nd rower in league, enjoy the set piece side from a playing pov especially at my advancing age.
It does indeed.Does the 'New Zealand national rugby union team' include searches for 'All Blacks' out of interest?
Much as I'd like that to happen, a sellout for a one-off game in a time where the NRL is on an upswing in NZ isn't the be-all and end-all.
Wellington should be the nrls third nz side
Think it’s more of gaining plenty of ground as opposed to taking over from my experience.
It’s very different from and ‘us or them’ scenario where it’s one or the other- most fans even if they prefer one will support both. League is definitely the better viewing product at the moment and NZ doesn’t have the economic backing that NRL enjoys which plays into it a lot.
Always wondered how long NZ could compete once the game turned professional and I’m honestly surprised they’ve held on this long.
Even with NRL winning the spectator battleground league still has a lot of ground to gain to get people playing it.
Personally watch and have played both, Warriors are my first love and they trump my viewing but playing I prefer to play union. I’m a prop in union and was a 2nd rower in league, enjoy the set piece side from a playing pov especially at my advancing age.
