Kangaroos vs Kiwis just a warm up for the Mate Ma’a Tonga clash

By Tim Gore / Expert

This Saturday evening the Kangaroos will clash with the Kiwis in a rugby league Test match. In seasons past I’ve really looked forward to these clashes as they were heated and intense affairs.

However, that hasn’t been the case for years.

Now there is only one show in international rugby league that I really want to see: Mate Ma’a Tonga.

Sure Australia vs New Zealand once was the pinnacle of the sport. I looked forward to the games with great excitement.

My first real attention was captured when Kevin Tamati and Greg Dowling went toe to toe at Lang Park back in 1985. The intensity of that incident highlighted the passion that existed between the sides and how much they wanted to beat each other.

Tamati’s only regret from the incident is not the fight itself, but that it is the thing that most people remember from what was an excellent three Test series.

And he’s right: it’s all I remember.

However, that passion is now nowhere to be seen. International rugby league was subjugated years ago to the behemoth that is State of Origin: its crowds, its ratings, its money. The demise of the Ashes series against Great Britain severely damaged international rugby league too.

For years now international rugby league has been a two-horse race between New Zealand and Australia. The Kangaroos have won every World Cup since 1975, with the exception of the Kiwis’ triumph in 2008. Australia have won three of the four Tri Nations series, with the Kiwis lone win coming in 2005. Australia and New Zealand have split the Four Nations titles three-two respectively since the tournament started in 2009.

Whatever gloss there was on international rugby league had certainly come off over the last two decades. The players know it too. It is far from uncommon for a player to have a Kangaroos jersey but not have played in State of Origin. Once upon a time that was unthinkable.

The idea that the likes of Semi Radradra or James Tamou could play for the Kangaroos was also a bizarre thought. However, now it is arguable that some elite players might view rugby league internationals as non-essential gigs.

Just look at this weekend’s teams that will play at Mount Smart. For a starter the Kangaroos side looks almost totally different from anything we’ve seen in recent years. There will be just 106 caps in the side. Billy Slater and Cam Smith have 86 between them.

Meanwhile, the Kiwis have named 23 year old Dallin Watene-Zelezniak as their captain although it’s only his eighth game for New Zealand and third in the fullback position. While both sides have plenty of really good players there are a couple of players many of us are still in shock aren’t in those teams: Andrew Fifita and Jason Taumalolo.

Those two chose – at great personal expense – to play for the red of Mate Ma’a Tonga. A speck of a Pacific Island nation that has a population of just over 100,000.

The Tongan people may have spread throughout Australia and New Zealand but they are passionate about their heritage and they are passionate about rugby league. And it is that passion that may well reignite international the game.

Jason Taumalolo – a modern rugby league superstar. (NRLPhotos/Scott Davis)

Once upon a time a player from the Pacific Islands would probably try to advance their careers through allegiance to either New Zealand or Australia. That’s no longer the case for those of Tongan heritage who are proudly flocking to the red jersey.

When Jason Taumololo and Andrew Fifita – the very top players in the world in their respective positions – decided to play for Tonga and not New Zealand and Australia respectively (the sides both had previously represented) they gave the 2017 Rugby League World Cup the shot in the arm it desperately needed.

I was extremely excited about how Tonga might perform. And I wasn’t disappointed. They lost only one game of the five they played – the semi final to England in which they went down by two points. Over the tournament they scored an average of 30 points a game, while Australia and the Kiwis (who both flogged easy-beat sides) averaged 34. The Tongan matches were all exciting and hotly contested.

And their crowd was totally and utterly berserk. A sea of fanatical red went everywhere with them and it was superb.

The red wave of Tonga seems to be growing exponentially. Of the 25 Test matches that Tonga has played – the first being in 1995 – they have won 12 of them. Six of those wins have come in their last seven games. Prior to 2017 Mate Ma’a Tonga had a 33 per cent win rate. It is now 50 per cent. It is 85 per cent since last May.

Make no mistake, the change has been the eligible players rallying to their cause. When Tonga were defeated 32-18 by Papua New Guinea in 2014, Sika Manu was the only regular NRL first grade player in the team.

The squad to take on the Kangaroos at Mount Smart Stadium on Saturday 20 October has 19 regular NRL first grade players in it. Six of them have won premierships.

Junior Tatola of Tonga celebrates with his teammates. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

So when the Kangaroos run out onto Mount Smart Stadium next Saturday to face Mate Ma’a Tonga for the first time you can be assured that it will be a screaming full house that will be red from wall to wall.

Further, the Australians will be up against a side who will be absolutely focused and determined – especially Andrew Fifita who will particularly have a point to prove. Australia will have eight players with five or fewer internationals under their belt. That includes their fullback, both centres, hooker and five eighth.

And then there is Felise Kaufusi who played for Mate Ma’a Tonga until just last year. He is bound to get a very hot reception indeed.

While I don’t want to put too much pressure on this game (although I clearly am), the match between the Kangaroos and Mate Ma’a Tonga has the potential to reignite international rugby league in the same way that the first State of Origin transformed the game in Australia.

And I for one hope that it does.

The Crowd Says:

2018-10-16T13:40:32+00:00

Divided Loyalties

Roar Rookie


LImp wristed lol

2018-10-16T13:39:25+00:00

Divided Loyalties

Roar Rookie


If last Saturday's test was the Kangaroos warm up for playing the mighty Tongans, then it was a dismal warm up wasn't it ... What will Tonga do to that limp waisted AUS forward pack ? ????????

2018-10-14T10:05:42+00:00

Lewl

Guest


"the Kiwi side has plenty of born and bred australians " Fact check time: Every member of the 17 that played against Australia on Saturday night was born in New Zealand. Every single one. Australia can't make the same boast (about all 17 being born locally in Australia, not NZ, obviously!).

2018-10-14T05:42:28+00:00

Bernie Vinson

Roar Rookie


Sutton, Cummins or Klein will be referee - what happened to neutral refs in RL interantionals?? So it will still be close.

2018-10-14T05:41:29+00:00

Bernie Vinson

Roar Rookie


Imagine the All Blacks play Australia in Rugby in Sydney and then the following week play Australian/NZ residents team of Fiji descent the next week and the second game is more important and draws a bigger crowd. This is the local equivalent of what is happening in NZ next week. Are you kidding???

2018-10-14T01:44:20+00:00

Bobby Magee

Guest


Spot on Jay...Does the hype live on when Tonga gets thrashed now that the Kiwi team beat Aus?

2018-10-14T01:41:39+00:00

Bobby magee

Guest


With you the truth often is....

2018-10-13T16:21:21+00:00

jay hova

Roar Rookie


So yeah how was that for passion? Kiwi players with tears in their eyes during the anthem ripping and tearing into the best team in the world and coming out on top. Lets see if your saviours tonga get within 20 of the aussies next week. Kangaroos will be out for blood and i can see that mitchell holmes combo causing havoc next week.

2018-10-12T06:24:50+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


It might be true but it’s irrelevant

2018-10-12T06:23:26+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I think we’re pretty much on the same page up to your last paragraph. The best way to share the money to incentivise players to elect tier 2 nations is to lift their profile and performance so they generate their own revenue. What incentive is there for Australia, England and NZ to give up their slice of the pie when it’s going to cost them players? But it will be a long long time (if ever) before the tier 2 nations can compete financially. I’m happy this model is better for the game. I don’t have a problem with say Anthony Milford playing for Samoa if he doesn’t make the Australian side as long as he meets the eligibility rules to play for Samoa. In the modern world the concept of people having a single nationality is becoming less and less relevant and bordering on outdated. With a limited player pool like rugby league it would be daft to force players declare for one nation only.

2018-10-12T03:58:26+00:00

DNZ

Guest


While all those sports have similar eligibility laws, they are also vastly different. Rugby League allows players to switch allegiance when they don't make their preferred side (which is fine as they need to promote the game) but most of us know that it's because the player pool is pretty much limited to a small number of regions. In soccer, players can only change eligibility once, provided they haven't played a sanctioned senior game for their country. Union has similar rules that make it particularly difficult to change sides. I am all for improving the international game and I think the money needs to be better shared to incentivise players choosing international footy on hereditary lines at an earlier age.

2018-10-12T03:55:21+00:00

Ozzie1

Guest


But true.

2018-10-11T19:20:48+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Sorry Simon...wrong person! Let me retract and say that I think Steve’s post about Tonga being a Aus/NZ B team is small minded and reflective of someone who doesn’t understand the eligibility laws. Your comments about eligibility laws - particularly grandparents - are valid but they’re not unique to rugby league. Union, soccer, and a lot of olympic sports all have similar heritage eligibility. But league always gets this “it’s a joke” element about their eligibility laws that other sports don’t get. The only difference league has is the ability for players to switch between tier one and tier two nations. That’s unique because of the small player pool. I think it’s been a master stroke that has absolutely enhanced international rugby league and allowed tier two nations to be more and more competitive. In a perfect world that wouldn’t exist. But in league it’s a brilliant idea and with the small player pool and discrepancy in remuneration it’s addressed a huge issue for international league and worked wonderfully well.

2018-10-11T05:43:55+00:00

Blahblah

Guest


To be fair the kiwis haven't been able to field a full strength side for quite some time.

AUTHOR

2018-10-11T05:14:42+00:00

Tim Gore

Expert


Tamou played for NZ Maori's before he decided to play for NSW and Australia.

2018-10-11T04:35:47+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


The problem with NZ in rugby league is they seem to be more interested in Qld in rugby league, and they connect that with the All Blacks in rugby. This attitude of play for Qld and the All Blacks and then look at the poor support for the NZ rugby league team. Tonga on the other hand , in rugby they have to watch their players play for other international teams, and they get their third or fourth best line up if they are lucky. So the Tongan rugby league team is the only time they get some sort of shot at glory. Thats why Tonga is more important than Qld B/NZ rugby league team at the moment.

2018-10-11T04:11:31+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


All good points. None of which were expressed in your original post effectively calling the Tongans an Aus/NZ B team. Which by itself as it was in your original comment is an extremely small minded view.

2018-10-11T03:40:46+00:00

Mtngry

Guest


Been some pretty good Rugby League on over this week at the emerging nations RLWC. The more teams in World RL the better.

2018-10-11T03:15:43+00:00

Justin Kearney

Roar Rookie


I hope you sort this problem out.

2018-10-11T03:08:39+00:00

Simon

Guest


Whilst the laws may be understood it doesn't mean a person has to agree with them. I'm not entirely sure it's small minded. It's an interesting discussion whether international sport should be selected on race or nationality. The problem I have with eligibility laws is the assumption that a person with a grandparent of a particular nation has more affinity with that nation as opposed to a person with a great grandparent of a nationality.

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