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Te Atatu Roosters

NZ rugby league club, based in Te Atatū


NZ rugby league club, based in Te Atatū

The Te Atatu Roosters is a rugby league club based in Te Atatū, New Zealand. They participate in the Auckland Rugby League competition. They currently have 25 teams across schoolboy, junior and senior grades. The Roosters premier team is in the 2024 season Fox Memorial Shield competition after qualifying from the 3 match qualifying competition.

Home ground

The Roosters play at the council owned Jack Colvin Park located on the Te Atatū Peninsula, next to the North Western Motorway. Junior teams also play at Te Atatū South Park.

History

The Te Atatū club was founded in 1955 after the opening of the North-Western motorway led to suburban growth in the Te Atatū area. The first team was a 7-aside team formed to represent Te Atatū North and South. They initially had to wear Glenora jerseys (who were a club based in Glen Eden) and their first ever game was against Wesley at Fowlds Park. The first training area was in a cow paddock on Edmonton Rd, before they were later able to move to Ramlea Park.

In 1961 Te Atatū won their first schoolboy championship in their Te Atatū colours. In 1960–61 Te Atatū Peninsula Park was developed on Neil Avenue and in 1965 they fielded their first senior side in the Senior B grade. The ground is still commonly referred to as 'Neil Ave'.

In the late 1960s work began on the current club rooms on Toru Avenue. They were built on Crown (council) land arranged with Waitematā Mayor Jack Colvin after 3 club members were elected to the WCC Parks Committee. However, before the club rooms could be built the land needed to be prepared. The land was in such poor condition that no other clubs had bothered applying for it, and life member Ken Pitman described the task of preparing it thus: "What a mess, over six acres of swamp, gorse and pine trees, five feet thick. Well we were all enthusiastic and silly enough to attempt the impossible. We chopped, scrounged, swore, drank and burned our way through the lot". The council also helped by putting a culvert under the motorway and realigned the creek which ran through the park. Eventually the playing fields were established and work could begin on the club rooms.

The club rooms took over 6 years to complete with the foundation stone being laid on 17 December 1962, with the official opening on 19 April 1969 by MP Martin Finlay. Just as the land was prepared solely by club members, so to was the club room built completely by members including Ken Pitman, Tom Hetherington, Ted Quedely, Eric Draper, Ernie Rainbow, Morrie Ramsey, Peter and Bis Pitman, Buddy Jones, Harry McWilliams, Jim Denyer, Gordon McCarten, Pat Fairweather, Don McMeekin, Murray Hill and Ian Pattulo.{{cite news | access-date = 7 July 2015}}

By the 1970s Te Atatū were becoming more competitive on the field at senior level and completed wins over all of the top clubs over a period of time, including Ellerslie Eagles, Mt Albert Lions, Glenora Bears, Richmond Bulldogs and Ponsonby Ponies. At this time the club also began producing NZ international quality players such as Dennis Williams who aged only 18 famously scored a brilliant individual try with his first touch of the ball in his debut test versus Great Britain, along with John Smith and John Wilson. In 1973 they won the Senior Competition and the Phelan Shield. In the same year they played the first ever Australian Aboriginal rugby league team in a pre season game, losing 13–17.{{cite news | author-link = Australian Associated Press | access-date = 10 August 2010}} | access-date = 30 July 2019}}

Around this time other branches of the club were formed at Ranui (which later led to the formation of the Waitemata Seagulls), and Massey. Teams playing at Moire Park in Massey were known as Te Atatū Massey. The nickname 'Roosters' was adopted along with the Eastern Suburbs (now Sydney Roosters) style jersey. In 1976 they turned 21 yrs old and celebrated with a ball at the Mandalay in the city. In 1979 club members looking for a summer activity to continue bonding and to develop player skills formed the Te Atatū Roosters Softball Club. The softball club has since relocated to the Massey Rugby Club and plays at Rosedale Park on Auckland's North Shore, but has retained the name Roosters Softball Club.

In the 1980s the club finally began experiencing the success on the field they had sought after for many years. In 1986 they were runners up in the Fox Memorial Shield to Mt Albert losing 31-4 but weeks later were crowned National Club Champions after defeating the same opposition 36-10. Then in 1988 they won the Fox Memorial Shield beating local rivals Glenora 22–16 in the final at Carlaw Park and a month later won the National Club title for the second time by again defeating Glenora at Eden Park as curtain-raiser to the Kiwis – Kangaroo World Cup final.{{cite news | author-link = Te Atatu Roosters Facebook page | access-date = 6 July 2015}}

In 2016 Te Atatū formed their first women's premier team. They played six seasons and won the 2nd division title twice (2016 and 2019). They are not fielding a women's team in 2022 however.

Titles

Te Atatu had a historic year in 1986 when they won the Rukutai Shield for winning the minor premiership and making the Fox Memorial grand final (both for the first time) where they lost to the Mt Albert Lions 31–4. A month later they had revenge when they beat the Lions by 36–10 to claim their first National Club title at Carlaw Park, defeating Randwick and Upper Hutt along the way.

In 1990 they again made the Fox Memorial final but lost to a Tawera Nikau inspired Otahuhu Leopards. In 1993 they made the Fox Memorial final for the 4th time but were again defeated by the Northcote Tigers 29–10.

In 2005 the Roosters celebrated their 50th Jubilee. In 2007 Te Atatu won the Roope Rooster (which by this time had become a trophy the winning team defended on their home ground). They defeated Mt Albert to win it and defended it for 3 matches before losing it to the Richmond Bulldogs.

The club then rebuilt in 2015 by appointing Revell Neil and bringing in many new players to the premier team. This saw a massive reversal in results and over the 2015 and 2016 seasons they won a remarkable 35 games, with 2 draws and just 3 losses. In 2015 they had their 60th Jubilee which featured a celebratory match with local rivals Glenora and was won by Te Atatu 38–28.[[File:Tuteauru Maipi scoring for Te Atatu, 21 May, 2022.jpg|right|thumb|Tuteauru Maipi scoring for Te Atatu, 21 May 2022]] They also won the Phelan Shield in this time. In 2016 they won the Phelan Shield again along with promotion back to the Fox Memorial when they beat the Bay Roskill Vikings 31–22 in the Sharman Cup final. In 2017 they were competitive in many matches but failed to convert this into wins. They were relegated back to the Sharman Cup and in 2018 were forced to rebuild after losing many of their players to other teams. Former Te Atatu player Lawrence Tagaloa was appointed head coach. They finished the season with a 7–7 record and lost to New Lynn in the Sharman Cup championship final. 2019 saw another change with new coaches (Keith Hanley and Phil Gordon) appointed and many new additions to the team. The 2022 season saw Phil Gordan in charge again as head coach after he had assumed sole responsibility in 2021. Te Atatu had one of their better seasons for over a decade and qualified 3rd in section 2 which included 10 sides with a 7 win, 2 loss record. They then thrashed Mangere East 62-6 in the quarterfinal before losing to eventual finalists Glenora 26-12. In 2023 they finished 8th out of 14 teams in the Fox Memorial competition. They beat Glenora 32-6 in the semi final of the Plate competition before losing to Mount Albert in the final 22-16.

In 2024 Te Atatu had a new coaching regime which changed several times during the season before settling on Lila Vaivai. They won the Denis Williams Cup from Glenora for the first time in over a decade and then on July 6 they defeated Point Chevalier Pirates 26-22 to win the Roope Rooster trophy for the first time since 2006.

YearTrophy
1968Gillette Cup
1970Sharman Cup
1973Sharman Cup
1974Sharman Cup & Gillette Cup
1976Sharman Cup
1978Sharman Cup
1986Rukutai Shield, National Club Championship & Kiwi Shield
1988Fox Memorial, National Club Championship & Kiwi Shield
2007Roope Rooster
2015Phelan Shield
2016Phelan Shield & Sharman Cup
2024Dennis Williams Cup, Roope Rooster

Current Season and Season Finishing Positions

Men's Season Records 1988-94, 2003, 2009-2024

YearCompetitionPldWDLPFPAPDPtsPosition/Notes
1988Lion Red Rukutai Shield1490529630298.01%183rd of 8
Playoffs22002216--W v Glenora in GF 22-16
1989Lion Red Rukutai Shield14716373272137.1%154th of 8
Playoffs21013648--W v Otahuhu 26-24 in minor SF, L v Mangere East 12-30
1990Lion Red Premiership Div 121122742143097.9%262nd of 10
1990Lion Red Premiership Div 121122742143097.9%262nd of 10
Playoffs21013648--W v Northcote in Major SF 22-20, L v Ōtāhuhu in Grand Final 14-28
1991Lion Red Premiership Div 118701135039788.2%147th of 10
1992Lion Red Premiership Div 1181305399316126.3%263rd of 10
Playoffs2002??--L v Ōtāhuhu in SF, L v Northcote in SF
1993Lion Red Premiership Div 118918378342110.5195th of 10
Playoffs43019571--W v Māngere East 31-8, W v Manukau 22-6, W v Richmond 32-28, L v Northcote 10-29 in the Grand Final
1994Lion Red Premiership Div 122121950748525104.5%5th of 12
Playoffs1001??--L v City-Pt Chevalier in a midweek playoff after they tied for 5th
1995Lion Red Rukutai Shield2491145326342383.9%9th of 13
1996Lion Red Preliminary Round133010266317683.9%12th of 14
1997Lion Red Super 1018511239455571%119th of 10
1998Lion Red Super 1018401436761759.5%88th of 10
1999Rukutai Shield Super 1222611546568667.8%139th of 12
2000Mad Butcher Fox Memorial Top 8141004446326136.8%203rd of 8
2000Playoffs21014028142.9%-W 8-24 v Northcote in Minor SF, L 16-20 v Richmond in Major SF
2001Mad Butcher Fox Memorial Top 814201238545285.2%68th of 8
2003Sharman Cup14707---144th of 10, L v Northcote in elim SF 18-20
2004Sharman Cup14806434301144.2%164th of 8
2004Playoffs32016955--W 28-10 v Glenora in Minor Final, W 21-16 v Howick in Major SF, L 20-24 v Manukau in Final
2009Fox Qualification7403---84th of 8, Qual for Fox Memorial
2009Fox Memorial143011---67th of 8, Zensei Inu (ARL Standoff of the Year), Zac Tippins (ARL Hooker of the Year), Stephen Shennan (ARL Rookie of the Year)
2010Fox Qualification7403228158+14484th of 8, Qualified for Fox Memorial
2010Fox Memorial14806412332+124164th of 8, W v Howick 26-8 in Minor Final, L v Otahuhu 14-28 in prel final
2011Sharman Cup14716412294+140154th of 8, L v Mangere East 16-19 in minor final
2012Sharman Cup18729379524-145167th of 10
2013Sharman Cup184113412533-12199th of 10
2014Sharman Cup182016290723-52349th of 10, Sala Falelua (Sharman Cup Player of the Year), Bill Norrie (ARL Volunteer of the Year)
2015Sharman Cup171511826277+54941st of 15, W v Ellerslie 26–22 in minor final, W v Bay Roskill 32–26 in major final, L v Richmond 16–45 in GF
2016Sharman Cup171510706186+52029*1st of 15, * -2 pts for a rule breach, L v Waitemata 14–21 in QF, W v Hibiscus Coast 54–18 in SF, W v Ellerslie 42–12 in major final, W v Bay Roskill 31–22 in GF
2017Fox Memorial183114289510-221710th of 10, Johnny Falelua (ARL Rookie of the Year)
2018Sharman Cup15618308285+231410th of 14, W v Pakuranga 30–6 in SF, L v New Lynn 24–29 in GF
2019Fox Qualifiers121111548179+322241st of 13, Qualified 1st including 10 game winning streak (rounds 3-12)
2019Fox Championship7502214140+74101st of 8, Qualified 1st, W v Papakura in Major SF 23-22 (aet, L v Papakura in GF 8-38.
2020Fox Memorial8206176198-2249th of 12, season cancelled after 8 rounds due to covid-19
2021Fox Qualifiers11218252368-116510th of 12
Fox Championship630317290+8264th of 8
2022Fox Memorial (section 2)9702438121+317143rd of 10 in sect 2, W v Mangere East 62-6 in Prel. final, L v Glenora 26-12 in QF
2023Fox Qualifiers310210276134.3%22nd of 4
Fox Memorial1140719220593-6688th of 12
Fox Plate Playoffs21014828--W v Glenora in SF 32-6, L v Mt Albert in GF 16-22
2024Fox Qualifiers330012234+886
2024Fox Memorial11902348156+192183rd of 12
2024Playoffs21014230+12-W v Mt Albert 22-10 in SF, L v Papakura 20-24 in Prel. final
1988-2004, 2003, 2009-2024TOTAL5732691828613,68912,545-467Includes playoff results

Women's Season Records

YearCompetitionPldWBYEDLPFPAPDPtsPosition (Teams)Notes
2016Women's Pennant5211115040+19072nd of 5W v Pt Chevalier 18–14 in SF, L v Mangere East 22–26 in the Championship Final
2017Women's Pennant8520127282+190141st of 5
2018Women's Championship5010454238-13425th of 5
2019Women's Championship76001260130+130121st of 8W v Glenora 32-24 in the championship SF, W v Manukau 10-8 in the grand final

Notable Past Players

Te Atatu's first Kiwi International was Dennis Williams in 1971. He went on to play 31 tests for New Zealand. The majority of the NZ representatives were to come from the late 1980s and early 1990s when the club experienced considerable success on the field With the likes of Peter Brown, Mark Elia, Mark Horo, Ron O'Regan, Dean Orr, and Sam Panapa in the side. In the early 1990s brothers Henry and Robbie Paul represented the Kiwi's though Robbie moved to play professionally in England at a young age and due to the difficulty for players from England being able to return to New Zealand or Australia for tests he did not represent New Zealand as many times as he would undoubtedly have. His brother Henry Paul also moved to play professionally in England and he later switched codes representing England in rugby union, and in Rugby Sevens. He was not the only Te Atatu Rooster to represent another country in Rugby Union. Shontayne Hape switched codes and was selected for the full English international side who he represented 13 times, and more recently James O'Connor who was a Te Atatu Schoolboy was selected for the Wallabies, the Australia national rugby union team.

NZ Representatives

Kiwis

  • Peter Brown (16 tests)
  • Mark Elia (37 tests)
  • Shontayne Hape (14 tests)
  • Mark Horo (16 tests)
  • Suaia Matagi (1 test)
  • Ron O'Regan (8 tests)
  • Dean Orr (1 test)
  • Sam Panapa (8 tests)
  • Henry Paul (24 tests)
  • Robbie Paul (29 tests)
  • John Smith (12 tests)
  • Dennis Williams (31 tests)
  • John Wilson (2 tests) NZ Maori
  • David Bailey
  • Mark Horo
  • Ron O'Regan
  • Terry O'Shea
  • Dennis Williams
  • John Smith
  • John Wilson Junior Kiwis
  • Taime Tagaloa
  • Henry Paul (c) NZ Under 19s
  • Terry O'Shea
  • Mark Elia NZ Secondary Schools
  • Shontayne Hape NZ Under 16s
  • Dean Orr
  • Benjamen Vai NZ Universities
  • Graeme Murdoch (5 tests) New Zealand Defence Force
  • Parata Ainsley
  • Beufa Brown
  • Peter Lincoln
  • Trevor Baker

Auckland Representative Teams

Auckland

  • David Bailey
  • Allen Cunningham
  • Shane Horo
  • Michael Kini
  • Carl Magatogia
  • Neville Ramsey
  • Phil Robards
  • Iva Ropati
  • Peter Ropati
  • Wayne Robertson
  • Mike Smith
  • Shaun Tempest
  • Jim Denyer New Zealand Warriors
  • Mark Horo (36 games)
  • Iva Ropati (7 games)
  • David Bailey (3 games)
  • Patrick Ah Van (54 games)
  • Shontayne Hape (28 games)
  • Suaia Matagi (36 games)
  • Isaiah Papali'i (63 games) NZ Warriors U20s
  • Peter Mills (2009)
  • Zensei Inu (2010)
  • Stephen Shennan (2011) NZ Warriors Jersey Flegg (21 & Under)
  • Robin Herbert (2024)

NRL

Canterbury Bulldogs

  • Mark Elia (9 games) Gold Coast Titans
  • Paterika Vaivai (10 games) Newcastle Knights
  • Paterika Vaivai (6 games)
  • Suaia Matagi (7 games) Parramatta Eels
  • Mark Horo (62 games)
  • Isaiah Papali'i (45 games)
  • Iva Ropati (4 games)
  • Api Pewhairangi (4 games)
  • Suaia Matagi (35 games) Penrith Panthers
  • Suaia Matagi (23 games) Sydney Roosters
  • Suaia Matagi (7 games) Western Suburbs
  • Mark Horo Wests Tigers
  • Reuben Porter (1 game)

New South Wales Cup

New Zealand Warriors (NSW Cup)

  • Paterika Vaivai (7 games)

Super League/England

Bradford Bulls

  • Patrick Ah Van (28 games)
  • Robbie Paul (241 games)
  • Shontayne Hape (136 games) Castleford Tigers
  • Shane Horo (18 games) Featherstone Rovers
  • Iva Ropati Halifax R.L.F.C.
  • Peter Brown
  • Mark Elia Huddersfield Giants
  • Suaia Matagi (28 games)
  • Robbie Paul (52 games) Hunslet
  • Peter Brown Kent Invicta
  • Mark Elia (34 games) Leeds
  • Peter Brown Leigh Centurions
  • Peter Brown
  • Shane Horo
  • Peter Ropati
  • Robbie Paul (38 games) Oldham RLFC
  • Iva Ropati Rochdale Hornets
  • David Bailey Salford Giants
  • Peter Brown (16 games)
  • Robbie Paul (27 games)
  • Mark Horo (20 games)
  • Sam Panapa (71 games) Sheffield Eagles
  • Sam Panapa (38 games) St Helens R.F.C.
  • Mark Elia (70 games)
  • Iva Ropati Wigan
  • Sam Panapa (119 games) Wakefield Trinity
  • David Bailey Widnes Vikings
  • Patrick Ah Van (118 games)
  • Mark Elia Harlequins
  • Robbie Paul (10 games)

International Rugby League and Rugby Union

Australia

  • James O'Connor{{cite news | access-date = 9 July 2019}} (44 tests) England
  • Henry Paul (6 tests)
  • Shontayne Hape (13 tests) Romania
  • Stephen Shennan (17 tests)* Samoa
  • Mark Elia (2 tests)
  • Sam Panapa (2 tests)
  • Patrick Ah Van (1 test)
  • Suaia Matagi (7 tests)
  • Malo Solomona (5 tests)
  • Isaiah Papali'i (1 test) Fiji
  • Fred Robarts (3 tests) Tokelau
  • Sam Panapa

References

References

  1. (24 April 2015). "Te Atatū Roosters Rugby League Club celebrates 60 years".
  2. "Roosters Softball Club Inc - Club Profile - OnlySport.co.nz - Bringing the Sporting Community together".
  3. "Home".
  4. (15 May 2016). "Women flock to the te Atatu Roosters' rugby league team".
  5. (27 August 2014). "Snell wins Auckland's top award".
  6. (18 April 2017). "Warriors reject plays test rugby for Romania". Stuff.
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