It is shaping up to be a busy month of awards ceremonies for Mid Canterbury’s Glenn Moore after he was nominated for the Buddle Findlay Coach of the Year at the upcoming Halberg Awards.
The award comes after Moore was also nominated for the coach of the year award at the New Zealand Rugby Awards.
It was a busy and successful year for the former Mid Canterbury player and coach, who won the World Cup with the Black Ferns in what was a dominant overall victory for the side at the tournament.
Moore also brought a winning touch to the Mid Canterbury Hammers, winning back-to-back Meads Cups in the 2013 and 2014, before jumping ship to coach in Super Rugby for the Blues.
Another Mid Canterbury connection in the nominations in netballer Kate Lloyd, who was part of the under-21 team that won the world championships in Botswana earlier this year.
The team was nominated for the team of the year award, alongside other teams including the All Whites, Black Sox, Black Ferns and Emirates Team New Zealand.
Sheep shearing, stand up paddleboarding and taekwon-do athletes are among the more than 70 nominations that have been received for six categories at what will be the 55th Halberg Awards, with 27 different sports represented in total.
The nominations go to the Halberg Awards Voting Academy for judging to be shortlisted into finalists.
Sixteen athletes from 12 sports have been put forward for the Sportsman of the Year award.
The hotly contested category includes Tom Walsh, Kane Williamson, Beauden Barrett, Brendon Hartley and Michael Venus.
The 2016 High Performance Sport New Zealand Sportswoman of the Year Lisa Carrington, is nominated again in the female category.
Carrington is joined by seven others including Ali Riley, Amy Satterthwaite, Portia Woodman, Roisin Giles and Sarah Goss.
Seven nominations have come in for the Halberg Disabled Sportsperson of the Year award including four time winner Sophie Pascoe.
Corey Peters, Holly Robinson, Jessica Hamill, Keegan Pitcher, Stephen Hills and William Stedman round out the list.
Nominees for the Disabled Sportsperson, Sportsman, Sportswoman and Team of the Year categories will all be eligible for the supreme Halberg Award – the country’s highest accolade for sporting excellence.
The award is presented to the athlete or team whose achievement is deemed by the judges as representing excellence in sport at the highest level.
The 55th Halberg Awards ceremony will be held on February 8.
Other awards presented during the ceremony include New Zealand’s Favourite Sporting Moment (public vote category), Sport New Zealand Leadership, Lifetime Achievement and inductees into the Sports Hall of Fame.
By Jaime Pitt-MacKay © The Ashburton Guardian - 9 December 2017
When the touring musical Saturday Night Fever hit town this week, it was home-grown talent which took front and centre stage.
The lead role of Tony Manero was played by Tainui Kuru, an Ashburton local who has crafted a successful full time career from the performing arts.
The production has been touring New Zealand for around three weeks, delivering iconic tunes and classic 1970’s storyline at all the main centres in the North and South islands.
The show is often remembered for its disco, yet Kuru said it also deals with some “pretty heavy stuff”.
“It’s set in Brooklyn at the lower end of society … and in a similar political climate to now, so that’s kind of interesting,” he said.
In Ashburton it stopped for one show only on Wednesday night – giving Kuru a quick chance to reacquaint with his old stomping ground before hitting the road again.
The 2009 Ashburton College head boy and NASDA graduate now lives in Auckland and is always on the go when it comes to showbiz.
He’s racked up an impressive repertoire of roles in performances over the past eight years and is a self-confessed “triple threat”– a dancer, a singer and an actor.
But despite having his face feature on posters in green rooms around the country, Kuru said Saturday Night Fever is by far the busiest show he’s starred in yet.
“I’m on stage in every scene. In fact, I think I’m off stage for a maximum of five minutes … there’s some pretty crazy costume changes.”
It’s also mammoth in tour length, with 26 performances in total.
The show’s national tour launched in mid-November and will wrap up at the end of next week in Whangarei, after more than a month on the road.
“It is a long time to be performing,” Kuru said.
“But it’s slightly different each time.
“We just treat every show as brand new.”
And it’s an opportunity to see all his favourite spots around New Zealand.
“I always love going to Oamaru, because I like being in an old theatre and having that history.”
Most enjoyable of all?
Obviously Ashburton.
“It’s the most supportive crowd, with all my family and friends.”
Next on the cards for the successful Tainui is another tour in the new year – this time for a group called Operatunity, delivering a Rat Pack tribute to the greatest artists of the 20th century in a series of daytime concerts.
It’s all go, but the hard work and love of theatre runs in Kuru’s blood.
“I grew up in a family where labour was the norm – working for something was just part of the family,” he said.
“Theatre takes so much hunger and drive – but it’s worth it.”
By Katie Todd © The Ashburton Guardian - 8 December 2017
A group of former Ashburton High School students spent a fabulous day at Lake Hood recently, soaking up the sun and reminiscing about their school years. The group started their secondary school education in 1960 and still meets annually for a catch-up – this year it included Charlie Pinion, over from the UK.
School magazines around the time include highlights like a visit by athletic coach Arthur Lydiard and Peter Snell in 1963. A young Graeme Church might have paid attention, since he was third in the high jump in the boys’ interschool athletic sports in Timaru earlier in the year.
Colin Bryant was in the First XV, though 1963 was not a year of great success as the team lost three and drew one of the inter-school games. Peter Lynn also featured as a top scholar, especially in physics.
© AshColl Alumni - 7 December 2017