Not all famous surnames in the history
of Featherstone Rovers come from local families. One famous family came from
New Zealand. In the 1980s fans loved to hate the bruising Sorenson brothers and
the Tamatis. In the 1980s fans loved to hate the bruising Sorenson brothers and
the Tamatis. In the 1990s we were thrilled by Henry and Robbie Paul, and later
on the Kiwi test team included Louis and Vinny Anderson. In a country that has so
many famous rugby league families, the Ropati name is one of the most well
known in New Zealand RL circles. The first Ropati brother to arrive in England
was Joe Ropati, who played for Warrington in 1988. He was the second oldest of seven
brothers, four of whom would go on to play the game professionally in England. He
was a strong and uncompromising winger who fit well into a tough Wilderspool
team. The following year, his brother Iva came over too and signed for
Featherstone Rovers. He must have wondered quite who he’d signed for as his
debut was a disastrous 59-8 defeat at Widnes in September 1989, where we were
destroyed by Martin Offiah and Brimah Kebbie.
A long striding centre who knew his way
to the line, Iva Ropati immediately found a place in Rovers first team, and
went on to play 26 games in his debut season in England, notching 15 tries,
including two on his home debut against Doncaster the week after the Widnes
debacle. He was also a try scorer in the
Yorkshire Cup Final against Bradford. That same season his younger brother Tea
Ropati was included in the touring New Zealand party, and once the tour was
over Tea signed for St.Helens. The youngest and perhaps most talented of the
brothers, Tea operated mainly at stand-off and went on to give St.Helens good
service over a number of seasons. That same 1989 season saw Leigh sign Peter
Ropati a hard-working hooker who stayed with Leigh a couple of seasons.
In 1991 Iva Ropati came back to
England, joining Sheffield Eagles. That year he set the Eagles try scoring
record with 30 tries in just 27 games, showing the type of form which prompted
Howie Tamati to pick him for the 1993 tour. But before that season had
finished, he left Sheffield for Oldham where his prolific try scoring
continued. On the 1993 Kiwi tour he won his first test caps, up against Great
Britain’s Paul Newlove, a former club-mate of his. He became the third brother
in his family after Joe and Tea to win a test cap for New Zealand. Once that
tour was over he signed for Featherstone Rovers for the second time, picking up
where he left off with an impressive try scoring rate. In his second game back,
he ran in a hatrick of tries against Leigh in a 36-0 success. He left
Featherstone at the end of 1994 having played a total of 56 games and scored 31
tries.
Our 2012 winger Tangi Ropati is only
very distantly related to this family.
No comments:
Post a Comment