News | Athletics
20 Feb 2026 17:26
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Sports > Athletics

    League of their own: the NRL Indigenous All Stars vs Maori match is much more than a novelty

    Sunday’s season-opener in Auckland goes well beyond tokenism to showcase the extraordinary contribution of Indigenous athletes and fans to trans-Tasman rugby league.

    Hoani Smith, Lecturer in Sport Management and Sport Science, Lincoln University, New Zealand, Dion Enari, Associate Professor, Nga Wai a Te Tui (Maori and Indigenous Research Centre) and School of Healthcare and Social Practice, UNITEC Institute of Techn
    The Conversation


    This weekend’s National Rugby League clash between the Indigenous All Stars and the New Zealand Maori men’s and women’s sides marks a decade-and-a-half of recognising a unique aspect of the trans-Tasman game.

    First staged in 2010, the season-opening fixture was not conceived as a marketing stunt, but as a deliberate exercise in showcasing Indigenous excellence and its contribution to the competition.

    The match centres Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander players, and their culture and leadership at the highest level of the game. The rationale was clear from the outset: Indigenous Australians were – and remain – significantly over-represented relative to their share of the national population.

    In 2010, the NRL reported that more than 12% of its playing group identified as Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander, despite Indigenous Australians making up less than 3% of the population.

    More recent estimates suggest that proportion has increased, now sitting closer to 15% across the men’s and women’s NRL games, while accounting for less than 4% of the general population.

    But what began as recognition of that over-representation has since evolved into something more relational, collective and trans-Tasman. It now reflects broader Indigenous leadership traditions in elite sport that prioritise whakapapa (genealogy), collective responsibility and cultural authority.

    Women players on the rise

    A major turning point came in 2019 when the Indigenous All Stars first played the New Zealand Maori team instead of an NRL or world side. This reframed the fixture as an Indigenous-to-Indigenous contest across the Tasman, rather than simply an Australian brand.

    While the men’s Indigenous All Stars match began as the centrepiece, the women’s fixture has become one of the event’s most structurally important expressions, reflecting the rapid growth of the National Women’s Rugby League (NRLW).

    Demographic patterns in the women’s game are particularly pronounced, with NRL inclusion data showing roughly 48% of NRLW players identify as Maori or Pasifika, with a further 14% identifying as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander.

    These figures show the women’s Indigenous All Stars team is not an add-on. It functions as a legitimate pathway, leadership platform and cultural anchor for a competition whose future growth depends heavily on Indigenous and Pasifika participation and whanau (family) engagement.

    Within the NRL, Maori players are typically counted within broader Polynesian or Pasifika demographic categories. Recent analyses suggest Polynesian players now account for close to, and potentially more than, 50% of the top tier of NRL contracts.

    Maori comprise about 17% of the overall New Zealand population, and Pasifika peoples make up a further 8%. On NRL rosters, those proportions are largely inverted.

    Combined with those identifying as having Indigenous Australian and/or Torres Strait Islander heritage, a clear majority – around 62% – of NRL players now come from Indigenous Australian/Torres Strait Islander, Maori and Pasifika backgrounds.

    An Indigenous State of Origin?

    As Indigenous sport researchers and practitioners, we work to highlight the importance of culture to professional rugby league.

    That 62% of players also represents a huge, vibrant fan base. Collectively, this Indigenous influence is the opposite of the cultural tokenism that can be found in many Eurocentric sports systems.

    The unprecedented success of last year’s NRL Pacific Championships, particularly the extraordinary match between Samoa and Tonga, further illustrated this shift.

    With the disproportionate number of Pacific athletes who make the NRL the spectacle it is, perhaps it’s time for the sport’s gatekeepers to consider a three-game series, modelled on State of Origin.

    This would bring together Maori, Pacific and Indigenous all-star sides. With players clearly expressing their pride in the All Stars game, it would be a fitting showcase.

    The success of the Pacific Championships suggests there is also potential for including Maori and Indigenous Australian teams in an extended format that would better reflect the cultural and playing realities of the modern game.

    Both would offer a competitively legitimate platform for this key group of rugby league superstars, and would meaningfully recognise their long-term cultural and commercial value to the game.

    The Conversation

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2026 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other Athletics News
     20 Feb: Pole vaulter Imogen Ayris' continues to leap the highest in her career, this time at an indoor athletics meet in France
     19 Feb: Winter Olympics 2026: Dog invades cross-country skiing, Americans get engaged as Ally Hickman feels the pain — day 12 quick hits
     15 Feb: Middle distance runner Sam Ruthe has been unable to replicate his stunning mile earlier this month at another indoor event in North Carolina
     13 Feb: Cooper Woods welcomed to the Winter Olympic 'gold medal club' by Alisa Camplin-Warner
     11 Feb: What Olympic athletes see that viewers don’t: Machine-made snow makes ski racing faster and riskier – and it’s everywhere
     10 Feb: Global Athlete accuses IOC of 'kowtowing' to Russia by including AIN athletes
     09 Feb: Teenage middle distance runner Sam Ruthe intends to compete at this year's Commonwealth Games
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    All Blacks flanker Du'Plessis Kirifi has reported he's not far away from a return to the Super Rugby Pacific picture, but is warning his teammates not to take Moana Pasifika lightly tonight More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Hopes are lifting among Auckland businesses for the economic recovery More...



     Today's News

    International:
    Timeline of key moments leading to former prince Andrew's arrest 17:17

    Entertainment:
    Lily Collins wants to celebrate "individuality" after joining Zalando as its first global brand ambassador 17:17

    Politics:
    The Local Government Minister says he is seeking advice on changes to the 30-year-old Dog Control Act 16:57

    Entertainment:
    Donald Trump has threatened Nancy Guthrie's kidnappers with the death penalty if she isn't returned alive 16:47

    Law and Order:
    A woman's been arrested for allegedly nicking nearly eight-thousand dollars worth of items during a retirement village burglary spree 16:17

    Entertainment:
    Robert De Niro hopes he can live as long as Robert Duvall 16:17

    National:
    Is AI really ‘intelligent’? This philosopher says yes 16:07

    Politics:
    Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor released under investigation after almost 10 hours in custody 15:47

    Entertainment:
    Jessie Buckley was "scared of love" for most of her life before settling down with husband Freddie Sorensen 15:47

    Law and Order:
    A man's been charged with murder after a second man was discovered dead in Tauranga's Wharepai Domain last Saturday 15:27


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2026 New Zealand City Ltd