
All Black Savea to skip Super Rugby in favour of Japan sabbatical in 2026
June 17 (Reuters) - All Blacks loose forward Ardie Savea will skip Super Rugby with Moana Pasifika next year and take a sabbatical in Japan at the Kobe Steelers club, New Zealand Rugby (NZR) said on Tuesday.
The former World Rugby Player of the Year, who spent the 2024 Japanese season with the Steelers, will be available for test duty until the end of the November internationals and return in time for the 2026 mid-year tests.
The news will come as a blow to Moana fans after Savea inspired the team to several notable victories and the brink of the Super Rugby Pacific playoffs in his first season at the club this year.
"It's hard to leave, even though it's only for one season, but I'll be supporting the team from afar and will stay involved behind the scenes," the 31-year-old said in a statement.
"This year at Moana Pasifika was the happiest I've been in my career."
The sabbatical system was introduced to enable players to benefit from lucrative deals offered by Northern Hemisphere clubs while still remaining contracted to NZR and therefore available for test rugby.
"Sabbaticals are a key component of our contracting model and provide flexibility for our most senior All Blacks to spend some time in a different environment," NZR's Chris Lendrum said.
"(Ardie) is committed to play his rugby in New Zealand through to the end of 2027 and we look forward to his ongoing contribution to our teams and competitions."
Moana coach Tana Umaga said Savea, who was the inaugural Super Rugby Pacific Player of the Year this season, would be welcomed back with open arms in 2027.
"Ardie obviously goes with our blessing," said the former All Blacks captain.
"We will continue to build the momentum of our movement in 2026 and work hard to grow our game so that we will be even better when he gets back to us in 2027."
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Like so many fathers and sons before them, Georgi Zilkin and Nicholas Tarasenko had an earnest conversation a while ago about what Nicholas was planning to do with his life. 'He said, 'Well, I want to get into sport,'' Georgi recalls. Nicholas, now 15, has always been big for his age, and disciplined with it. He has thrived at rugby, mixed martial arts and judo. Georgi, however, did not see a future in those pursuits. 'Like any normal father I said, 'No, there is no money in that, you need to get a job...' He pauses, before brightening. 'Then sumo wrestling turned up.' If a life and career training to go professional in Japan's ancient national sport strikes you as an unlikely choice for a GCSE student from Hull in want of secure employment, you would have a good point. But Georgi, despite his protestations, isn't a particularly normal father. Nicholas, meanwhile, is far, far from a normal 15-year-old. 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The only other British man to win a place at a Japanese sumo stable, Nathan Strange, who enrolled in 1989, dropped out after feeling alienated. 'I'm excited to see how my character shifts, how my mentality changes in such a rough environment,' Nicholas says. 'My stable has been very nice and welcoming so far, they're tough on training, but those scandals won't happen there.' Georgi can be heard sighing. 'Things happen everywhere. If you're afraid of wolves, don't go to the forest and pick berries, you know what I mean? But the berries are needed, you have to live your life. But no, I'm not worried, he already does long hours of training here, and the people who are looking after him are really nice.' It's different from sixth form college in the East Riding of Yorkshire. I wonder what Nicholas's friends at school think. 'I mean, to be fair, in school I don't really have mates,' he admits. 'I'm not too fussed about it, no one in school is a good influence. 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