Netball: Third-time lucky Tactix win their first ANZ Premiership title
Photo:
Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz
Nothing pleased Tactix coach Donna Wilkins more than seeing her veteran players win their first ANZ Premiership title in the red dress in Auckland on Sunday night.
The Mainland Tactix won netball's ANZ Premiership for the first time by stunning the Northern Mystics 58-46 in the grand final.
For Jane Watson, Te Paea Selby-Rickit, Erikana Pedersen, and Ellie Bird - they had suffered two heart-breaking grand final losses in 2020 and 2021.
They came the closest in 2021, losing by just two goals to the Mystics. By then Karin Burger had joined the side and had well and truly become a stalwart of the team.
Wilkins said the thought of winning an elusive title was what kept bringing some of the older players back.
"It's pretty special… we don't know who's going to come back next year, our focus has been on finals. For some of those old heads and experienced ones that keep coming back because they want to win a championship, that's what I'm most proud of now they've got it," Wilkins said.
Tactix captain Pedersen embraced Selby-Rickit straight after the game.
"She just said that she felt relief - was her first emotion and it is a bit like that because I know we deserved to be here and deserved to win, we've worked so hard.
"We had a lot of people doubting us, you know as they should, we came to Mystics territory, they were number one but we knew we could do it, we had the full belief, we've trained our butts off. The last few weeks in particular our intensity at trainings have been unreal… we've been coming out of them exhausted."
Karin Burger and Jane Watson.
Photo:
Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz
Tactix shooter Ellie Bird capped off a superb season by shooting 50 from her 53 attempts, and even pulled off two intercepts.
Just two weeks prior, the Mystics had beaten the Tactix by 14 goals to win the minor premiership and advance straight to a home grand final.
Everything was stacked against them - the Mystics have won every grand final they have appeared in, and six of the eight grand finals had been won by the team who claimed the minor premiership.
But the Tactix showed a lot of fight when they beat the Pulse in the elimination final and Wilkins philosophy? "Finals netball is getting into it and giving yourself a chance."
The former Silver Ferns defensive pairing of Burger and Watson picked up where they left off from that Pulse game.
Ellie Bird has been a Tactix stalwart.
Photo:
PHOTOSPORT
Watson unsettled Australian import shooter Donnell Wallam, who had not looked flustered all season.
"They are big game players, they are experienced, they are used to playing against tall shooters. I told them they needed to get touches early and Jane did right from the get-go so it made it a little bit doubtful for them to just let rip and throw that ball in," Wilkins said.
"They were doing one or two more passes before they would launch it in, whereas a couple of weeks ago it was just 'catch-boom', so we needed to nullify that connection between Peta [Toeava] and Donnell and I think we did a good job of that.
"And because we are so clinical in looking after our own possession off our centre pass, even if teams hit a couple of two point shots, they don't make headway and we showed that on Monday night."
Once again Wilkins stuck with her starting seven, apart from a brief period where Pedersen had to come off the court due to cramping.
"Everything was going, my toes, my calves, my quads, my hips… but we knew we needed to prepare for a tough game, I think Teeps [Selby-Rickit] started cramping as well," Pedersen said.
Despite the cloud hanging over the domestic competition, with Netball New Zealand still trying to pin down a broadcast deal for 2026, Wilkins said none of that was a distraction.
"We had an opportunity to win a championship, that's been our focus, it's been about us."
She was looking forward to taking the trophy to Christchurch.
The Tactix and their National League predecessors, the Canterbury Flames, had not won a title since the introduction of franchise netball in 1998. The Flames played in four Coca-Cola Cup/National Bank Cup finals but lost all four to the Southern Sting.
"It's a long time coming, enjoy just being together as a team and enjoy the moment with our family and friends and we'll worry about next year next week," Wilkins said.
The Tactix may look a little different next year.
Bird is off to Australia and doesn't plan on coming back for another season. It remains to be seen whether the likes of Pedersen and Watson might call it a day.
Selby-Rickit
had one of her finest seasons and the 33-year-old may well be on the radar
of an Australian team.
Coach Robyn Broughton and captain Bernice Mene after Southern Sting beat Canterbury Flames in the 2001 Coca Cola Cup domestic final.
Photo:
Photosport
To guide the Tactix to the title in her first season as head coach is a dream start to Wilkins' elite coaching career.
Pedersen was full of praise for the former Silver Fern and Tall Fern.
"Donna's been in our position, she knows what it's like to play in high pressure matches. She's very disciplined in the way that we play on attack but she's just brought this winning mentality, like even warm up games, she's is all about winning and I love that because I think that's what our Tactix team needed."
Competitive, clinical with possession, and sticking with a starting seven are all traits associated with the late great Robyn Broughton, one of New Zealand's most successful netball coaches.
Broughton became an icon of Southland netball during her long tenure with the Southern Sting, where she was head coach from 1998-2007, winning a record seven Coca Cola/National Bank Cup titles during that time.
Wilkins played many seasons under Broughton, as did Tactix assistant coach Te Huinga Selby-Rickit.
When Wilkins was asked what the legendary coach would have made of it, she shared that she treasures a photo of her old friend.
"Well I actually brought [the photo of] Robbie with me, I normally talk to her before we play our home games but this week I thought I better take it with me and I think it might have helped. She's always there, God she coached me and Hu [Te Huinga Selby-Rickit] and a lot of the players, it's pretty special," an emotional Wilkins said.
Donna Wilkins
Photo:
© Photosport Ltd 2025 www.photosport.nz
The Mystics were denied a historic three-peat and were denied a chance to play their best netball.
Despite easily beating the Tactix two weeks prior, Mystics coach Tia Winikerei said they knew the visitors were going to bring some venom.
"When you get beaten like that and you're a quality side like they are, you come back fierce and you want to win.
"Tactix came out very very strong and we didn't cope with that very well… we let them over power us, we actually just didn't execute what we should have in that first quarter and that hurt us for the rest of the game.
"I didn't see any momentum shifts throughout the game and so the story of the first quarter was almost the story of the whole game."
Mystics captain Michaela Sokolich-Beatson said they were not blindsided - "They did exactly what we thought they were going to do."
The Tactix have now become the fourth franchise to win the title, since the competition began in 2017.
The Steel have won twice, and the Pulse and Mystics three times each.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter
curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

NZ Herald
24 minutes ago
- NZ Herald
All Blacks squad naming: Scott Robertson names Rugby Championship squad
Advertise with NZME. All Blacks coach Scott Robertson names his Rugby Championship squad for the first two tests against Argentina. The All Blacks have been dealt a huge injury blow ahead of their Rugby Championship campaign, with halfback Cameron Roigard ruled out due to a stress fracture. The 24-year-old felt pain in his right foot following the All Blacks' test-series win over France and scans have confirmed the stress fracture. As a result, Roigard won't travel to Argentina for the first two tests of the campaign, which gets under way on August 17 in Córdoba. His return to play will be assessed in two weeks, but losing his starting halfback is a huge blow for New Zealand coach Scott Robertson, with Noah Hotham already ruled out of the entire campaign as he requires surgery for a high ankle sprain. Robertson will name his 36-man travelling squad tomorrow at midday and there will be plenty of questions around which two halfbacks he will name to join Cortez Ratima on the plane. A return for Finlay Christie, who hasn't played for New Zealand since the second test against England last year, appears likely. Christie was set to play for Tasman against Bay of Plenty in the NPC today, but was a late scratching as a precautionary measure after a shoulder contact injury. Folau Fakatava also looms as a possible selection, while uncapped Crusaders halfback Kyle Preston has also been touted as a future All Black. Roigard joins a long list of players who are unavailable with tighthead prop Tyrel Lomax, winger Caleb Clarke, loose forward Luke Jacobson and Hotham also ruled out. Veteran midfielder Anton Lienert-Brown also missed Waikato's win over Auckland with a shoulder injury and his status remains uncertain. Lomax's injury is the biggest concern with a hand fracture, and the 29-year-old is expected to miss five to six weeks of the season. It puts him in a race against the clock to be fit to play the Springboks in Auckland on September 6. Clarke and Jacobson are both set to miss the same amount of time with a high ankle injury and thigh injury respectively. The All Blacks are set to welcome back key personnel for the trip with captain Scott Barrett, his brother Beauden Barrett, Tupou Vaa'i, Wallace Sititi and Tamaiti Williams all set to overcome their injury.

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Free-to-air ANZ Premiership games comes at huge cost for Netball NZ
Netball New Zealand CEO Jennie Wyllie. Photo: RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly Domestic netball may be returning to free-to-air television, but it's come at a huge cost to Netball New Zealand. Radio New Zealand understands Netball New Zealand is paying TVNZ hundreds of thousands of dollars for championship games to be shown on the state broadcaster next year Netball New Zealand CEO Jennie Wyllie would not confirm or deny the arrangement, which is believed to be costing between $600,000 and $700,000. "I do know what that figure is relating to, but we certainly aren't going to discuss any commercial arrangements we have in place." Netball New Zealand admitted to investing in production costs, despite the deal for next year's Silver Ferns games still under negotiation, and nothing in place for 2027. "Whilst it might set a precedent it gives us a lot of control over the product and how we give exposure to our partners within the broadcast product," Wyllie said. It was hoped sponsorship revenue would be boosted by the increased visibility of being on free-to-air television. The players' collective employment agreement was still being finalised, and New Zealand Netball Players Association executive manager Steph Bond could not confirm whether wages would drop, but said the agreement would "look different." "That's probably all really that we can say right now." Wyllie was resigned to the fact netball could no longer rely on big money offers from TV networks to fill the coffers. "The whole broadcast and media landscape has changed. It's not what it was the last time around when everyone locked in their deals." That had led to them looking elsewhere, including to the government. "Increasingly, this is a space where New Zealand On Air needs to consider that production of New Zealand made content and the storytelling that you see in a sports game is no different to a Shortland Street, is no different to some of the diverse projects that are funded under New Zealand On Air, so I think that landscape will and should change." While it could not be done this year due to the Commonwealth Games, Bond said Players Association wanted to see the ANZ Premiership shifted so it did not clash with the Australian domestic competition. "We have put on the table for the last year or so that moving the competition would obviously allow players to play across the ditch, but also in this competition, which is only going to be great for the sport and great for players, because in the shortened time they have to make a living from the sport they have more ability to do that by playing in more competitions." But the market remained difficult for women's sport "We're not a rugby and a cricket with a men's game cross subsidising us, we don't have an India and we don't have FIFA, we don't have a World Rugby so this is just us trying to work through it for ourselves," Wyllie said. TVNZ declined to comment, citing commercial sensitivity. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


NZ Herald
an hour ago
- NZ Herald
Lions Tour: Bundee Aki reveals his missed birth of daughter during Australian tour
New Zealand-born British and Irish Lions second five-eighth Bundee Aki has revealed he has yet to meet his newborn daughter because of playing in the 2-1 series win over Australia. Following the third test defeat to the Wallabies on Saturday, the Ireland veteran let slip that his wife gave birth