
'Don't ever be like the shameful guy who did this to our dad'
Warning: Graphic content
The son of a Dunedin club rugby player who has been left disfigured after being stomped on the head during a game is outraged the culprit was given just a one-game ban.
The incident happened during a division 1 game at Peter Johnstone Park on May 17.
Green Island prop Aifala Taelega attempted to tackle Taieri No 8 Kasimila Vaihu.
Vaihu spun around and struck out with his boot, connecting with Taelega's head.
Taelega was left with a large, deep cut close to his right eye.
The wound is still bandaged and until it is removed the family will not know whether his eyesight has been damaged.
Vaihu received a one-game ban for the incident, but that decision has been rescinded and the player may face a longer ban.
Green Island prop Aifala Taelega has been left with a nasty wound after he was stomped in the head during a rugby game. Photos: supplied
Taelega declined to be interviewed, but his son Brayden Wilson felt it was important his father's story was made public.
"This is for our pa," he wrote on social media.
"Our dad has played rugby for over 20 years. His journey started when he got a scholarship from Samoa to Upper Hutt College at just 16 years old. Since then, he's worked hard, kept his head down and always led by example. He's never done anyone wrong.
"So, for this to happen to him shows the kind of toxic attitude some clubs still allow.
"It's honestly a disgrace. We're not posting this for hate, we're posting this to raise awareness. To say, this s... is not OK.
"Be safe, play fair, and don't ever be like the shameful guy who did this to our dad.
"The guy only got a one-week stand-down. One week.
"We hope this player gets a proper ban and learns that rugby is about respect, not violence.
Taieri No 8 Kasimila Vaihu strikes out with his boot moments before connecting with Taelega's head.
"The game we love should be safe for everyone."
Otago Rugby Football Union chief executive Richard Kinley said the union could not comment on the situation as the judiciary panel was independent of the union and was still working through the process.
"However, I would add that under the regulatory framework the regulations do provide the opportunity for the judicial panel to reconsider their decision and on this occasion, they have chosen to take this route."
Taieri Rugby Football Club chairman Peter Dyer said it was before the judiciary and he could not comment.
"But we certainly don't condone that sort of behaviour," Dyer said.
"From our player's perspective, he has a pretty clean record. There was nothing malicious about it, it wasn't intentional. I think that was reflected in the fact during the first judiciary he got one week."
Green Island coach Hayden Finch was also reluctant to say much. However, he said they were not happy with the initial finding of the judiciary.
"I think the video speaks for itself and it was just such a nasty outcome."

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


Otago Daily Times
2 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Commemorative shield to make debut
Pip Jones, 56, holds up the new shield which bears the name of her father, Otago rugby great Tuppy Diack, who died recently. The shield is made from the wood of a fallen totara estimated to be about 1000 years old. Photos: Peter McIntosh What better way to recognise a fallen totara than by putting his name on a fallen totara. The Tuppy Diack Shield will make its debut this season. It is a new competition that bears the name of Otago rugby great Tuppy Diack, who died in Dunedin last month. It will be played for by Southland Country, Southland Metro, Otago Country and two Dunedin metro teams — a north team made up of Alhambra-Union, University, Harbour, Kaikoria and Taieri and a south team made up of Zingari-Richmond, Southern, Dunedin and Green Island. It is a straight round-robin that will be attached to the end of the club rugby season. The opening round is on August 2. Otago Rugby Football Union game development manager Michael Smith said it was a great shame Mr Diack had died before he got to see the competition in action. However, Mr Diack had been aware of the concept and was very pleased to put his name to it. The wood the shield is made from is from a fallen totara tree in the Catlins area and was carved by Patrick Bowden and members of the South Otago Turners Club. The reverse of the shield. The tree is understood to have been about 1000 years old. "It's a great bit of wood," Mr Smith said. "We've put Tuppy's photo on the front of it, and a story about him on the back as well. "It looks great. It was unfortunate that Tuppy passed away [before he got to see it]." Mr Smith said the new competition was a way to bridge the gap between club and provincial rugby, as well as offer the players who miss out on representative opportunities something else to aim for. It was also a good way for players from the country to get noticed. At the end of the tournament, an Otago B and Southland B team will be selected to play in a triangular tournament that will include a Canterbury team. Mr Diack was born in Invercargill and went to school in Gore. He played seven games for Southland and 101 games for Otago. He was the pin-up boy of Otago rugby in the 1950s and early 1960s and played one test for the All Blacks against the British Lions at Athletic Park in 1959. Mr Diack was a life member of both the Otago University Rugby Club and the Otago Rugby Football Union.


Otago Daily Times
3 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Hope new refs donning green jerseys will create empathy
Volunteer referees (from left) Andy Robertson, Brodee Thomson, Daniel Thom, Logan Boyd and Amelia O'Connell don the new green jerseys at the Taieri junior tournament at the weekend. PHOTO: SUPPLIED Otago Rugby Football Union referee development officer Brandon Hale hopes this green jersey will be the source of a lot less controversy. When the Highlanders introduced their green jersey in 2011, it sparked a public outcry. The sky did not cave in and people eventually moved on. A decade and change later, the Otago union has introduced a green jersey for its junior rookie referees. The initiative was launched during the Taieri junior sevens tournament at the weekend. Hale said the idea behind the different coloured jerseys was to signal to the public the referees in green were learning. "So we'd identified that there was nothing to actually differentiate between someone who's had quite a bit of experience and someone who's very new in their journey," he said. "And so we wanted a visual representation of someone who's green in their experience. "So it's more of a subtle nod to where they are at in their current journey." Hale hoped people would recognise the person in the green jersey was still learning and go easy on them. Referees do not get a lot of amazing feedback from the sidelines usually. "It's an indication to our public to say, 'look, hey, have a bit of patience with these referees as they may have only got out in the middle with a whistle three or four times potentially.' "The first time we do anything, we're not exactly completely competent just yet. "So we obviously have to have a bit of patience with these people. "It also would hopefully encourage some more support and good feedback." The green jerseys have been rolled out at junior club and lower secondary school grades. Hale said there were 14 people across the province in the green jerseys, which look more like a T-shirt. The idea is once the rookie referees become more confident, they will "graduate" to a white jersey. Referee numbers were stagnant in the province, Hale said. But he hopes the initiative will help encourage people to stay involved longer. "We recognise that the first year of a referee's development is the most important. "That's probably where we get the biggest drop-off in referees, hence why we've made a conscious effort to really support our new referees through this initiative."


Otago Daily Times
6 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Small in stature, big on commitment
Southern player Utalia Moataane, 6, charges on at the annual Taieri sevens junior rugby tournament, at Mosgiel's Peter Johnstone Park yesterday. PHOTOS: GREGOR RICHARDSON. At least 1000 young rugby players faced off on the field during an annual tournament in Dunedin yesterday. About 75 teams gathered at Mosgiel's Peter Johnstone Park for the annual Taieri sevens junior rugby tournament. Ollie Batt, 6, of the Taieri Rugby Football Club, scored the first try in a match against Kaikorai. His mother Leonie Hamilton said from the sidelines she was "pretty excited" about his performance. Taieri Gold player Ollie Batt, 6, sprints towards the try line to score against Kaikorai. It was his first time playing in the seven-a-side tournament, taking after his older brother who already had a history at the event, she said. "He follows in [his brother's] footsteps ... and he's rugby mad. "Rugby is definitely his sport." The tournament was open to children in year 2 to those in year 8, from the wider Otago region. Alyssa Johnson, 8, of the Green Island Rugby Club, takes possession of the ball. Tournament official Tania Burton estimated at least 1000 children were joined by another thousand spectators at this year's tournament. While it was a lot of work, it was a lot of enjoyment too, she said. It was very much a "community-driven event". "Everyone looks forward to the sevens — all the refs, all the clubs. "It's an absolute standout of our year of rugby." This year's tournament was their second using an app for the draw and to display up-to-date live scores. A focus on sideline behaviour also featured this year, she said. "It's not always about the winners and losers, it's justeveryone having a great day."