
Showcase of Filipino food, sport and culture
Kira Azucena. Photo: Philippines Embassy
Sports and glamour will feature in a series of events this weekend.
Dunedin Filipino Sports will host the South Island Filipino Sports Tournament at venues across the city this weekend.
About 500 athletes from Nelson to Invercargill will compete in basketball, volleyball, badminton and billiards.
The event, which carries a theme of diversity, passion and unity, is being co-ordinated by Dunedin Filipino Sports president Arvin Lazaro and his wife, Charm Lazaro.
Mrs Lazaro said the tournament usually rotates between host cities each year, but a Covid-19 hiatus has kept it out of Dunedin since 2016.
After the sporting events wrap up on Sunday, a separate showcase will celebrate the beauty of young women.
The Search for Binibining South Island will highlight Filipina beauty.
''Binibining'' means young woman or ''Miss'', and the contest will let participants display a range of outfits and compete in talent and cultural sections.
Judges include the Filipino Ambassador to New Zealand, Kira Azucena.
Members of Dunedin's Filipino community will perform and Sport Otago's William Hola will give an inspirational talk.
The new contest aims to celebrate beauty and weave cultural elements into the programme.
''It is not always about masculinity,'' Mrs Lazaro said.
Filipino food stalls will operate at the main venue and members of the public are welcome at all events.
SAM.HENDERSON @thestar.co.nz
Events
Volleyball and Basketball
Edgar Centre
116 Portsmouth Dr
Saturday and Sunday 9am-5pm
Under 23 Basketball
Saturday 9am-5pm
Caledonian Gymnasium
265 Andersons Bay Rd
Billiards
Bowey's Pool Lounge
81 Crawford St
Saturday 6pm-9pm
Badminton
Otago Badminton Centre
101 Victoria Rd, St Kilda
Saturday 9am-5pm
Search for Binibining South Island
More FM Arena
116 Portsmouth Dr
Sunday 5pm-10pm
Hashtags

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


Otago Daily Times
8 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
Milestone speaks to umpire's dedication
A great night for Kristie Simpson is when nobody notices she is in the room. That was a little hard late last month when the Eastern Southland umpire officiated her 150th national league netball game during the Southern Steel and Northern Mystics clash in Dunedin. It was a fitting moment for Simpson who now holds the national record for umpiring the most national league games. Asked how she felt about the milestone, Simpson joked "like I've been around for a wee while". But she acknowledged it was a special achievement and her longevity spoke to her determination as an umpire at the top of her game for the past 15 years. Simpson, who lives on a farm in Tokanui, grew up umpiring and officiated her first national game in 2010 during the transtasman ANZ Championship era. There had been many highlights through the years, including the league's first "sudden-death" game, which presented new challenges for players and umpires, and shuffling her life through Covid lockdowns, when most of the games were played in Auckland while she was based in Southland and had a family to think about as well. She also umpired the Steel's victory against the Mainland Tactix in Christchurch in 2017, days after Steel players were injured in the van crash. "We spend a lot of time with the players, we see them week-in, week-out," Simpson said. "Whilst we're trying to achieve different things, we've got a great respect for what they do, so that was definitely a game that stands out for a lot of emotions." Simpson, who has also officiated at Netball World Cups and the Commonwealth Games, has grown as an umpire through the years and never stopped developing. "I guess when you've been doing it for this long you get a picture memory bank of things that happen and how they go about happening. "You have a good idea of the players and what they're trying to achieve . . . and how the defence is trying to stop them. "You get a better feeling for that contest, contact and consistency across the court." But there were always things that kept her on her toes, including the addition of the two-point shot to the competition this season. The new rule turned the goal circle backwards — while shooters have traditionally tried to be under the post, they are now aiming to be in the two-point zone. "From our perspective, we've got to look in different places. We've got to have different angles to the court and therefore the defence is trying to do that opposite thing to what they're normally doing. "It has made it interesting, it's made it a new challenge, a new thing to think about and I think that's always good and exciting." Her enjoyment for the game had never wavered and the often thankless task of umpiring had been her way of being involved in the sport. "It's great to be a part of the game and this is the part that I can do well. That's the thing I like the most is being involved in the game. "But the best games are always when they don't notice us. "At the end of the day if you've got a game and you come off and someone's like 'oh did you umpire that game?', it's a big win." Simpson, who is also a coach for the national watch list umpire squad, is part of a unique crew from the Eastern Southland centre, home to five international umpires in Colleen Bond, Alison Cormack, Bobbi Brown, Jono Bredin and Simpson. "The joy of Eastern is we still have those umpires and those people in there helping," Simpson said. "They're such a great support, they've got so much knowledge and that gives you a lot of confidence, especially when it's the young umpires coming through when you're starting. "I feel very lucky and very privileged to have been able to come from there."


Otago Daily Times
5 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Passing on a passion for learning
Sport Otago has been hosting coaching development workshops to support the next crop of coaches across the region. Kayla Hodge catches up with community sports adviser William Hola to hear why he believes coaching can change lives. William Hola has never viewed sport as just sport. It is a vehicle that can change people's lives and teach them a raft of skills that can spill over into everyday activities. Coaching plays a big role in that and it was one of the first areas the community sports adviser was keen to hook in to when he joined Sport Otago earlier this year. Speaking to his colleagues, Hola recognised the need for more support in developing coaches and pitched bringing all the sporting codes together across the region. It has blossomed into a three-phase coaching workshop series, focusing on a holistic model to help their growth. They have proved successful with more than 100 coaches flocking to the workshops in Dunedin, Clutha, Cromwell, Wanaka, Queenstown, and Waitaki — and the demand led to Alexandra being added for phase two. And they have been popular from young to veteran coaches and various codes too, from figure skating, netball, hockey, squash, rugby, mountainbiking, athletics, rugby league and snow sports. "That was the beauty of that connection," Hola said. "You can imagine that all together was such a cool experience for others that deal with a different scope of athletes as well." Phase one was held in April, tailored for coaches as they headed into their seasons and focused on topics such as team culture and effective communication. Some of Otago's best coaches offered words of wisdom as key speakers across the workshops, including Highlanders assistant Kane Jury, New Zealand Netball secondary schools coach Jo Morrison, Basketball Otago general manager Jodi Brown, and former Tongan and Otago rugby player Uili Kolo'ofai. Online check-ins were held throughout the past month ahead of the second phase, which starts in Alexandra on June 16. The second phase will focus on the needs of coaches in the midst of their season including coping with pressure, decision-making, feedback and "all the things that come with what coaches ask themselves". More speakers will be involved, including Steve Richens, of Te Mahi Ako, and former All Blacks physiotherapist Pete Gallagher, and Hola hoped to connect with Special Olympics as well. Having high calibre speakers passing on their knowledge had been the key, Hola said. "It's been an awesome experience to hear them because they're coaches that have coached at grassroots, and community level, and now they're at their peak. "It's not just coaching, but life really. "That's why we've got guys like Uili, Pete — they deal with people as well. You have coaches, but also great people too that can connect." Coaching provided a different pathway in sport and Hola was proud to see the workshops — which people can still register for — playing a hand in that pathway. "It excites me because my passion and heart is to see all coaches develop. "What excites me is that I'm learning too. "It's just nice to see the coaches being developed because it's such a thankless job. "Everyone seems to be praising them when they're winning, but no-one seems to praise them when they're losing." Sport has always been a core part of Hola's life. Growing up in Auckland, Hola attended Kelston Boys' where he played rugby and volleyball, representing New Zealand secondary schools and New Zealand under-19s in the latter. He later moved to Wellington and then seven years ago, Hola and his wife, Amandah, and their children Josiah, 21, Praise, 20 — who is part of the Southern Blast — Joseph, 17, David, 13, Tim, 10, and Noah, 4, landed in Dunedin. Hola coached rugby in Auckland, and Wellington, and linked up with Zingari Richmond as head coach last year when they made the quarterfinals, but they "just haven't got the results this year at the moment". He also has been the assistant coach for the Highlanders schools forwards the past two seasons and relished the chance to connect with coaches from North Otago, and Southland, and learn from Highlanders coaches Jamie Joseph and Dave Dillon. Coaching has always played a big part in Hola's life— and there was always something new to learn. "I've always been passionate about using that platform of sports to transform lives and how I can influence someone to be a better person. "Seeing young men become good men — that's been my drive — but also seeing other coaches thrive as well." That has made seeing the success of the coaching workshops even more worth it. "Where I am at the moment I have a passion and desire to go further in my coaching . . . but I always look back at the journey of where I started coaching under-8s to where I am now to have an opportunity with Highlanders schools. "It's a vast difference, but in between that I've had connections and people that have helped me along the way. "That's the key. If I can help a different coach, whether that's sending them a template of different trainings plans, or developing, or giving them feedback, it fulfils me in terms of what I can do in that space."


Otago Daily Times
6 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Showcase of Filipino food, sport and culture
Kira Azucena. Photo: Philippines Embassy Sports and glamour will feature in a series of events this weekend. Dunedin Filipino Sports will host the South Island Filipino Sports Tournament at venues across the city this weekend. About 500 athletes from Nelson to Invercargill will compete in basketball, volleyball, badminton and billiards. The event, which carries a theme of diversity, passion and unity, is being co-ordinated by Dunedin Filipino Sports president Arvin Lazaro and his wife, Charm Lazaro. Mrs Lazaro said the tournament usually rotates between host cities each year, but a Covid-19 hiatus has kept it out of Dunedin since 2016. After the sporting events wrap up on Sunday, a separate showcase will celebrate the beauty of young women. The Search for Binibining South Island will highlight Filipina beauty. ''Binibining'' means young woman or ''Miss'', and the contest will let participants display a range of outfits and compete in talent and cultural sections. Judges include the Filipino Ambassador to New Zealand, Kira Azucena. Members of Dunedin's Filipino community will perform and Sport Otago's William Hola will give an inspirational talk. The new contest aims to celebrate beauty and weave cultural elements into the programme. ''It is not always about masculinity,'' Mrs Lazaro said. Filipino food stalls will operate at the main venue and members of the public are welcome at all events. @ Events Volleyball and Basketball Edgar Centre 116 Portsmouth Dr Saturday and Sunday 9am-5pm Under 23 Basketball Saturday 9am-5pm Caledonian Gymnasium 265 Andersons Bay Rd Billiards Bowey's Pool Lounge 81 Crawford St Saturday 6pm-9pm Badminton Otago Badminton Centre 101 Victoria Rd, St Kilda Saturday 9am-5pm Search for Binibining South Island More FM Arena 116 Portsmouth Dr Sunday 5pm-10pm