Latest news with #Taurua


Otago Daily Times
12-05-2025
- Sport
- Otago Daily Times
Silver Ferns coach's Australian foray allows her to ‘stay sharp'
Silver Ferns coach Dame Noeline Taurua has been spreading her wings across the Ditch. Taurua returned home yesterday after a three-week professional development stint with the New South Wales Swifts, strengthening the connection between the Silver Ferns and the Australian Super Netball club. The Swifts are home to Silver Ferns shooter Grace Nweke and coach Briony Akle, who is a specialist coach with the Silver Ferns. Taurua previously spent nine days as a specialist with the club last season. Taurua joined the Swifts for their past three games, the Swifts beating the Adelaide Thunderbirds 65-57, the Queensland Firebirds 71-63 and the Melbourne Vixens 59-51 to remain the only unbeaten team after five games. Those games allowed Taurua to sight Jamaicans Shamera Sterling-Humphrey, who is now pregnant, Latanya Wilson and Romelda Aiken-George, Ugandan shooter Mary Cholhok and English Roses Imogen Allison and Helen Housby. Netball New Zealand head of high performance Stephen Hotter said the relationship benefited everyone and helped build connections. ''Coaching opportunities such as this engagement are essential for Dame Noeline to stay sharp and engaged at an elite level during the domestic season,'' Hotter said. ''It also enables Noeline to observe top international talent and note the progress that they've made in their game and it enables us to stay connected and support Grace where needed.'' Taurua had been impressed by Nweke's performances in the tough league, where she already looked fitter, stronger and had adjusted her game. Nweke leads the competition with 249 goals from 266 attempts — Melbourne Mavericks Jamaican shooter Shimona Jok is next on 235 — and is third for offensive rebounds with 15. Nweke is ineligible to play internationally at present due to NNZ criteria requiring players to hone their craft domestically in New Zealand. Taurua told Newstalk ZB last week her stance had not changed on wanting Nweke to be available for the Silver Ferns, but understood the NNZ board's point of view as well. She hoped they could meet in the middle in the near future. Taurua is no stranger to the Australian league. She was the inaugural coach of the Sunshine Coast Lightning and led them to back-to-back championships in 2017 and 2018. She returned home in time for the ANZ Premiership season, which got under way at the weekend.

NZ Herald
28-04-2025
- Sport
- NZ Herald
Northland netball injuries cost ACC $1.8m - Silver Ferns coach backs injury prevention
It's an important year for the Silver Ferns as they look to consolidate on their Constellation Cup victory in 2024 and prepare for the 2026 Commonwealth Games and 2027 Netball World Cup. 'The thing that I was most pleased about [in the win over Australia] was our ability just to mentally be in tune with each other,' the 56-year-old coach said. 'So that is our focus for this year. We need to consolidate on those performances and hit those standards again. We need to keep building.' That same philosophy applies to player welfare. Taurua (Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Whātua) is educating netball coaches and players across New Zealand about the changes to the NetballSmart dynamic warm-up. 'It is important work because our Silver Ferns come from the grassroots of our game,' she said. 'That is our pathway from local level coming right through to high performance to the Silver Ferns. We need to ensure our coaches have the resources to protect our players for the long term.' In New Zealand, there were 373 ACL-related netball injuries in 2024, and 335 of those were female. 'We know that an ACL is a debilitating injury that can take a player up to 12 months to recover from,' Taurua said. 'That has a huge impact on the person's career and their life.' ACC has partnered with Netball NZ since 1997 to deliver NetballSmart. It is the only injury prevention programme to focus solely on improving outcomes for females. The Ferns' lead physiotherapist, Sharon Kearney, has driven the revision of the programme. 'NetballSmart is brilliant. We are so fortunate to have Sharon, and her team involved,' Taurua said. 'And for athletes and coaches to have these resources available is great. We have reviewed the programme and listened to the feedback of our community to improve it. We are lucky to have our partnership with ACC who have played a massive role in minimising injuries in our game.' Netball NZ is supporting coaches with a range of resources like videos on the warmup. Taurua, who played 34 tests for the Silver Ferns, has simple advice for coaches and players on how to approach their netball. 'For players it is all about enjoyment. You need to look after your body and know that your body is the tool and the more you invest in it, the more you are investing your longevity in the game. 'For coaches, understand clearly why you're doing it. It is easy to overthink it, but the best coaching is when you pull it back to the core fundamentals and keep it simple. ''