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Underarm Bowling to the Rugby World Cup: Martin Snedden’s Incredible Life

December 07, 202502:17:46
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>> Martin Snedden, welcome to my podcast.
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>> Oh, thank you, Dom.
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>> I appreciate you being here.
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>> I love being here.
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>> Yeah. Really?
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>> Yeah. Yeah.
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>> Yeah. Well, I can't um Okay,
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I'm going to drop any sort of facade of
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[ __ ] here. Um you and I, we've had
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had some meetings over the years, like
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just briefly sort of in passing. So, I
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was um somehow I ended up as what you'd
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call CEO of Dookco events with Dave
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Higgins and Dean Lonigan.
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>> Why they ever called it CEO, I don't
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know because I'm sitting in the same
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office as the two of them. There's no
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chance I'm in charge.
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>> And um so we were running all these
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events and you were popping up in the
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middle of it. So, we got I remember
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sitting on a plane with you one day. We
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were flying one place to another and you
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told me a bit of your life story. Um
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>> uh was good. Yeah. So, we've got a bit
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of history.
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>> Yeah. But I I've never told you this
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until now, but um when I was I suppose
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seven or eight years old, that's when
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you made the New Zealand cricket team.
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And um that was uh that was that was a
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like a life-defining period for me. That
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was probably when I was like a peak into
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my cricket. So, you were one of my
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heroes. You weren't my alltime hero.
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That was Lance Ken. I had the Excalibur
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bat.
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>> Um but I was a big Martin Sneden fan as
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a kid.
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>> Yeah. No. Um a lot of ladies have told
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me that since. So I also knew it at the
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time but wasn't the case. There was a
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great period in the 80s. I mean we might
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talk about that but
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>> yeah 100%
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>> great history great great great memories
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>> and and you mentioned um Dooko events
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which is um in terms of your career a
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very small part of it um but I spoke to
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Dean Lonigan on Friday um and this is
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what he said. Martin is very considered
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and never made any rash decisions. He
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always thinks things through carefully
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and is just a really good bloke. when he
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came to Duke, we didn't need a third
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entrepreneur. We needed someone with
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great with a great management mind and
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that was Martin Sneeden.
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>> Yeah. I listen, I didn't know what I was
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walking into. Um
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but from a distance, I had looked at
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those two guys and I admired what they
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had done. They were risk takers, big
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risktakers. And Dino's right that they
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needed someone in the middle that was a
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little bit less of a total risk taker.
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And um but I had seen them do stuff that
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mainstream sport wouldn't do, wouldn't
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take the risk on, wouldn't have the
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drive, and that really interested me.
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And then stepping into the middle of it,
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wow, it was an I could only last for two
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years [laughter] with them, but
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[clears throat] it was it was a
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memorable two years full of great stuff
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and the odd bloody disaster, but but you
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know, most of it great stuff. And so I
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came away and I came away with an
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admiration for those two cuz I often
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hear them slagged off by others and I
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stop people when they're doing that and
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say, "No, no, you've got this wrong. You
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don't know these people.
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>> They're different than each other. You
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don't put them together and and sort of
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categorize them as the same. They're
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completely different than each other."
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[snorts]
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>> Um, but they're bloody hardworking.
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>> Well, David is when he's when he's on
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the game and Dino is the whole time. And
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once they decide to do something, they
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move heaven and earth to try and make it
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work. And sometimes they achieve stuff
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that all the big sports with all their
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money simply couldn't do. And that's,
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you know, that's why they've got my
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admiration. And um but it was an
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interesting ride. [laughter]
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>> Yeah, they they end up having quite an
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acronomous split, but um I've got great
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admiration for both of them, I think.
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Did you were you like a a handbrake?
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Like some of your ideas you wanted to
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shut them down?
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>> Dino's right. He's been a bit polite
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with that that explanation, but I was a
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wee bit of a handbrake. Not a not overly
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successful, mind you. Um Dino used to
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label me Mr. Negative. Um, [laughter]
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and it and it probably was because, you
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know, as they would come up with ideas,
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which they did every single day,
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uh, I would point out some of the
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obstacles and, um, they would look at me
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and think, "Oh, you you bloody negative
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bastard." And, uh, why don't you just
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let us get on with it? And most of the
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time, I had no choice. I had to. And
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then so what I'd do is try and work on
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those obstacles and those negatives just
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to mitigate them and and remove them if
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I could. Um
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but they achieved stuff, you know, they
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were ahead of their time. They still
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are, you know, you see when they split
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up and it was acrimonious and sad for
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me. um they sort of had to reinvent
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themselves and and so David, you know,
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has gone off and and I don't see either
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of them, no, for no reason other than
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their paths don't cross
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>> and um I see what they do and I think,
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well, good on you. You're still you're
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still ahead of the game.
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>> Oh, 100%.
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>> So, that makes up a very small part of
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your sports admin career. So, there's a
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playing career which went for like a
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decade and then there's this been this
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incredible sports admin career. If you
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had to pick one, um, yeah, what are you
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more proud of?
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>> Uh, Rugby World Cup.
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>> Funny. Okay. The admin side,
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>> considering I've been in cricket,
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>> yeah,
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>> most of my life,
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>> uh, outside of family stuff, it's the
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Rugby World Cup. I think cuz
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>> it was so huge for New Zealand that had
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risk all over the top of it. I knew that
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if we stuffed up, the organization I was
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leading that was delivering it stuffed
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up, my career was probably not going to
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recover or take a long time to recover.
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So, you felt that pressure the whole
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time and the people that that were
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involved with us, the government, New
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Zealand rugby never let that pressure uh
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subside in the whole four years that we
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had to prepare for the thing. But the
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cooperation we got from right across the
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country, not just within sport, but
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right across the country uh was
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spectacular. We set it up, you know, we
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we did it well to get that support. Um
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but when people committed to it, they
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came in guns and all and it was just
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fantastic to see the whole country
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activate and um you know and then it
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came off and we knew it was going to
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come off unless there was going to be
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some unforeseen disaster. But it just
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was a a brilliant event. And then Dom it
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was a great lesson in life because you
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know we had the fanf fair. It culminated
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at Eden Park around the corner with with
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the an unbelievable final and not in the
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way that we expected it to be, but it
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sort of got there, you know, they got
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there and the event was topped off by
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that. And then 3 days later, everyone's
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moved on. Everyone else has moved on and
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those of us that had spent our lives
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doing this were sort of sitting there in
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our offices looking around thinking, "No
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one cares about us anymore. You even
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wrote a book about it.
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>> Yeah, I did.
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>> Actually, I've got a whole whole card
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about the 2011 Rugby World Cup. So,
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we'll get into that. Um, just a couple
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of quickfire ones. Um, yeah. What's the
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most money you've ever heard of in one
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negotiation and your various roles? You
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>> Oh, it's it's um it's in cricket and
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it's to do with India. You know, in the
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world of cricket,
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Indian broadcast money is mindboggling.
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And about 3 years ago, what what happens
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is all the countries give their their
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broadcasting rights into a pool in the
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middle and the International Cricket
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Council, the ICC then sells those
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rights. And you know about six, seven
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years ago, they sold the rights to
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Cricket World Cups, those sorts of
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events for I think it was about 2
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billion US.
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But then 3 years later, they sold the
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same rights for a 4-year period instead
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of an 8-year period for 3.6 billion. And
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you know, you're sitting in New Zealand
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looking at this firstly thinking, Yahoo,
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we get a share of that. Um, but secondly
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thinking, wow, that's just
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extraordinary. Um, so yeah,
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>> that's absurd money. It is.
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>> I was um Yeah, cuz I was wondering when
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I when I when I wrote that question
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down, I was thinking, what would it be?
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would have it be some sort of cricket
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negotiation would have been one of the
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early Parker fights you know I was
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thinking maybe a million couple of
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million I wasn't expecting billions
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>> no and um so those in in Indian cricket
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that's the money you're dealing with
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which on the one hand is great for those
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like New Zealand cricket that are
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sharing in it on the other hand uh it
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creates an enormous challenge to the
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future of cricket
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>> speaking of cricket um toughest bowler
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you ever faced
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uh was Macan and Waka Ununas, the two
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Pakistani guys who uh were just listen I
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wasn't much of a batsman. Every so often
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I had a day but but really I was there
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as a bowler. So the expectations of
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everyone else were fairly low when I was
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batting. So um there wasn't a huge
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amount of pressure but apart from what I
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put on myself but facing those two guys
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I just didn't have a clue. You know,
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it's sort of everyone else you sort of
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try and work out and you, you know,
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maybe do okay, maybe not, but usually
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you feel like um you got a chance. Not
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against these guys. Didn't have a chance
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in hell.
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>> What about the toughest batter you ever
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bowled to?
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>> One summer in Australia, David Gow got
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going and he just slaughtered everyone,
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including me. I think he picked on me.
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Um and so [laughter]
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and so um you know that was a bit
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daunting. Um but it only lasted for a
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summer. You know I played against him
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plenty of times over the 10 years and
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that was that was his summer and every
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other time you know it was a little bit
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more even. I mean he was far better than
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I was but at least I had a chance
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>> whereas that summer I was out of my
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depth. [snorts]
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>> Um we've only been going about 10
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minutes. I think this sets the platform
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for what's going to be a great chat. Um
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it's like a a tappers version of what
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we're getting into like just an
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incredible life and um top level sport
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and uh top level business as well. First
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of all, let's go all the way back. Um so
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yeah, earliest memories.
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>> Uh [clears throat] youngest of five, you
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know, brought up around the corner in
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Mount Eden. Um sport mad family, luckily
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three older brothers and a sister. Um
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and so you know playing in the backyard
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as the youngest of that lot um that's
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what I remember and then just sort of
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gradually you know that emerging um into
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into actually formal playing of cricket
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and rugby and and uh tried to hand some
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other sports but in those days you know
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it was really only cricket and rugby
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that was available. the school system
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and whatnot, they actually actively
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dissuaded people from playing football
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or
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>> rugby league or other stuff like that.
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And so that's what it was. And uh I was
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just lucky. I mean, I think the
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beneficiary of being the youngest in a
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in a group of um sports mad siblings
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paid off.
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>> Who I I there were times where I'd
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pretend to be Martin Snedden or Lance
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Kins or Richard Hadley. Um who did you
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pretend to be? Well, I had a pretty
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active imagination and and um quite
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often as well as what I talked about
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before, I'd be out in the backyard
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playing um playing sport by myself with
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pretending I was in test matches or this
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or that. And um funnily enough,
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Australian cricketers were the ones cuz
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I'd
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you know, shortwave radio can remember
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listening to in those days listening to
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cricket from Australia. It was always on
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shortwave and
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you know the sound of well probably
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people don't remember the sound of that.
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[laughter]
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>> What's shortwave like am radio? No.
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>> Oh yeah. Well this was actually
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shortwave and um uh I just fell in love
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with the picture in my mind of Ian
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Chapel, Doug Walders, Lily came along um
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those sort of people. And so that for me
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that was the in inspiration around
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cricket. it. I couldn't believe that
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years later I was actually playing
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against those guys out on the Sydney
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cricket ground or Melbourne cricket
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ground. I mean, gez.
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>> But anyway, that's that's what sort of
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fired it up. And then in the winter it
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was all blacks, all blacks, all blacks,
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you know, and I was a I learned to be a
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great reader and my grandparents had all
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these sports magazines and so I'd just
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devour those. And dad had a whole lot of
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cricket books that I would just devour.
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It's actually how I learned English,
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mathematics, geography, you know, was
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those sorts of stuff cuz I really didn't
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spend a lot of time in class
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concentrating on them. And and so, you
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know, I just had this
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sport feeling infused into me
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from my whole childhood. And I remember
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one day driving along u mom was driving
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me uh to a new school on the Northshore
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and and I don't know why but I said to
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her I'm going to play cricket for New
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Zealand and she looked at me and sort of
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nodded her head and then moved on.
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Although our family has an amazing
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history
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>> you know my granddad captain New Zealand
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at cricket. My uncle played for New
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Zealand. My dad played for Oakland and
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my great-grandfather was one of five BS
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that purchased swamp land in Kingsland,
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turned it into Eden Park. So, you know,
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all of this has been in my background
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and so there was no surprise really that
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I end up right in the middle of the
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sport for my whole life.
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>> Yeah, I was going to I read that I was
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going to ask you about that later. That
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must have been is that something that
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was in your mind like um the the
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completion of the Rugby World Cup which
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you were heavily involved with and we'll
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get to that at Eden Park. Yeah.
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>> Um, all blacks beat France by one point.
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One point was it?
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>> Yeah.
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>> 87.
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>> Was that something that played on your
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that that came to mind that grandad?
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That was
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>> Yeah. I I was incredibly proud of of
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that. It It is why when this debate
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rages about Eden Park that I am 100%
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plus pro Eden Park. Um,
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and uh, it's just because so much of my
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history, my family history has been tied
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up in that ground and it of course it's
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created so much of the great memories of
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sport in New Zealand that I just can't
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get away from that. And now I'm living
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across the road down in Sandringham from
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it. So I can't get away from it, you
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know. But yeah, it did it and and
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particularly in the Rugby World Cup
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where
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>> the capacity of the ground had been
00:15:18
raised to 60,000 and and you know we had
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11 games there and and eight of them
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were sold out at 60,000 which was just
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an extraordinary
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>> series of of events that yeah I you know
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I felt really proud about.
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>> So you're from a big cricket family also
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a big law family as well. Um so
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>> lawyers for Africa
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>> it was um so it was always going to be
00:15:41
and you in your path to go to Deneden
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and study law.
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>> Well I had to go to needen in the end
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I'll tell that story but um [laughter]
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but
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my grandfather was a lawyer and he
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started up a legal firm in Oakland and
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that legal firm is still going 105 years
00:15:58
later.
00:16:00
uh my grandfather, my father, my older
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brother Dave, me for 20 years with Dave
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and then I moved out into cricket.
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Dave's still going so it's still going.
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But my grandfather had two brothers who
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were lawyers and the other two of them
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went off and and
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um created law firms themselves. So
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three brothers had three law firms. Why?
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I I just never thought to ask my dad
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when he was alive how the hell that
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could happen. But um [laughter] and then
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yeah I I suppose I was going through
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school sort of concentrating mainly on
00:16:34
rugby and cricket which weren't um
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curriculum uh activities at that stage
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and I had no idea what I was going to do
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but I had loved reading books in dad's
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library about courtroom scenes and so
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you know that captured my imagination
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and then because everyone else in the
00:16:51
family was lawyers I thought oh well
00:16:53
I'll try and be a lawyer. Well, I
00:16:54
started off at Oakland University and I
00:16:56
was a disaster and the reason I was a
00:16:59
disaster is really rugby, cricket,
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drinking and I had a good great
00:17:02
girlfriend and uh so there was no chance
00:17:05
there and so after 2 years I I found I
00:17:08
couldn't make headway but I could if I
00:17:13
went down to Otago to Deneden University
00:17:16
I could get into law school there as I
00:17:17
couldn't up here. [gasps]
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So I made the step. I didn't know anyone
00:17:21
down there, one mate. And um [snorts] I
00:17:24
went down there and that, you know, was
00:17:26
a a brilliant moment in our lives really
00:17:29
because
00:17:30
uh I ended up meeting my wife there. She
00:17:33
was doing a law degree as well and we
00:17:36
Yeah. Annie, we've had four kids and
00:17:38
we've sort of strong armed each of them
00:17:39
to go through Otago if they wanted any
00:17:43
financial assistance at all. And so
00:17:45
>> you're encouraging your kids to go to
00:17:47
Deno? [laughter]
00:17:49
because we had had such a great time
00:17:51
that uh it was sort of like
00:17:55
>> you've got to go guys. This is just
00:17:57
you've got to
00:17:58
>> what just like the right of passage.
00:17:59
>> Yeah. Well, it is. And of course, we our
00:18:01
best friends in our lives have all
00:18:04
emerged out of that period. And so all
00:18:07
of them have been around our kids as
00:18:08
well and had their own kids. And so, you
00:18:11
know, there was all these this myth
00:18:13
about Deneden. [snorts] motion, a lot of
00:18:15
it true and a lot of it myth that just
00:18:17
kept being fed to our kids. So there was
00:18:19
no choice when it came to it. You know,
00:18:21
they had to go.
00:18:22
>> What um [snorts] Yeah. What what what
00:18:25
were you like in the 70s? What was
00:18:26
Deneden like in the 70s? You you were um
00:18:28
you were like on the towards the end of
00:18:30
you would agree you were on the cusp of
00:18:31
like um playing for the country. You
00:18:34
kind of been much of a party boy, eh?
00:18:35
>> So you No, no, you're you're missing the
00:18:39
point here. [laughter] Um
00:18:41
we were
00:18:44
even at international level uh cricket
00:18:47
was pretty social. [laughter] Um you
00:18:50
know no one was there were no contracts.
00:18:53
You weren't working full-time playing
00:18:55
cricket. Um the the seasons were were
00:18:59
pretty short compared to what they are
00:19:00
now. Uh so I had I'd sort of started
00:19:04
emerging when I left school and then
00:19:06
went down to Deneden and and uh I think
00:19:10
it was in my my second year there. Um I
00:19:13
had a good run with the cricket and in
00:19:17
March that year they picked a New
00:19:18
Zealand team to tour Australia but it
00:19:20
wasn't leaving until October. So I had 6
00:19:23
months notice and um you know in the law
00:19:27
school this was quite a big thing. He's
00:19:28
a guy playing for New Zealand even
00:19:30
though I hadn't yet. Um so we celebrated
00:19:33
that winter um the selection and
00:19:37
[laughter] the whole winter.
00:19:38
>> The whole winter of course and and you
00:19:40
[snorts] know fitness levels weren't
00:19:41
what they are today. So but I was young
00:19:44
and and you know and uh so preparation
00:19:48
for the tour wasn't ideal. Um, but it
00:19:51
was uh a dream come true and and of
00:19:54
course October the start of the tour
00:19:55
coincided with exams
00:19:58
and so because I'd had notice I'd gone
00:20:00
to the lecturers and said, "Hey, I've
00:20:02
got a problem here. I'm meant to be in
00:20:03
Australia." Well, Otago Law School was
00:20:07
pretty sporting minded and so what they
00:20:09
did is they created separate exams for
00:20:11
me and I sat them in the two or three
00:20:14
days. you know, I had to do five exams
00:20:16
in about three days and then at least it
00:20:18
meant I could bug her off to Australia
00:20:20
and not have to think about it again.
00:20:23
Um, my wife to be was doing the same
00:20:27
exams and I thought they would create
00:20:30
different exams for me than they might
00:20:32
for the others. So, she got a bit of a
00:20:33
head start with understanding what might
00:20:35
be in those.
00:20:36
>> Um, but anyway, and then I, you know, go
00:20:39
to Australia and this is a dream come
00:20:41
true, 21 years old.
00:20:44
um playing on all these brilliant venues
00:20:48
that I dreamed about and playing against
00:20:51
the guys that that I'd grown up inspired
00:20:54
by
00:20:56
uh playing with Richard Headley
00:20:59
>> and Jeff How and a team that history
00:21:03
showed was a really good bunch of
00:21:07
players
00:21:08
>> and you know that was just a fantastic
00:21:10
way to start playing for New Zealand.
00:21:13
And then of course I had to come back
00:21:14
and go to university in the next year
00:21:16
and I was the richest student in Deneden
00:21:19
because
00:21:20
>> um we'd got given each get given 10,000
00:21:23
bucks no tax to um to tour which you
00:21:27
didn't have to spend any of it cuz you
00:21:29
got daily allowances that covered
00:21:30
everything. So I turned back up in
00:21:32
Deneden with 10,000 bucks in the
00:21:34
account. I'm the only p only student in
00:21:36
Deneden with any money in the bank
00:21:37
account. And so that started off another
00:21:40
winter of celebration of of what had
00:21:43
happened.
00:21:44
>> Yeah. 10,000 in 1981 80.
00:21:47
>> So So dad said to me, "Right, you got to
00:21:51
put it in in a scheme that at that stage
00:21:53
the government, I forget the name of the
00:21:56
scheme. And I should remember this cuz
00:21:57
it was a bloody be which was that they
00:22:00
would guarantee you an interest rate
00:22:03
which was equivalent to the rate of
00:22:05
inflation plus 2 or 3% and inflation was
00:22:09
going crazy.
00:22:10
>> So I was getting about 16 17 18% per
00:22:14
year on that 10,000. It it ultimately
00:22:16
became the deposit for my first home.
00:22:18
[snorts] Um so [laughter] so you know
00:22:22
having having had the joy of 3 months in
00:22:26
Australia doing what I just love um to
00:22:29
end up with some money in the bank. I
00:22:31
would have gone for nothing. I didn't
00:22:32
you didn't play for money.
00:22:34
>> Um
00:22:35
so
00:22:37
what was um what was that like with the
00:22:39
the day you first turned up to um New
00:22:41
Zealand camp or whatever? Are you
00:22:43
familiar with the term imposter
00:22:45
syndrome?
00:22:45
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I know it well. um
00:22:48
>> probably too young to think about it
00:22:50
that way. You know, when you're young,
00:22:52
you don't think
00:22:54
you're not good enough sort of that that
00:22:56
happens when you get a bit older and
00:22:58
that did happen to me a little bit later
00:22:59
on when things didn't go quite so well.
00:23:02
But, um it's just that that cocky, brash
00:23:05
youthful,
00:23:06
>> you know, I was smart enough to keep my
00:23:07
mouth largely shut, you know, cuz most
00:23:10
of these guys I didn't really know. I
00:23:13
hadn't I hadn't played against or with
00:23:16
guys enough by that stage to have but
00:23:18
there was two other young guys in the
00:23:20
team John Brace and Ian Smith. So the
00:23:22
three of us you know who were all just
00:23:24
picked out of junior sort of development
00:23:27
pathway type things we we became good
00:23:30
friends. So yeah and you know you just
00:23:33
gradually worked your way into the
00:23:35
friendships and whatnot that then lasted
00:23:37
for a long time.
00:23:38
>> What was Hadley like? Oh well people it
00:23:43
he's a little bit misunderstood Richard
00:23:46
um at that point in time this is 1980
00:23:51
the success of the New Zealand team
00:23:53
depended entirely on Richard Hadley you
00:23:55
know yeah other guys would could chip in
00:23:58
but if we were going to win it would be
00:24:01
because Richard made us win
00:24:03
>> he was our Michael Jordan
00:24:05
>> yeah that's exactly right and he felt
00:24:08
the pressure of that and though you know
00:24:10
and there was an enormous strain on him
00:24:13
to turn up every single day, put in an
00:24:16
enormous effort and succeed. And so he
00:24:20
he sort of was a little bit insula
00:24:24
um in that period of time. And he also
00:24:26
at that stage 1980 he was clearly
00:24:29
emerging as one of the really good
00:24:31
players
00:24:32
um of
00:24:35
test cricket but he hadn't at that stage
00:24:38
reached the pinnacle of what he became.
00:24:42
As the 1980s went on and he started to
00:24:46
just knock off all these achievements
00:24:47
gradually. He just relaxed and um and
00:24:53
you know opened up a lot more. Well,
00:24:55
I've known Richard ever since that time
00:24:57
and I've I've worked for him. I was his
00:24:59
boss for a while when he was at New
00:25:00
Zealand cricket. I I came to really
00:25:04
really like him and totally trust him
00:25:08
because he was so organized, so diligent
00:25:12
and had great integrity and so you could
00:25:16
you could totally rely on him to do
00:25:19
>> what he was doing. But, you know,
00:25:21
carrying that New Zealand team in the
00:25:23
early ' 80s, that that must have been an
00:25:25
enormous strain on him. And of course, I
00:25:27
didn't have a clue. I was just a student
00:25:29
um and playing, you know, as much for
00:25:32
fun as as as
00:25:34
for uh serious stuff. And so, he had to
00:25:38
carry a lot, but man, he was good.
00:25:41
>> And you came along at the beginning of
00:25:42
the Beige Brigade.
00:25:44
>> Yeah.
00:25:44
>> What what year did the um the made a
00:25:46
huge comeback with um you know, the ACC,
00:25:49
different things. So, so my first tour,
00:25:51
this one in Aussie was that that Packer
00:25:55
had Kerry Packer had sort of had a bit
00:25:58
of an explosion in Australia in the late
00:25:59
'7s.
00:26:01
So 1980, we come along, we tour
00:26:04
Australia, suddenly we're playing in
00:26:05
these uniforms that we had had no say
00:26:08
whatsoever in the design or color of.
00:26:12
[snorts] And so, you know, we were to
00:26:14
start with called the chocolate soldiers
00:26:16
and then and then the beige brigade sort
00:26:18
of emerged a little bit later. But also,
00:26:21
we were playing under lights for the
00:26:22
first time. We were playing with a white
00:26:24
ball with fielding restrictions. It was
00:26:26
all new.
00:26:30
And uh the first part of the tour we'd
00:26:32
played a test series and we'd got wiped
00:26:34
badly. Um so that was a bit of a
00:26:37
disaster. But as the one day series went
00:26:40
on, we started to play really well and
00:26:44
capture the imagination of people at
00:26:46
home because cuz cricket was starting to
00:26:48
be broadcast back and at home and the
00:26:50
one day games would come in at a viewer
00:26:52
friendly time cuz they're day night
00:26:54
games and so people got really
00:26:57
interested and of course then you know
00:26:58
it moved towards the underarm game
00:27:00
towards the end of the tour which it
00:27:01
just took off. It exploded from there
00:27:04
and that that explosion carried on for a
00:27:06
few years after.
00:27:08
>> Yeah. Okay. Let's talk about that.
00:27:09
February 1, 1981. Um, a day that goes
00:27:13
down in New Zealand sporting history.
00:27:15
Um, when you think of that day, what
00:27:18
comes to mind?
00:27:19
>> Uh, the very first thing I think of,
00:27:21
because I'm thinking selfishly, is that
00:27:24
I took one of the greatest catches of
00:27:26
all time in the outfield. Um
00:27:30
uh it it actually was a really good
00:27:32
catch. I was fielding right on right out
00:27:35
on the boundary on the mid wicket
00:27:38
sideways to the wicket. Gre Chapel was
00:27:40
batting. Uh Aussie had batted first and
00:27:44
he smacked this ball out towards me and
00:27:46
I went running in at it. Now I' I'd
00:27:48
played a lot of rugby at fullback and I
00:27:51
was actually really good at catching the
00:27:53
ball and so I just kept going at it and
00:27:56
ended up diving at it and catching the
00:27:59
ball which um so if you see replays of
00:28:03
it or whatever YouTube you it actually
00:28:05
looks really good. It was fantastic.
00:28:07
>> I I I watched on YouTube did you um I
00:28:09
suppose the camera technology at the
00:28:10
time you just come from the right hand
00:28:12
side of the frame from out of nowhere.
00:28:14
>> I know they should have been following
00:28:15
me the whole way. I don't know where
00:28:16
they were. The empire were watching you,
00:28:18
right?
00:28:18
>> Well, that's that was the amazing. So,
00:28:20
so I dive forward, take this catch and
00:28:24
um uh nothing's happening. Um you know,
00:28:29
uh Mark Burgess had been feeling close
00:28:31
to me. He jumped up and Joy jumped over
00:28:32
the top of me, I think. Um
00:28:36
and then we sort of started to notice
00:28:37
that nothing was happening in the
00:28:39
middle. So wandered into the middle and
00:28:41
and I said to Greed Chapel, "I caught
00:28:43
it." And he didn't say a thing. he just
00:28:45
sort of turned around and walked away.
00:28:48
Now, to be fair to him, it's not the
00:28:50
batsman's job.
00:28:51
>> Um there I mean, you could say, "All
00:28:53
right, he should take the word of a a
00:28:56
fieldsman, but you know, it it's still
00:28:58
not his job." But the two umpires, cuz
00:29:02
Jeff H, the captain, was going at them
00:29:03
full full pelt at this stage. They said,
00:29:05
"Well, we weren't watching. We were
00:29:07
watching the batsman running between the
00:29:09
wickets." Pathetic. Anyway, so Greg was
00:29:13
given not out. He was on 58. He went on
00:29:15
and got 90. Funny thing is when he got
00:29:17
out I was bowling to him. Same thing
00:29:19
happened almost a replica and Bruce
00:29:21
Edget came flying in and took a
00:29:23
beautiful catch at mid wicket and Greg
00:29:25
walked off straight away. Didn't didn't
00:29:27
hang around. But then the game of course
00:29:29
then went later on and and I should say
00:29:32
this is at the MCG which is the the huge
00:29:36
bowl of a sports ground and it had a
00:29:38
world record crowd for one day
00:29:40
internationals there that day. I think
00:29:41
it was 70 something thousand and it was
00:29:45
hot as hell and and
00:29:48
um sort of it came down to the last over
00:29:50
and and
00:29:52
uh it was really close and then you know
00:29:55
the Aussie umpires pulled a couple of
00:29:57
LBWs out of the out of their bag just to
00:30:00
keep it even and then um [snorts]
00:30:03
uh you know the last ball Brian McKnney
00:30:06
went into face and and there was this
00:30:07
commotion happening in the middle and we
00:30:09
were sort of looking from the sideways
00:30:10
thinking what are they talking about and
00:30:12
then the penny dropped that Greg had
00:30:14
told his brother Trevor to bowl
00:30:15
underarm.
00:30:16
>> Yes. So Brian um who by the way double
00:30:18
all black so played cricket for New
00:30:20
Zealand with you played for the All
00:30:21
Blacks as well.
00:30:22
>> He was um facing the last ball of the
00:30:24
match and New Zealand needed six to
00:30:26
draw.
00:30:26
>> To draw not to win to draw or tie
00:30:30
>> and this is the largest playing arena in
00:30:33
the world of cricket. And I'm when I say
00:30:35
playing arena I mean the grass the
00:30:37
boundaries are bigger than anywhere
00:30:38
else. Brian is coming in to face his
00:30:41
first. Well, Brian was a good guy, but
00:30:43
there was no chance in Hill that he was
00:30:44
going to hit a six. Um, [snorts]
00:30:47
and uh, and so he comes in and then it
00:30:52
becomes obvious that that Greg has told
00:30:55
Trevor to bowl underarm. And Trevor's
00:30:58
looking at his brother saying, "I don't
00:31:00
want to do this." And Greg is [snorts]
00:31:02
saying, "I'm sorry, you have to do it."
00:31:04
And Rod Marsh is wicked keeper sort of
00:31:06
waggling his head saying, "No, no, don't
00:31:08
do it.
00:31:09
>> [snorts]
00:31:09
>> And anyway, it happened and um and you
00:31:15
[snorts] know the the of course there
00:31:17
was just everyone was stunned.
00:31:20
It was in the rules that you could do
00:31:23
this but no one ever it's one of those
00:31:24
rules you never you never know about.
00:31:27
you never would would think of doing it
00:31:30
and then it happened. And you know I I
00:31:34
often refer to it as the greatest day in
00:31:37
New Zealand cricket because it is the
00:31:39
day that New Zealanders
00:31:43
in huge numbers stood up and started
00:31:46
taking real notice of cricket. And from
00:31:49
that moment on, you know, the popularity
00:31:52
of cricket, it it actually, this is
00:31:55
February 1981, and remember the spring
00:31:57
box tour, that acrimonious tour a bit
00:31:59
later in the year. Cricket surpassed
00:32:01
rugby that year in terms of popularity
00:32:03
and also reputation. Um,
00:32:07
and so it it sort of we were looking at
00:32:10
each other, what the hell happened? And
00:32:14
um, anyway, it I I think to be honest,
00:32:20
we we realized we're on to a winner
00:32:23
pretty early, that this gave us the
00:32:25
moral high ground that 44 years later
00:32:30
we've still got with Australia.
00:32:32
And um and you know I still have
00:32:35
Australian mates who who refer to it or
00:32:39
you know if we're just getting to know
00:32:40
each other I just slip in. Oh I played
00:32:42
in the underarm game and suddenly
00:32:44
they're really embarrassed and
00:32:45
apologizing and [laughter]
00:32:48
I give speeches about it you know about
00:32:50
this. Um so so it was a actually a great
00:32:54
thing. The O poor old Aussie team um
00:32:56
they they didn't know what hit them. You
00:32:58
know, we went in normally what happens
00:32:59
is after a game in those days anyway,
00:33:02
the side that's batting second will go
00:33:04
in the dressing room of the side that
00:33:06
that has been fielding and you have a
00:33:07
few beers. Well, we decided some reason
00:33:10
we would go in there, which is pretty
00:33:12
pretty courageous of us, but we went in
00:33:14
there and it was a morg and they were
00:33:16
just they just didn't know what had hit
00:33:18
them.
00:33:18
>> So, we pretty quickly backed out of
00:33:21
that. Um, [snorts] but we got on really
00:33:23
well with those guys. Greg Greg I've
00:33:26
always find uh even when I run into him
00:33:29
now he's he's actually a really good guy
00:33:31
and um and so you know it wasn't one of
00:33:35
those things that called caused any
00:33:37
acrimony between the team but man did we
00:33:40
play it up when we got the chance and
00:33:42
every chance we could.
00:33:43
>> But were you we is part of you still a
00:33:46
bit um bitter with Greg because you
00:33:48
caught him out and uh you could have won
00:33:50
um a Toyota for catch of the match.
00:33:52
>> Oh that's right. I forgot about that.
00:33:53
You're right.
00:33:54
>> He cost you he cost you a bloody car.
00:33:56
>> A brand new Toyota was was on offer for
00:33:59
the best catch of the summer.
00:34:01
>> I mean the the commentary at the time
00:34:03
Richie Beno says, "What a catch. That's
00:34:04
one of the best catches I've ever seen
00:34:06
in my life." [gasps]
00:34:07
>> Well, you got to respect Richie.
00:34:09
>> Um yeah, [laughter] you know, but of
00:34:12
course I would have only got a hub hub
00:34:14
cap or something like that once we'
00:34:15
shared it around the team. Um
00:34:17
>> Oh, is that what happened? Oh, so okay.
00:34:19
So you won it as an individual, then it
00:34:20
went into like a team. That sort of was
00:34:22
the done deal. And of course, usually
00:34:25
Richard was winning the cars time after
00:34:26
time, and so he was he was having to
00:34:28
shove them all, which he got a bit sick
00:34:30
of at times. Um, but
00:34:34
listen, it didn't for a second cause any
00:34:37
acrimony. It, as I say, it just gave us
00:34:39
the moral high ground forever
00:34:42
>> with Australia. And isn't it funny that
00:34:44
the guy that faced it, Brian McKitney,
00:34:47
only a few months beforehand had been
00:34:49
playing for the All Blacks at Carter
00:34:50
Farms Park and Andy Hayden had dived out
00:34:54
of the line out in a predetermined ploy
00:34:57
and we'd got a penalty and and Brian had
00:35:00
kicked the winning goal. So to be
00:35:01
involved in two of the most
00:35:03
controversial episodes in New Zealand
00:35:05
sport history,
00:35:06
>> like the Forest Gump of New Zealand
00:35:07
sport, just involved in all these
00:35:09
pivotal moments, it's great. Were were
00:35:11
you were you guys sort of aware? So you
00:35:13
go back into the change room after the
00:35:14
game. Are you like are you sort of
00:35:16
bewildered or are you laughing about it?
00:35:18
Do you you realize it is at the time?
00:35:20
>> We're not laughing that quickly. We
00:35:21
we're we're a bit bewildered.
00:35:24
Um
00:35:26
but remembering it, you know, huge
00:35:28
ground and the chances of Brian hitting
00:35:30
a six would were non-existent and even
00:35:32
if he had of it would have been a draw
00:35:34
or tie.
00:35:35
So, you know, it wasn't it just we were
00:35:39
just flumxed by why they would do it.
00:35:41
Greg had had a really difficult summer.
00:35:44
You know, he'd been struggling to score
00:35:45
runs. The the demands on him as captain
00:35:49
Australia were ridiculous. The
00:35:51
Australian cricket board had ass flying
00:35:53
all over Australia. No cohesion in the
00:35:55
in the way the the calendar of games was
00:35:59
worked out. So, he was utterly and
00:36:01
completely burnt out by the time. and
00:36:03
that affected his his decision-m on the
00:36:06
day. [snorts]
00:36:06
>> The following year they toured New
00:36:08
Zealand. We had this brilliant occasion
00:36:10
at Eden Park which was the biggest crowd
00:36:11
in cricket history and Greg came out to
00:36:14
bat and the crowd booed him out into the
00:36:18
middle. Um a a a wag jumped off the
00:36:21
terraces cuz there's no security as to
00:36:24
what you bought in the games in those
00:36:25
days. And he had a bowling ball and he
00:36:27
got out and he bowled the ball along the
00:36:28
ground. It was brilliant. And Jeremy Con
00:36:30
picked it. Jeremy was a laugh. Anyway,
00:36:33
[snorts] um Greg went on and scored 100
00:36:35
and he got a standing ovation coming off
00:36:37
the field. He had just published a book
00:36:41
uh about the previous summer and there
00:36:43
was a chapter on my catch and there was
00:36:44
a chapter on on uh the underarm. I'd
00:36:47
bought the book and I took it into the
00:36:49
Aussie director room afterwards and I
00:36:50
got him to sign it for [laughter]
00:36:54
so um good memories.
00:36:56
>> Jeez, you mentioned Eden Park again.
00:36:58
Yeah, there's this amazing given the
00:37:00
backstory with your great granddad. It's
00:37:02
been like this amazing backdrop to your
00:37:04
life.
00:37:04
>> Oh, totally. You know, it it so my
00:37:07
granddad and then my uncle Colum, he had
00:37:09
this amazing thing where he was a rugby
00:37:12
and cricket commentator and in those
00:37:14
days they used to play, you know, club
00:37:16
rugby every Saturday at Eden Park, then
00:37:18
represented rugby, then the All Blacks
00:37:21
and um and in cricket, you know, when
00:37:24
Oakland was playing there. Well, Colin
00:37:25
was the commentator for both sports
00:37:28
every Saturday for 40 years.
00:37:31
>> He only gave up in the end because he
00:37:33
felt uncomfortable that I was out there
00:37:35
playing for New Zealand. So, he he
00:37:37
retired. Um, so that that connection
00:37:40
with the ground is just enormous.
00:37:42
>> Um, yeah.
00:37:44
>> What's your proudest moment as a New
00:37:45
Zealand cricketer?
00:37:48
>> Oh, [gasps]
00:37:49
two really. one was I' I'd had, you
00:37:52
know, despite the fact I'd had a good
00:37:54
first tour, I struggled a wee bit on and
00:37:56
off um with my career and then and I was
00:38:00
out of the team a bit and then I got
00:38:02
brought back in when we were playing the
00:38:04
West Indies and the West Indies, you
00:38:06
know, were at their height of their fame
00:38:09
>> and we're playing a test in Christ
00:38:11
Church and I was a bit worried because I
00:38:13
was on a comeback and, you know, playing
00:38:15
against the best one of the best teams
00:38:16
in history
00:38:18
and um I started did okay and so I felt
00:38:22
I relaxed a bit more into it but then on
00:38:24
the last day we had to bowl the West
00:38:26
Indies out to have a chance of winning
00:38:28
and um Hadley had started bowling at the
00:38:32
start of the day and Viv Richards was
00:38:34
batting and he just smashed him
00:38:35
everywhere and then Con who was captain
00:38:37
said to me what your turn thought anyway
00:38:42
um I started all right and um I had him
00:38:46
in a little bit of difficulty and then
00:38:49
uh I bowled the ball and he slashed it
00:38:50
and he nicked it 3D and Smith at wick
00:38:52
keeper and you know it was one of the
00:38:54
the turning points of my life was to
00:38:57
actually cuz I'd been up against it I'd
00:38:59
been struggling
00:39:02
to get him out at a time that mattered
00:39:04
and then I went on I got five wickets
00:39:06
that day and we won the test match and
00:39:08
wow
00:39:08
>> uh but then probably two years later uh
00:39:11
a test match in Perth which is is
00:39:14
remembered as the Mark Greatbatch test
00:39:16
uh because he he basically against
00:39:20
Australia. He saved the match for New
00:39:22
Zealand by just batting and batting and
00:39:25
batting for almost two days. And
00:39:30
it was quite a young team because there
00:39:32
were a few injuries and so I had to lead
00:39:33
the bowling attack. And Aussie got 500,
00:39:36
but I actually bowled quite well. And
00:39:38
then um in the second innings I came out
00:39:40
to bat with Mark just straight after
00:39:43
lunch. So we were about seven down I
00:39:46
think. So the game was going to be over
00:39:48
in half an hour or an hour. Well, I
00:39:51
managed to bat the rest of the day with
00:39:52
him and we saved the test match. And you
00:39:56
know, it was just one of those things
00:39:58
where I thought, "Wow,
00:40:00
that's that's just a memory of
00:40:05
that just won't ever go away. just the
00:40:07
satisfaction
00:40:09
of working with them to to stop them in
00:40:13
their tracks and enable us to hold on
00:40:17
and draw the game was just you know it
00:40:19
wasn't even a win it was a draw but it
00:40:21
felt like a win at the end of it um
00:40:23
because [snorts] we'd pulled a draw out
00:40:25
of the hat really and so you know those
00:40:27
sort of things um you know in my mind
00:40:30
>> that's so cool yeah do you ever catch up
00:40:33
with Mark Greatbatch and
00:40:34
>> yeah yeah um you know He he [snorts]
00:40:37
uh yeah we sort of because I've been
00:40:40
involved in cricket administration I do
00:40:41
run into guys um
00:40:45
uh not all the time but but every so
00:40:48
often you know so
00:40:49
>> is that something you bring up or is it
00:40:50
just unspoken like this unspoken
00:40:52
>> it's sort of unspoken you know I think
00:40:53
it created a bond between us because we
00:40:57
were completely different types of
00:40:59
individuals and at times had rubbed up
00:41:01
against each other a little bit the
00:41:02
wrong way. Um, but you know when you've
00:41:05
done something like that with someone
00:41:07
that you sort of do have that bond that
00:41:09
you don't need to talk about it. You
00:41:11
just know that was that was a good thing
00:41:13
to do together.
00:41:14
>> I can't imagine you rubbing anyone up
00:41:16
the wrong way.
00:41:17
>> Uh, listen, I I did have a bit of a
00:41:19
mouth on me at times when um, uh, in the
00:41:24
second half of my career. You know, I
00:41:25
sometimes get surprised when I run into
00:41:27
some younger guys who I played with who
00:41:29
who say to me, "Well, you're a bit of a
00:41:30
handful there." [laughter] um towards
00:41:32
the end um you know tired and old and
00:41:35
grumpy but um I don't believe them but
00:41:38
there's enough in it [laughter] saying
00:41:39
it that it must be true
00:41:40
>> evidence
00:41:42
>> so uh so yeah every so often
00:41:45
>> any any um memorabilia what have you got
00:41:47
at home you going balls or wickets
00:41:49
>> I did have but then what happens is you
00:41:52
start giving it away you know people say
00:41:53
oh we got auction here yeah
00:41:55
>> and you know it's like with like the
00:41:57
duko stuff but most of it had gone by
00:41:59
then you did and the the beige brigade
00:42:02
uniform sort of I'd given it all away
00:42:05
before it actually, you know, the the
00:42:07
guys made it Yeah. into
00:42:09
>> what it is now. Um, so I don't care. You
00:42:13
know, I've got the memories. That's all
00:42:15
that matters. I listen when co happened,
00:42:19
uh, they had no sport content because
00:42:22
there was no live sport around TV. So,
00:42:24
Sport Sky Sky Sport purchased from
00:42:27
Channel 9 in Australia the highlights of
00:42:29
the old games. Well, it's the first time
00:42:33
I'd seen most of these because when we
00:42:34
were playing, we were playing and so you
00:42:37
weren't, you know, on a couch watching
00:42:39
TV and then each night after a game,
00:42:42
they'd half an hour highlights, usually
00:42:44
at about 11 p.m. Well, by 11:00 p.m.
00:42:47
you'd had a skin full. You weren't
00:42:48
really, and all you're watching anyway
00:42:49
is either been hit for four or six or
00:42:51
get the odd wicket. Um, so it was
00:42:54
actually quite nice in co to to um to
00:42:58
actually have a chance to look at a
00:42:59
whole lot of games. You know, I'd fast
00:43:01
forward to try and remember, did I bowl
00:43:03
right that day or not? And if I didn't,
00:43:05
I wouldn't watch it. I still can't, but
00:43:07
if I did, I'd hang in there. Then I'd
00:43:09
say to Annie or the kids, "Come and
00:43:10
watch. Come and watch. You know, this is
00:43:12
your chance." Well, they weren't in the
00:43:13
slightest bit interested, [laughter]
00:43:17
>> but it was quite nice seeing it.
00:43:19
>> And how did retirement look? Did you Did
00:43:20
you end on your own terms?
00:43:21
>> Yeah, I did. And that that was a good
00:43:24
thing to do. Um because one of the real
00:43:29
issues and it still exists today, maybe
00:43:32
even more because of the professional
00:43:33
game, is that if a player
00:43:38
effectively disappears out of it cuz
00:43:41
they're dropped,
00:43:43
then somehow they carry that and
00:43:45
sometimes they carry it for their lives.
00:43:48
And it I've seen it cause lots of damage
00:43:50
to people where the very team or the
00:43:54
organization they were working with um
00:43:56
who had given them these opportunities
00:43:58
throughout their career, they'd end up
00:44:01
hating
00:44:02
>> and it's awful to watch. Well, we'd sort
00:44:05
of got to 1990, so I'd had, you know, 10
00:44:07
years on and off of playing. And I was
00:44:10
lucky because in those days you weren't
00:44:12
full-time professionals. So, I'd got a
00:44:13
law degree and I was working with my
00:44:15
brother and so I knew what my next step
00:44:18
in life was going to be. And then Annie
00:44:20
and I started having kids and
00:44:24
uh by the time we had a second kid um it
00:44:27
had become pretty obvious to me that it
00:44:29
wasn't on for me to disappear on two
00:44:31
month or 3 month tours and leave it to
00:44:33
her to look after these things. So, in
00:44:36
1990 I just sort of decided right that's
00:44:39
enough. Got to stop. So, I made the
00:44:41
decision. I don't think I even talked it
00:44:43
over with her. I just sort of said,
00:44:44
"Nah, that's it. I've done it. I've
00:44:46
enjoyed it. Time to move on with life."
00:44:49
And that was really good because it
00:44:50
actually meant that I went into what was
00:44:52
after that with a pretty excited,
00:44:56
positive frame of mind instead of it
00:44:58
being I'm only doing this cuz I've been
00:45:00
kicked out sort of thing.
00:45:02
>> You always had something to something to
00:45:04
do. It's not like you finished and it's
00:45:05
like what am I going to do now? You
00:45:06
know, I might have to train to do real
00:45:08
estate or
00:45:08
>> Yeah. Yeah. And that's a real problem
00:45:09
for professional sport. Yeah.
00:45:11
>> Is that uh you know athletes give so
00:45:15
much and they're required to give so
00:45:16
much to it now that they don't think
00:45:19
about
00:45:20
>> the future and I don't blame them
00:45:23
>> and then the future becomes the now and
00:45:26
then a lot of them just aren't ready.
00:45:28
>> Now rugby and cricket
00:45:30
>> with the growth of player associations
00:45:32
have actually developed really good uh
00:45:35
player development whole of person
00:45:37
development programs for players. So
00:45:40
there is much more attention paid
00:45:43
uh to what happens next and players are
00:45:45
getting help. But of course it it's for
00:45:48
most players they're not going to
00:45:50
concentrate on that until it's obvious
00:45:51
they're going to finish.
00:45:53
>> And so you know it takes a while for
00:45:54
them to tune into that. But it does help
00:45:56
a hell of a lot. But other sports like
00:45:58
I'm in cycling now
00:46:00
>> and I already see it. You know they go
00:46:02
out of it and that's it. Um and they
00:46:05
don't know you know they're looking
00:46:06
around thinking what do I do now? And
00:46:09
people's memories are short. You know,
00:46:10
you might be a hero while you're on the
00:46:12
track or on the on the field, but once
00:46:15
you're finished, you're finished
00:46:17
>> and people move on. And it's quite a
00:46:20
it's quite a reality. You you will have
00:46:23
struck this your yourself in your career
00:46:25
a few times where, you know, you come to
00:46:27
the end of something
00:46:29
and you realize that people just move on
00:46:33
>> and they don't think about you. It's not
00:46:34
a nasty thing or anything like that.
00:46:36
It's just that's the way it is.
00:46:38
And you sometimes, and this is a a real
00:46:42
risk in sport, is that a player's
00:46:44
selfidentity is wrapped up in what they
00:46:46
are on the field. And and in cricket
00:46:49
now, we spend a lot of time trying to
00:46:51
get players to understand they are
00:46:54
people. That's their identity, their
00:46:57
people identity. [snorts] And they
00:46:58
happen to play cricket, which is
00:47:00
important, but it's not everything. But
00:47:03
of course, you know, it's hard for for
00:47:05
people that are in the middle of it the
00:47:06
whole time to accept. But it is true. If
00:47:09
you can't see your value as a person as
00:47:13
opposed to what the public sees, then
00:47:16
you've got a problem you've got to sort
00:47:17
out. [sighs]
00:47:19
>> Yeah. I I mean it's a far smaller scale
00:47:21
than being like um representing your
00:47:23
country in sport or winning a gold medal
00:47:25
but um I did a breakfast radio show on
00:47:26
one radio station called the edge for 20
00:47:28
years and you sort of you do become sort
00:47:30
of defined by by this public role
00:47:33
>> and and you you you know you might try
00:47:35
and play it down but you're actually
00:47:36
were far more in the public eye
00:47:38
consistently
00:47:39
>> than I would have been. Um, and every
00:47:42
morning you, you know, alarm goes off
00:47:44
and you have to gear yourself up to
00:47:47
perform and so you you you go at it. Um,
00:47:51
and then it's really hard when you don't
00:47:53
have the opportunity to perform
00:47:55
>> cuz someone else stops it.
00:47:57
>> Um, or you've you've had enough. You
00:47:59
you're burned out. Burnout's a a very
00:48:02
real thing that people should take a lot
00:48:04
more notice of.
00:48:05
>> Um, what did you what did you miss the
00:48:07
most and the least when you finished up
00:48:09
with cricket?
00:48:11
Uh,
00:48:13
I loved I loved playing on the big
00:48:17
grounds around the world. You know, I
00:48:19
almost I think deliberately thought,
00:48:21
right, a tour to England's going to be
00:48:23
my last tour and then to play a test at
00:48:25
Lords. Um, you know, the previous tour
00:48:27
I'd been on, I was 12th man, so I didn't
00:48:29
get to play in the test there. So to
00:48:31
play the test at Lords and and play on
00:48:34
the other great grounds over there, um,
00:48:38
that was a good thing. Um I loved the
00:48:41
rhythm of touring in the old days. These
00:48:43
days where you play only international
00:48:45
matches and it's really you know
00:48:48
pressure cooker the whole way. Whereas a
00:48:50
tour to England in 1990 is that we would
00:48:53
play three test matches but we would
00:48:55
have a lot of time just touring around
00:48:57
England playing against county teams. So
00:49:00
it was pretty low pressure environment
00:49:01
and just you know having fun doing that
00:49:03
and having a beer each night with people
00:49:05
and and stuff was all good fun. So I I
00:49:08
sort of missed that. But
00:49:13
I I
00:49:15
the imposition on your family life,
00:49:19
>> the end of you know the
00:49:21
>> sacrifice.
00:49:21
>> Yeah. Well, I didn't really see it as a
00:49:23
sacrifice for myself, but I started to
00:49:26
see towards the end the sacrifice that
00:49:28
Annie was making letting me go on these
00:49:30
tours. I mean, she'd come over for bits
00:49:32
and pieces of some of them and have a
00:49:34
good time, but but that, you know, when
00:49:36
the kids were there, that that just was
00:49:39
really difficult. So, uh, I actually
00:49:43
loved sort of being in one place for a
00:49:46
decent length of time, which I hadn't
00:49:48
been for 10 years.
00:49:49
>> So, that was good. Um,
00:49:52
>> did you [snorts] become a smoker at all?
00:49:54
Heavy cigarette sponsorship at the time.
00:49:56
Rothman's B&H. [laughter]
00:49:58
>> So, Rothman's B&H. Yeah. I remember
00:49:59
seeing a game um at the Ferturban Oval
00:50:01
in Palmer North. Um Ian Botham was
00:50:03
playing. There was some exhibition match
00:50:05
against Central Districts I think. Um
00:50:07
and as soon as he got out he was in his
00:50:08
caravan just
00:50:09
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No, he he smoked a lot
00:50:11
of things. Um [laughter]
00:50:14
I think I did my serious smoking at
00:50:16
about 11. Um but I [snorts] never I
00:50:19
never smoked. Yeah.
00:50:20
>> You know, I just it never interested me.
00:50:22
But of course, when you were sponsored
00:50:24
by those guys, they would give you
00:50:25
cartons and cartons of cigarettes. So
00:50:27
the guys in the team that did smoke, and
00:50:29
there were quite a few, would line up
00:50:31
and say, "Hey, just give me your cart."
00:50:32
[laughter]
00:50:35
>> That's amazing. It seems crazy now,
00:50:37
doesn't it?
00:50:38
>> And that's um You're right. And the
00:50:40
alcohol thing was also, you know, like
00:50:43
we went to the pub every single night
00:50:46
that we're on tour. That's another
00:50:48
reason I like touring. And the bowlers
00:50:52
had something in common. So the bowlers
00:50:54
would stick together. It's a bit like
00:50:56
you go to a party and the males are on
00:50:57
one side and the females are on the
00:50:59
other side. Well, it was the same on
00:51:01
cricket tours. The bowlers would stay
00:51:02
together and the batsmen if they turned
00:51:04
up were over there and and the bowlers
00:51:06
had a real because we were the blue
00:51:08
collar hardworking lot. the batsmen were
00:51:10
just flashy white collar um show ponies
00:51:14
and um and so there was a hell of a
00:51:17
social time and I I tell my son who's
00:51:19
playing cricket for Wellington I said
00:51:21
you know we would have a team meeting
00:51:23
the night before a test match or a
00:51:25
one-day international
00:51:27
and in those days you had bugger support
00:51:30
staff with you on tour and so the
00:51:32
players would have
00:51:34
uh jobs they had to do and and you know
00:51:37
someone would be in charge of of the
00:51:39
alcohol for the team thing. So, their
00:51:41
job was to get the concurge to um bring
00:51:46
up enough ice to fill the bath in the
00:51:48
room that you were having the team
00:51:49
meeting in. And then all the cans of
00:51:51
beer would have to be in there 2 or 3
00:51:53
hours beforehand. So, they're ice cold
00:51:55
when you were sitting down having a
00:51:56
serious meeting about how you were going
00:51:58
to attack the opposition the next day.
00:52:00
And you know when you compare that and
00:52:02
that happened my whole 10 10 years to
00:52:05
nowadays where my son who who plays
00:52:07
domestic cricket for Wellington almost
00:52:10
doesn't have a single drink of alcohol
00:52:12
between October and and April. It's just
00:52:16
night and day. I'd rather have my time.
00:52:20
>> It was a glorious time to be
00:52:22
representing your country, wasn't it?
00:52:23
And um were there transferable skills
00:52:26
that you got from playing professional
00:52:27
sport that you carried on to the board?
00:52:28
>> Totally. Totally. And that was that was
00:52:31
the thing that really not not I I'll
00:52:34
more to being a lawyer, an effective
00:52:36
lawyer. So, you know, I'd been tinkering
00:52:39
around being a lawyer for the 1980s and
00:52:41
then once I retired, I was into it big
00:52:44
time with my brother and became a
00:52:46
partner with him. And do you know what
00:52:49
it was? It was I think I
00:52:53
learned a whole lot when I was playing
00:52:54
cricket about handling pressure and the
00:52:57
importance of preparation.
00:53:00
But but what I realized is I'd never
00:53:02
done that properly when I was playing.
00:53:05
But I'd seen Richard Hadley do it. I'd
00:53:07
seen Martin Crow do it. I'd seen John
00:53:09
Wright do it.
00:53:12
And so I knew right from the start of my
00:53:15
post cricket career that's what I had to
00:53:17
do to succeed in the law. And that's so
00:53:19
that's what I did. And it it was
00:53:20
incredible. And and so the you know, you
00:53:24
channeled pressure in the right way from
00:53:26
there. And then, you know, that did
00:53:28
carry into the sports administration
00:53:30
stuff after that as well.
00:53:31
>> Yeah. You mentioned Martin Crow. What
00:53:33
what made him so good? Did Did you play
00:53:35
with him at the peak of his career or
00:53:36
did he sort of peak after you?
00:53:38
>> Oh, I think probably at the peak.
00:53:40
>> Yeah.
00:53:40
>> Um, he was a bit complex, Marty. Um, you
00:53:44
know, had a lot of pressure coming on
00:53:45
him. A bit like Richard,
00:53:47
>> like tortured geniuses.
00:53:48
>> Yeah. There was a book called that
00:53:50
Joseph Romanus wrote was called Tortured
00:53:52
Genius. And he was he he he struggled to
00:53:56
just relax and enjoy life enough. Um he
00:54:00
struggled to enjoy what he was achieving
00:54:03
enough I think. And so I saw him play
00:54:07
unbelievable cricket against you know I
00:54:09
talked about the West Indies before you
00:54:12
know one of the best teams with with the
00:54:14
most fearsome bowling attack and then
00:54:16
switched to playing against Pakistan
00:54:18
with Wazi Marramakar Ununas and some
00:54:20
really good spinners and he was just he
00:54:23
had prepared so well he'd got himself
00:54:25
mentally right and he would be
00:54:28
unbelievably outstanding against them.
00:54:31
So I I saw him at his peak. Um
00:54:35
but you know it it didn't go smoothly
00:54:36
for him. I think what happened is during
00:54:38
the 80s he had a whole lot of
00:54:40
experienced guys around him and then we
00:54:42
all sort of
00:54:44
a lot of us retired in 1990 and and he
00:54:46
was left
00:54:48
a little bit without that protection you
00:54:51
know and it sort of got to him a little
00:54:53
bit and and things didn't work out quite
00:54:54
as well during the 1990s for him apart
00:54:57
from the 92 World Cup in New Zealand
00:55:00
where he was just sublime
00:55:03
um fantastic
00:55:06
you had a front row seat with these
00:55:07
guys, Hadley Crow.
00:55:10
>> It was incredible time to be part of the
00:55:11
New Zealand cricket scene.
00:55:13
>> And and Lance Ken, you mentioned before,
00:55:16
you know.
00:55:16
>> I loved Lance
00:55:17
>> and me too cuz what he did even though,
00:55:22
you know, I got on the team and I'm a
00:55:23
bowler and and I'm a competitor if you
00:55:26
like for a place in the test team with
00:55:28
with him. And yet he took me under my w
00:55:32
under his wing right from the start and
00:55:35
looked after me
00:55:37
um
00:55:39
uh for those first few years, you know,
00:55:40
and was was a really good um yeah really
00:55:45
good person to anchor me uh with things.
00:55:48
He understood how hard it was at that
00:55:50
level. You know, there were a lot of us
00:55:52
who didn't have necessarily the talent
00:55:56
to be stars at international cricket. So
00:55:59
we were spending a lot of time trying to
00:56:01
hang on in there and do okay. And there
00:56:04
was an art to that and New Zealand was
00:56:06
really good at it is that we had a whole
00:56:08
lot of guys who could do okay. Um
00:56:14
and and you know and Lance was was one
00:56:18
of them. And then of course he had a
00:56:19
couple of years where he he just had the
00:56:20
fun of smashing all those sixes. And
00:56:23
>> he was such a great character.
00:56:25
Why did the um the shoulderless bat not
00:56:27
catch on? [laughter]
00:56:29
>> Oh, I I did for a while. Yeah, I did for
00:56:32
a while. Um Excalibur.
00:56:34
>> Yeah, Excalibur. I had one. Yeah, I
00:56:36
don't remember scoring one boundary with
00:56:38
it myself, but
00:56:39
>> but in those days too, don't you forget
00:56:41
now where the the live broadcast
00:56:44
photography means you get right in
00:56:47
>> at anything you want to. It's amazing.
00:56:49
in those days. Yeah. You see it, but
00:56:51
from the distance, so it wasn't quite as
00:56:52
prominent as as it would be now.
00:56:54
>> Yeah. Hey, I've got some um silly
00:56:56
quickfire team questions here and then
00:56:58
we can move on to the uh the the the
00:57:00
business side of your career, which has
00:57:02
been longer than the cricket.
00:57:03
>> It is.
00:57:04
>> Um who was the funniest guy in the
00:57:06
dressing room?
00:57:07
>> Oh, Con brilliant sense of humor. Uh
00:57:10
such a clever person with words. His
00:57:12
training had been drama and you know, so
00:57:15
he brought all these dramatic skills to
00:57:17
everything. Plus he played the he he and
00:57:19
Wrighty played the guitar. So we you
00:57:22
know we would on this first tour this is
00:57:23
how different it is now. We would go to
00:57:25
all these country towns that Australian
00:57:27
cricket had sent us to and in in a
00:57:29
function we'd get up on stage and sing
00:57:31
poceric Ariana or you know it was sort
00:57:35
of but you know he had Jerry
00:57:37
unbelievably funny.
00:57:38
>> Yeah. Who was the most serious on the
00:57:40
team? Uh
00:57:43
Hedley and Chatfield both
00:57:46
>> uh were pretty pokerface serious a lot
00:57:50
of the time and you know they had they
00:57:52
enjoyed themselves but
00:57:53
>> yeah they kept it pretty pretty serious.
00:57:56
>> But you you were one of them right? Like
00:57:58
you were Yeah. The three bowlers.
00:58:00
>> Yeah. Well, Headley and
00:58:01
>> Well, Kens and me and Troop and
00:58:03
>> and [snorts] of course Brace will bo
00:58:06
um who would you never want to sit next
00:58:08
to on a long haul flight? Oh.
00:58:12
uh probably younger. You know what what
00:58:14
you realized when you got older how far
00:58:17
out of touch you were with the younger
00:58:18
guys in the team. So So someone like an
00:58:21
Adam Peruri my last tour he was 19 I was
00:58:23
31. We just we weren't quite going to be
00:58:27
>> besties
00:58:28
>> besties. [laughter]
00:58:30
He's a good I've had him on the podcast.
00:58:32
He's a good dude now.
00:58:33
>> Oh he's he has done some remarkable
00:58:35
stuff. Um, but he was a different
00:58:37
generation, you know, different
00:58:39
mentality than me. So, you know.
00:58:42
>> Yeah. I can't imagine what like a
00:58:44
19-year-old Peruru was like. Just
00:58:46
>> the arrogance, the ego.
00:58:48
>> Yeah, we're all a bit like that if
00:58:49
we're, you know,
00:58:52
>> um, who had the weirdest pre-match
00:58:54
ritual?
00:58:56
>> Jeff House. Uh, before he went into bat
00:58:59
in internationals,
00:59:01
he would throw up, vomit every time. um
00:59:06
he just the pressure of it and then you
00:59:10
know carry on but that happened all the
00:59:12
time with him. He felt I love Jeff and
00:59:15
he was a great captain but he felt the
00:59:17
pressure internally you know and so he
00:59:20
he it was tough um and so he you know
00:59:24
before he batted he'd he'd throw up.
00:59:28
>> Best and worst dressed off the field.
00:59:32
>> Martin Crow would have been a snazzy
00:59:34
dress. Oh yeah. Know who he thought he
00:59:35
was. Um [laughter] no, he would have
00:59:37
been um
00:59:40
you know [snorts] that uh
00:59:43
God. Yeah, probably Marty, I guess. Um
00:59:46
the worst dressed.
00:59:48
>> Uh
00:59:49
Richard had some awful taste
00:59:54
in fashion.
00:59:56
[laughter]
00:59:59
Um [snorts]
01:00:00
>> what does that mean?
01:00:02
>> Can you [laughter] elaborate? Well, you
01:00:03
know, I don't you see old films, you
01:00:05
know, and you watch you look at some of
01:00:07
the stuff guys are wearing and think,
01:00:08
man, did they really wear that?
01:00:11
[laughter]
01:00:11
>> Um, who who talked the most rubbish
01:00:13
during a game? Were you a were you a
01:00:15
were you a sledger?
01:00:16
>> Uh, not not no braces by far was the
01:00:21
biggest sledger. John Bracewell,
01:00:23
>> like he would be in at people big time.
01:00:28
Um
01:00:30
our some of our batsmen would cap cap
01:00:33
cop it from the Aussies but not you know
01:00:35
for all their reputation
01:00:40
was just went over your head or you
01:00:42
didn't give a stuff about it. Um so
01:00:46
>> and who was grumpiest after a loss?
01:00:50
uh depending on how we'd lost,
01:00:54
>> you know, um Richard Jeff would hate it
01:00:59
if we lost because we'd played badly, if
01:01:02
we'd let ourselves down. Wasn't wasn't
01:01:04
too worried if if you know, we'd
01:01:07
actually played pretty well and lost.
01:01:10
>> But if we'd if we'd let ourselves down,
01:01:12
then then the leaders got pretty grumpy.
01:01:15
M
01:01:16
>> so after Chris after um cricket it was
01:01:19
law for a bit and then you ended up back
01:01:20
at NZ cricket as the
01:01:22
>> Yeah. So well actually it both happened
01:01:24
in the 1990s. So I retired in July 90
01:01:28
1990. Um went straight into my law firm
01:01:33
full-time.
01:01:35
Uh but at the same time exactly the same
01:01:37
time I went on to the border New Zealand
01:01:39
cricket. So by September 1990 I was on
01:01:41
the border New Zealand cricket.
01:01:43
>> Wow. they had been after someone who was
01:01:46
uh knew a bit more about what it was
01:01:48
like at the front line for players and I
01:01:50
just happened to be at the right place,
01:01:51
right time. So, so through the 90 I
01:01:55
worked with my brother for 10 years,
01:01:57
1990 to 2000
01:02:00
and I was on the New Zealand cricket
01:02:02
board for quite a bit of time during
01:02:04
that time
01:02:06
and then um Chris Doy had been CEO and
01:02:10
Chris amazing figure um had decided he'd
01:02:14
had enough and so he said to me why
01:02:16
don't why don't you think about becoming
01:02:18
CEO of New Zealand cricket which was
01:02:20
based in Christ Church and I B no I
01:02:23
can't do that. And he said he said you
01:02:26
only have to work 4 days a week and you
01:02:27
can play golf on the fifth. So naively I
01:02:31
believed him. And anyway Annie was Annie
01:02:34
was happy enough. We had four kids at
01:02:35
that stage. And she said yeah you know
01:02:37
let's have a change in life and shift
01:02:39
the whole family down to Christ Church.
01:02:41
And away we went. So you know it sort of
01:02:45
it just sort of happened really mainly
01:02:47
because of Chris. Um and I suddenly
01:02:49
found myself as CEO of New Zealand
01:02:52
cricket straight out of a law degree.
01:02:53
Never having worked in a sort of a
01:02:57
organization. Never had you know to look
01:02:59
after people or whatever. And so it was
01:03:02
a bit different. But um you know the
01:03:05
first few weeks I was there uh we had
01:03:07
the New Zealand team in Pakistan and a
01:03:09
bomb went off outside their hotel and I
01:03:12
soon learned the realities of life there
01:03:15
and um you know terrorism became quite a
01:03:17
big thing for the whole time that I was
01:03:19
CEO. Um it was just at that time it was
01:03:23
it was a big part of the world cricket
01:03:25
world particularly in Asia.
01:03:28
So um you know I just sort of learned on
01:03:30
the job. I had good people around me to
01:03:32
teach me a bit. And uh it was a volatile
01:03:36
time because it was also when the
01:03:37
players just started up with the players
01:03:39
association and in the first 6 months of
01:03:43
what was a negotiation between me and
01:03:45
Heath Mills [snorts] uh for the first
01:03:47
ever player contract system was a bit
01:03:50
was a bit uh volatile to the point where
01:03:53
uh uh about a month before the start of
01:03:56
the cricket season every player in New
01:03:58
Zealand went on strike. Um, so it was a
01:04:01
very public event. It kept radio sport
01:04:03
going every day. [laughter] Um,
01:04:06
uh,
01:04:07
>> yeah. How, how is that for you? So,
01:04:08
you're an ex player, a very experienced
01:04:10
ex- player, so you've got sort of, I
01:04:12
suppose, an empathy or understanding of
01:04:13
the players. Um, but then you're on this
01:04:16
other camp.
01:04:17
>> Yeah.
01:04:17
>> Yeah. It was a bit confusing time.
01:04:19
>> It was confronting. And
01:04:22
I think it was for the players, the
01:04:23
current then current players as well
01:04:25
because, you know, I had been a player.
01:04:28
Um but you know I I guess by that stage
01:04:31
10 years after I'd retired they just
01:04:33
regarded me as an old fart part of the
01:04:35
past and um
01:04:39
it it got incredibly acrimonious.
01:04:42
Um and even when we solved it I solved
01:04:45
it with a sledgehammer. Not not through
01:04:49
gifted negotiation with Heath but a
01:04:52
sledgehammer.
01:04:53
And so I forced an end result onto the
01:04:56
players that of course they hated. Um
01:05:00
but then I did a really smart thing um
01:05:04
which was that I went back to Heath and
01:05:05
said
01:05:08
we can't that's not the way I see it. I
01:05:10
actually agree with what you were trying
01:05:12
to do.
01:05:14
>> Um just a couple of aspects of what you
01:05:16
wanted how much money you wanted were
01:05:18
just too much for the circumstances.
01:05:20
But I really value and Heath and I
01:05:22
became having been not known each other
01:05:25
and been in the public domain pitted
01:05:27
against each other in a big way. We have
01:05:31
had become and and still are really good
01:05:34
friends. Um over that you know how many
01:05:37
years since then 24 years and and the
01:05:41
players association has been one of the
01:05:43
great success stories of cricket in New
01:05:45
Zealand.
01:05:45
>> Yeah. Um, so you know those sort of
01:05:48
things they happen and you're sort of
01:05:51
for a moment in time you're fighting as
01:05:54
hard as you can with something but as
01:05:57
time goes past you you know life moves
01:05:59
on
01:06:00
>> and uh you must have learned learned so
01:06:03
much about yourself. I suppose this is
01:06:04
like sharpening the axe for the 2011
01:06:06
World Cup but
01:06:07
>> you yeah what did you learn about the
01:06:09
importance about being respected rather
01:06:11
than necessarily being liked?
01:06:12
>> Yeah. Well, that's absolutely true is
01:06:14
that you know you had to
01:06:16
>> cuz cuz seriously the players hated me
01:06:19
at that stage and I don't blame them. I
01:06:23
was the opposition in their minds.
01:06:26
>> Um they didn't actually understand that
01:06:28
I actually agreed with them having a
01:06:30
really good system
01:06:33
and it's just they wanted too much money
01:06:35
that we couldn't afford.
01:06:37
>> That was the only real impediment.
01:06:39
Um
01:06:41
but yeah, you know, enormous pressure,
01:06:44
but probably Dom,
01:06:47
the pressure of having your players in
01:06:49
Pakistan and a bomb's gone off outside
01:06:51
of their hotel, it's blown out the
01:06:53
windows of the team bus. Fortunately,
01:06:54
they weren't sitting on it. Um knowing
01:06:57
that you had players lives in your
01:07:00
hands,
01:07:02
uh that was that was even harder to deal
01:07:05
with. That's that's reality.
01:07:08
and
01:07:09
um and trying to find a way to help the
01:07:13
players recover from that. And then, you
01:07:17
know, a couple of years later, we're in
01:07:18
South Africa for the Cricket World Cup
01:07:20
and the International Cricket Council
01:07:22
want us to play Kenya and Nairobi and
01:07:24
that was an absolute nogo area for
01:07:27
Westerners at the time. And
01:07:30
>> and I sat down with the players and I
01:07:32
said, I I just can't let you go there.
01:07:35
Um, and then I did the same with the
01:07:38
international cricket. People didn't
01:07:40
give us stuff. They thought we were just
01:07:42
being objectionable.
01:07:44
And I said, "No, no, our our players
01:07:46
have been through this, the reality of
01:07:48
it. This is not theory. This is this is
01:07:50
stuff that we know." And I said, "I'm
01:07:53
not putting them there." And and the
01:07:54
players themselves, you know, this is 2
01:07:56
years after all the the the contract
01:07:59
issues. They were trusting me by then.
01:08:02
And I said to them, I'm not going to ask
01:08:04
you to make a decision. I'm going to
01:08:05
make this decision, but I do want to
01:08:07
know what you think. And you know what?
01:08:09
Half of them wanted to go and half
01:08:10
didn't. Um,
01:08:13
and
01:08:15
so I defaulted a World Cup match, you
01:08:18
know, and it cost us a place in the
01:08:19
semi-finals doing that, but the players
01:08:22
and the player association supported it
01:08:25
full-time. M
01:08:26
>> and then you know these people that had
01:08:29
been criticizing me in world cricket
01:08:32
about a year year and a half later
01:08:36
um terrorists attacked their umpires and
01:08:40
match referees in Pakistan shot at a bus
01:08:42
that they were in and someone was
01:08:44
wounded and and um you know someone was
01:08:47
killed
01:08:49
and they you know cricket never went
01:08:51
back to Pakistan for 20 years after and
01:08:53
I'm thinking yeah well if you'd actually
01:08:55
listen to me. You might have found that
01:08:57
that you wouldn't have had that problem
01:08:58
then, [snorts]
01:08:59
but you you know, you were too ready to
01:09:01
put money
01:09:02
>> ahead of um ahead of welfare of players.
01:09:06
So, you know, you you do learn a hell of
01:09:08
a lot and I'd been through the mill. Um
01:09:13
and I hadn't I hadn't solved everything
01:09:15
spectacularly well, but I'd done okay.
01:09:18
And New Zealand cricket was doing okay.
01:09:21
It was Steven Fleming's team and and he
01:09:24
he was a superb captain and the players
01:09:26
did pretty well. And so I think when
01:09:30
they came to look for someone to run the
01:09:32
Rugby World Cup, they they looked at
01:09:34
that and thought they need someone who
01:09:36
is visible to New Zealanders who New
01:09:39
Zealanders sort of can connect with for
01:09:42
this. And so, you know, they came to me
01:09:44
and said, "Would you consider it?" And I
01:09:46
said, "No, no, I'm too wrapped up in the
01:09:48
Black Caps. want them to help them win
01:09:50
the cricket world cup in 2007.
01:09:53
So it went dead. But then they had
01:09:55
trouble finding who they wanted and they
01:09:57
came back a little bit later and by that
01:09:59
stage I thought oh I asked them whether
01:10:01
I could combine the two jobs for a while
01:10:03
which they agreed so I got the black
01:10:05
caps through to the um 2007 World Cup.
01:10:09
They didn't win it.
01:10:10
>> Um but I was able to then to transition
01:10:13
out of it pretty nicely.
01:10:16
>> Yeah. Hey, you just mentioned Steven
01:10:18
Fleming before. Um, how's the air con?
01:10:20
Is No, it's
01:10:21
>> Is the temperature good?
01:10:22
>> No, it's fine.
01:10:22
>> Yeah, I think it's a Toshiba as well.
01:10:24
>> I can't take my jersey off cuz I have an
01:10:25
iron machine. [laughter]
01:10:27
>> So, um, yes. So, when do you start with
01:10:29
the the 2011 World Cup stuff? Is that
01:10:31
2007?
01:10:32
>> Yeah.
01:10:32
>> Yeah. So they, you know, the what they'd
01:10:35
learned from the mistakes of Australia
01:10:38
running the Rugby World Cup in 2003 was
01:10:40
that if New Zealand rugby itself was to
01:10:44
run the event that it would take over
01:10:46
their whole organization. So they and
01:10:48
the government agreed, let's set up a
01:10:50
separate entity, we'll each own 50% of
01:10:53
it and that will be a new organization
01:10:55
set up solely to run the event. And so
01:10:58
that's the way it went. And then of
01:11:00
course they're starting from a zero
01:11:02
employee base. So they start looking for
01:11:04
you know a chief executive and a couple
01:11:07
of senior managers and it started from
01:11:09
there. So we I started I got appointed
01:11:11
at the end of 2006
01:11:14
did did that role which was pretty
01:11:17
gentle at that stage and the New Zealand
01:11:19
cricket CEO role through to the end of
01:11:23
the cricket world cup in May 2007 and
01:11:26
then shifted across and and began. So it
01:11:28
was just over four years of preparation
01:11:31
for that event.
01:11:32
>> Yeah. I got a quote from you. Outside of
01:11:34
raising a family, the Rugby World Cup
01:11:35
goes down as the number one event in my
01:11:37
life.
01:11:37
>> Yeah.
01:11:38
>> Yeah. Yeah. And it and it is I was so
01:11:41
uh inspired by
01:11:43
by what happened and proud of being part
01:11:48
of a team that could galvanize New
01:11:51
Zealand, not just rugby people,
01:11:53
>> but New Zealanders to get in behind it
01:11:57
and really um really support it in the
01:12:01
right way. And and when I say that, I
01:12:03
mean this. One of our biggest risks of
01:12:05
the event was that the All Blacks at
01:12:08
that stage had not won the Rugby World
01:12:10
Cup for since 1987
01:12:13
and people were getting pretty grumpy as
01:12:15
we went through, you know, World Cups
01:12:17
subsequently and you talked to Lori
01:12:19
Mains a short while ago.
01:12:20
>> Um I had John Hart on as well the impact
01:12:23
it had on his 99.
01:12:25
>> So the rugby community was pretty bloody
01:12:28
pissed with this that they hadn't won.
01:12:30
But of course, we were hosting the world
01:12:33
and we didn't want this to be all about
01:12:35
the All Blacks finally winning. We
01:12:38
wanted it to be a celebration of New
01:12:39
Zealand hosting the world. And that's a
01:12:42
completely different mentality. And it
01:12:44
was one of the reasons I think the
01:12:45
government supported the setting up of a
01:12:47
separate organization and didn't
01:12:49
necessarily find look for leaders that
01:12:51
came out of rugby to run it.
01:12:55
So um
01:12:58
so you know that the way in which we
01:13:01
laid a platform to get people connected
01:13:04
into it and then let them loose to do
01:13:08
the great stuff they could do. So we ran
01:13:11
the event I think from memory was 48
01:13:13
games of rugby. So okay there was a
01:13:17
there was a formula that we were bound
01:13:19
into to run 48 games of rugby. 20 teams,
01:13:22
48 games.
01:13:25
But there was this whole opportunity of
01:13:26
a nation nation coming in as hosts that
01:13:32
you just we just needed to find the
01:13:34
right keys to galvanize people to jump
01:13:36
on board and and for people to show them
01:13:40
communities to show themselves off. And
01:13:43
we got it right, you know, and I could
01:13:45
watch it growing and I knew this was
01:13:47
going to be great. And then to see it
01:13:49
just take off at the end was just was
01:13:51
fantastic.
01:13:52
>> And the line uh that was used was um a
01:13:55
stadium of a stadium of 4 million. Um
01:13:57
that sort of became like a mission
01:13:58
statement. Can you remember the origins
01:13:59
of that line?
01:14:00
>> Yeah, it it the the clever people that
01:14:03
were piecing together a bid to host the
01:14:06
tournament um working New Zealand rugby
01:14:10
came up with this and they were right.
01:14:12
what they were saying and this is sort
01:14:14
of goes back to about 2005
01:14:17
is that New Zealand you go back to that
01:14:19
time is the spiritual home of rugby the
01:14:22
All blacks you know
01:14:23
>> and
01:14:25
so that what they were saying is you
01:14:27
bring this rugby world cup to New
01:14:28
Zealand and we will give everyone the
01:14:30
greatest rugby experience
01:14:33
that was perfect for the bid because the
01:14:35
people who were voting on where it would
01:14:37
go it resonated with them they many
01:14:40
[clears throat] of them had played
01:14:41
against the All Blacks and they
01:14:42
respected, you know, that and that
01:14:44
history.
01:14:46
And so it was a really clever bid um
01:14:50
catchphrase. But when we started working
01:14:52
on it and started thinking about what's
01:14:55
the the story of the tournament,
01:14:59
>> we thought no, it can't just be about
01:15:00
rugby.
01:15:02
>> And so we gradually evolved this stadium
01:15:06
of 4 million from a pure rugby story. We
01:15:08
kept always kept rugby at the heart of
01:15:10
it because it had to be. But we started
01:15:13
spreading it so that it had reasons why
01:15:17
all sorts of communities around New
01:15:19
Zealand and people's could connect with
01:15:21
it in their own way without having to
01:15:24
commit to rugby as opposed to committing
01:15:27
to New Zealand hosting and you know
01:15:30
people saw the opportunity and it just
01:15:32
sort of mushroomed you know even [sighs]
01:15:35
>> like Deneden suddenly decided Carisbrook
01:15:38
was a dog and they'd build a new stadium
01:15:41
And from a riskmanagement point of view,
01:15:44
you're looking at this and thinking,
01:15:46
"God, are they going to finish this on
01:15:47
time and and it was going to have a a
01:15:51
roof over the top? Can they even cuz at
01:15:53
this stage we didn't know these sorts of
01:15:55
things, could they even grow grass on
01:15:57
the ground?" Well, the this was a
01:16:00
consortium of construction people that
01:16:03
were were engaged to build this. They
01:16:07
themselves made a conscious decision
01:16:10
that although they knew during the
01:16:12
construction period they would hit lots
01:16:14
and lots of problems with each other.
01:16:17
They would shove those problems, they
01:16:20
wouldn't necessarily resolve them if
01:16:21
they couldn't, but they would put them
01:16:24
aside
01:16:25
and they would concentrate on getting
01:16:27
the stadium built in time
01:16:31
as a contribution to the success of
01:16:33
Rugby World Cup in New Zealand. And
01:16:34
that's what they did. And and you won't
01:16:38
remember this, but they were building a
01:16:40
um a new uh motorway sort of out to the
01:16:45
airport in Oakuckland. And likewise,
01:16:48
Fletchers were leading a consortium that
01:16:51
were doing this. And they'd made exactly
01:16:53
the same decision. and they said, "Our
01:16:54
contribution to this is to finish this
01:16:57
motorway, get it ready so that when
01:16:59
people arrive in New Zealand for the
01:17:00
Rugby World Cup, this is ready and
01:17:03
working and they can enjoy their first
01:17:05
impressions of New Zealand coming in
01:17:07
from the airport are good ones."
01:17:08
>> And and I went along, you know, during
01:17:11
that construction time, I would go along
01:17:13
and speak to their workers and tell them
01:17:15
the story of Rugby World Cup and
01:17:17
everyone was into it big time and this
01:17:19
was happening in every direction.
01:17:21
Um,
01:17:22
>> so what year is this? This is sort of
01:17:25
well it started 2007 this work but it
01:17:27
really probably intensified around 2009
01:17:31
um 910
01:17:33
and you know so we had all these we were
01:17:36
running the rugby tournament but we had
01:17:38
all these projects happening around New
01:17:40
Zealand that we were connected into that
01:17:42
were all doing it for the same reason
01:17:44
>> and it was just inspiring and and you
01:17:46
just knew you know everyone was going to
01:17:49
make this work
01:17:51
>> and they did. And then there's
01:17:53
unforeseen things like the Christ Church
01:17:54
earthquakes. Did you did you lose like
01:17:56
literally lose sleep over those sort of
01:17:59
things? That must have been one of the
01:18:00
toughest decisions you've ever had to
01:18:01
make in your life.
01:18:02
>> Well, actually the decision was easy,
01:18:04
but the emotional
01:18:06
impact was enormous. So, you know, the
01:18:10
Christ Church um that happened in
01:18:12
February 2011
01:18:15
>> and we were sitting in a Rugby World Cup
01:18:18
board meeting in Oakland at Eden Park
01:18:20
and we had I don't know why but we had
01:18:21
the TVs on without the sound and we
01:18:24
suddenly started seeing what was
01:18:26
happening in Christ Church breaking news
01:18:28
and we realized you know what a major
01:18:31
this was going to be. And
01:18:34
so the next two weeks we had, you know,
01:18:37
cuz the government was into this big
01:18:39
time, every service that you needed,
01:18:43
police, whatever, they were into it. And
01:18:45
so it wasn't hard to to to
01:18:49
extract the information we needed. And
01:18:51
what became really clear and and topped
01:18:55
off I think with an inspection one day
01:18:57
of Lancaster Park and seeing what a mess
01:18:59
it was
01:19:00
>> is that the decision was obvious we
01:19:03
couldn't go there.
01:19:05
>> But then communicating that to the
01:19:07
Christ Church people who were in the
01:19:08
worst moments of their lives. And so
01:19:10
what we did is we we staged the
01:19:12
communication over a period of two to
01:19:14
three weeks to take him on a journey so
01:19:16
that when when we made our decision, it
01:19:18
had a much better chance of being
01:19:21
accepted than it would do if we'd come
01:19:23
straight out and said no show. Even
01:19:25
though we knew really early on there was
01:19:27
no show. Um and [snorts] then we had to
01:19:30
concentrate really hard on how to, you
01:19:32
know, we're talking about a stadium of 4
01:19:33
million. How do you keep
01:19:36
>> Christ Church engaged? So, a lot of work
01:19:38
went into finding ways of doing that and
01:19:42
we did okay in the end.
01:19:44
>> How did you do it?
01:19:45
>> Well, um
01:19:48
well, we had to, you know, we'd had
01:19:50
seven games were were set down to be
01:19:52
played at Lancaster Park and we'd sold
01:19:54
28 million bucks worth of tickets at the
01:19:56
time the earthquake happened. All those
01:19:59
games had to be reallocated around New
01:20:01
Zealand and you couldn't just send seven
01:20:02
games to some other place. So, you it
01:20:04
was a hell of an exercise. We kept as
01:20:07
many of them in the South Island as
01:20:09
possible so that access of Christ Church
01:20:11
people who wanted to go would be closer.
01:20:14
Um some we had to send to Oakland. Well,
01:20:17
the airlines and the hotels said we will
01:20:21
we will anyone who had an air ticket to
01:20:24
go to Christ Church could change it free
01:20:26
of charge to go to Oakland. The hotels
01:20:28
would charge them only the same rates
01:20:30
that whatever people had booked in
01:20:31
Oakland. Um
01:20:34
some people in Oakland started up a free
01:20:36
bulleting so anyone from Christ Church
01:20:39
would come up and stay with them for
01:20:40
free. It was some amazing stuff went on
01:20:42
in the opening ceremony which was an
01:20:45
amazing
01:20:46
uh ceremony.
01:20:49
We had Jon Almo was was a centerpiece,
01:20:52
but
01:20:54
you might remember there was a little
01:20:55
kid that he brought onto the field. Um,
01:20:59
and he was wearing a Canterbury jersey,
01:21:01
you know, and he became a bit of a star
01:21:04
of of the opening ceremony.
01:21:07
Um
01:21:09
uh three of the teams, touring teams,
01:21:12
well the All Blacks plus Australia and
01:21:14
England all agreed to go down to Christ
01:21:17
Church and spend well they didn't agree.
01:21:19
They said this is what we're going to
01:21:21
do. Martin Johnson leading England.
01:21:23
Robbie Deans was in charge of Australia
01:21:25
and Robbiey's from Christ Church
01:21:26
obviously.
01:21:28
They took their teams down to Christ
01:21:29
Church during the tournament. They they
01:21:31
stayed there so people could connect
01:21:33
with them, you know. Um
01:21:37
it it but I mean God
01:21:41
[snorts] it was it was awful.
01:21:43
>> Um
01:21:47
>> knowing what you know now, were you
01:21:48
qualified for the job or did you grow
01:21:50
into it?
01:21:51
>> Uh bit of both.
01:21:53
>> Uh
01:21:54
>> I don't know if you can ever be fully
01:21:55
qualified for a
01:21:56
>> Listen, I I'd had a good background in
01:22:00
events and world world cricket cup world
01:22:03
cups.
01:22:04
Um
01:22:07
uh I' I'd had the pressures of cricket
01:22:11
which in the end were nowhere near close
01:22:13
to what rugby world cup was but it still
01:22:15
had had meant that I had experience been
01:22:18
under real pressure and people had seen
01:22:19
me under pressure. So there was that
01:22:21
sort of thing, but then uh you you have
01:22:24
to learn it on the job. But we did have
01:22:26
four years and it was lovely because it
01:22:28
was quite gentle to start with and then
01:22:29
it just gradually grew and grew and
01:22:31
grew. So you could grow with it, you
01:22:33
know, and uh I had an extraordinarily
01:22:36
talented team working with me because we
01:22:39
could pick the best of the best, you
01:22:41
know, everyone wanted to work on this.
01:22:43
And so the the sort of people that were
01:22:46
working on Rugby World Cup were just
01:22:50
brilliant. And so that workforce by the
01:22:53
time it was, you know, getting close to
01:22:55
the event, that would have been the most
01:22:56
talented workforce in New Zealand.
01:22:59
Would your reflection on the event be
01:23:01
different if the All Blacks had hadn't
01:23:02
won or was the rugby sort of irrelevant?
01:23:04
It
01:23:05
>> to me it was irrelevant and that was it
01:23:07
was always about how would New Zealand
01:23:10
be seen as the host of a world event and
01:23:14
we already knew before the final we'd
01:23:16
nailed it. And and in fact my my um I'll
01:23:19
tell you the story and you know who
01:23:21
Steven Jones is. So Steven Jones is a
01:23:23
rugby writer from England. Oh yes.
01:23:26
>> And he has made a living out of needling
01:23:29
New Zealand rugby and the All Blacks for
01:23:31
years and years and years and and you
01:23:33
know he'd sort of he'd condemn the
01:23:35
hacker and say it should not be allowed
01:23:36
and make awful comments about it and New
01:23:39
Zealand rug he was persona non grata
01:23:41
with New Zealand rugby. Um and he was
01:23:45
the head of the rugby tribe of
01:23:47
journalists in England who hated the
01:23:50
idea the rugby world cup was coming to
01:23:52
New Zealand by the way. They thought
01:23:53
what a you know that that's a real step
01:23:56
backwards that it comes to this little
01:23:58
country in [snorts] the middle of
01:23:59
nowhere. So 2 years before the event I I
01:24:03
emailed Steven and said can we catch up?
01:24:08
You know I'm coming to England. Why
01:24:09
don't we catch up? And so we agreed to
01:24:12
meet. He lived south of London so far
01:24:14
somewhere and we found a halfway in
01:24:17
between where I was and he was in a
01:24:18
restaurant, Italian restaurant and we
01:24:21
caught up at about noon and we rolled
01:24:24
out at about 5:00 p.m. after a couple of
01:24:27
bottles of of red and he said I told him
01:24:32
the story of the stadium of 4 million my
01:24:34
vision our vision and he said if you can
01:24:38
deliver on that then I will tell the
01:24:40
world that that is a great thing so he
01:24:43
and I then stayed in close contact New
01:24:46
Zealand rugby didn't like this idea but
01:24:48
wasn't their business
01:24:51
and I just made sure every year I'd go
01:24:53
to England and to France and I'd get the
01:24:55
journalists together and I'd take him to
01:24:58
a pub and give him free drinks and free
01:25:01
pizza cuz the jouros that that really
01:25:04
worked hard, you know, and and I'd do a
01:25:07
gentle cell, not a hard cell, gentle
01:25:09
cell all the time. And so I got to know
01:25:11
them quite well.
01:25:12
>> Made them feel valued, I guess.
01:25:13
>> Yeah. And then and then they loved the
01:25:16
the idea that we were spreading this
01:25:18
around New Zealand, even if they hated
01:25:20
it going to New Zealand. I loved what
01:25:21
was happening in terms of preparation,
01:25:23
communities preparing to host teams. And
01:25:26
then Steven, I I emailed him about 3
01:25:28
months before the tournament and I said,
01:25:30
"Listen, I've got a holiday home at
01:25:31
Tapo. Why don't you stay there for a
01:25:33
while while you're out here?" And
01:25:36
>> Oh, you went deep. [laughter]
01:25:38
>> And he said, "Yeah, sure. Love to." And
01:25:40
he said, "Do you mind if I take a few of
01:25:41
my Jouro mates with me?" And I said,
01:25:42
"No, no, absolutely. Go for it."
01:25:45
um he fell in love with Annie as well
01:25:46
cuz Annie turned up at that long lunch
01:25:48
and um uh so he would often refer to her
01:25:53
um uh long-suffering wife and so
01:25:57
[snorts] there's just a there was a real
01:25:58
connection there and so he did he came
01:26:00
and stayed at Tapo
01:26:02
and
01:26:03
>> Jeez, I can't believe you gave him the
01:26:05
keys to your house. Well, it, you know,
01:26:07
I was sacrificing serious. You took me
01:26:09
>> sacrificing it for New Zealand
01:26:10
[laughter]
01:26:11
>> and um but because we delivered, you
01:26:14
know, he reflected that in the way he
01:26:16
wrote and so did all of the British
01:26:18
journals
01:26:20
>> and so we turned what could have been a
01:26:22
big risk into into actually what was a
01:26:25
real endorsement from those people.
01:26:28
>> Um [laughter]
01:26:29
>> Oh, that's a great story. Is that in
01:26:31
your book?
01:26:31
>> Yeah, it is.
01:26:32
>> It is. And then I' I stayed in touch
01:26:34
with him, you know, and if I emailed him
01:26:35
now, he'd be really receptive. You know,
01:26:37
it's just I don't get these free trips
01:26:39
to England anymore with jobs. So,
01:26:41
>> was there a moment during the tournament
01:26:43
where you and your team could sort of
01:26:44
exhale and think, "Yeah, we've done it."
01:26:46
>> Well, it it so once the tournament
01:26:48
started or
01:26:50
>> uh listen, the first night of the
01:26:52
tournament, which was the opening, the
01:26:54
opening ceremony was unbelievable. It
01:26:56
was brilliant. Um but actually also what
01:26:59
happened that night was the train broke
01:27:01
down between downtown Oakland and Eden
01:27:04
Park. Now that wasn't our responsibility
01:27:07
but it had a huge impact on how people
01:27:10
it was bloody stupid because it was the
01:27:12
biggest risk we could see transport-wise
01:27:14
in the whole tournament and but the the
01:27:17
train line there only had one track. So
01:27:19
if a train broke down, it broke down.
01:27:20
There was nothing you could do about it.
01:27:22
So we were telling people
01:27:25
not to come downtown and then try to get
01:27:27
to Eden Park. Well, people ignored it
01:27:29
and this there were, you know, I I don't
01:27:31
know how many people, but 100,000 plus
01:27:33
down on the waterfront on the opening
01:27:36
afternoon was massive. Yeah. There were
01:27:38
screens at the cloud and there were
01:27:39
public events.
01:27:40
>> Yeah.
01:27:41
>> And uh and then of course people tried
01:27:43
to get to Eden. Well, of course they had
01:27:44
trouble and so a lot of people were late
01:27:46
to the start of the game which was, you
01:27:48
know, a bit of criticism and I'm
01:27:49
thinking, well, you know, you took on
01:27:51
bit too much there trying to do both.
01:27:54
But um so that caused a bit of angst and
01:27:57
then the games kept rolling out and and
01:28:00
you could see the the uh support that
01:28:03
people were giving it right around the
01:28:04
country and you could see all the teams
01:28:06
relaxing into it and enjoying it. But we
01:28:09
still had this we had a financial
01:28:13
issue hang over our heads. The co the
01:28:16
tournament was budgeted to make a $30
01:28:18
million loss. I think it the budget was
01:28:22
uh I think 300 million say against a
01:28:25
cost of 270 million and both the
01:28:28
government and New Zealand rugby who
01:28:30
were responsible for the loss were
01:28:33
putting enormous pressure on us and and
01:28:36
we had to hit a ticket revenue
01:28:40
you know say the ticket revenue was 270
01:28:43
million and the previous largest ticket
01:28:47
revenue event in New Zealand's history
01:28:50
was sold out Lions Tour in 2005 which
01:28:54
off the back of every game sold out it
01:28:56
generated 24 million. So we had to do 11
01:28:58
times that to hit ticket budget. So,
01:29:01
we're up against it the whole way, but
01:29:03
we were tracking. But then we would get
01:29:06
to the start of the a day or two before
01:29:08
the tournament. We're about 20 million
01:29:11
short, 25 million short. And I was
01:29:14
catching it in the neck from I remember,
01:29:17
you know, I'll never forget one
01:29:18
journalist had me on live radio and she
01:29:20
just ripped the [ __ ] out of me [snorts]
01:29:22
about you're never going to reach this
01:29:24
target. And it didn't matter what I said
01:29:26
to her. She just had it in for me and
01:29:28
and the tournament. Well, what we knew
01:29:31
is that two things that people didn't
01:29:34
didn't think about. One is once the
01:29:37
tournament's up and running, you're
01:29:38
still selling tickets right through to
01:29:39
the time it finishes. So, so you you
01:29:42
didn't reach the end of ticket sales
01:29:45
before the tournament. It was kept
01:29:46
going. And the second thing was the
01:29:48
magnificence of the opening ceremony
01:29:51
galvanized people to say, I want to be
01:29:53
there. And so, ticket sales after the
01:29:56
opening ceremony just took off. But even
01:29:58
so, 20 million was a big target. Well,
01:30:02
we hit that 20 million target
01:30:05
um 2 days before the final and you know
01:30:09
the four me and the three senior
01:30:11
managers were sitting in Oakuckland at a
01:30:13
hotel room when the news came through
01:30:15
and we just looked at each other and
01:30:17
thought, "Wow, you know that that was
01:30:19
something we probably between ourselves
01:30:21
unspoken thought we might struggle on
01:30:25
this one." Mhm.
01:30:26
>> And then we hit it and we didn't even
01:30:28
have to sort of we bought a bottle of
01:30:30
champagne and we just quietly celebrated
01:30:33
hitting that but we still had you you
01:30:35
couldn't relax because you couldn't
01:30:38
relax until all the teams had left New
01:30:40
Zealand and gone home and so you know
01:30:42
you on edge but I have to say when we're
01:30:45
at the final and the All Blacks had
01:30:47
scraped in which which even though it
01:30:49
wasn't our number one objective still we
01:30:51
knew would help enormously in terms of
01:30:53
the thing and because they it was a
01:30:55
close final was probably a good thing.
01:30:58
Um cuz it felt like everyone then was
01:31:01
connected even more cuz they'd been the
01:31:03
people inside the park had been dragged
01:31:04
through 90 minutes of psychological hell
01:31:07
to get there.
01:31:08
>> Actually months of psychological hell.
01:31:10
>> Yeah. There was Dan Carter getting
01:31:12
injured.
01:31:13
>> Um Steven Donald story was brilliant.
01:31:16
>> Richie McCoy training on a broken foot.
01:31:18
>> Yeah. No, they were brilliant. All these
01:31:20
stories but we weren't connecting with
01:31:22
the All Blacks. [clears throat] You
01:31:23
know, for us, they were just one of the
01:31:24
20 teams. Sounds odd, but that's the way
01:31:26
we decided to do it because if we
01:31:28
favored them in any way, other teams
01:31:31
would pick up on this and their junos,
01:31:33
and we would get absolutely nailed
01:31:35
rightly.
01:31:36
>> And so, they for us were just another
01:31:38
team, but of course, in your heart, you
01:31:40
want the All Blacks to win the
01:31:41
tournament. So, it really wasn't until
01:31:43
we were sitting there
01:31:45
um at Eden Park in the final that I
01:31:48
actually for the first time switched on
01:31:49
to them and and hoped. But the funny
01:31:52
thing is I'm sitting in the stands at
01:31:54
Eden Park cuz I'm running the
01:31:55
tournament. I get quite good tickets and
01:31:58
um I'm sitting next to the guy who had
01:32:00
run the World Cup in France four years
01:32:03
before and he had become a good friend.
01:32:06
He's another one who who stayed at Tapo,
01:32:07
him and his family. [snorts]
01:32:09
And um
01:32:11
uh
01:32:13
he that and even though we had been
01:32:15
really good friends,
01:32:17
suddenly I'm realizing he's realizing
01:32:19
we're sitting next to each other and
01:32:21
France are playing New Zealand and this
01:32:22
is the ultimate test. So the two of us
01:32:25
for the whole event were as quiet as can
01:32:27
be respecting each [laughter] other.
01:32:32
So it [snorts] was Yeah, it was it was
01:32:34
memorable. But you know when we were
01:32:35
having a few drinks after the game had
01:32:37
finished even Murray McCauley, Minister
01:32:39
of Sport came up to me and shook my
01:32:40
hand. Now Murray and I had had our
01:32:42
moments with each other or he was the
01:32:44
minister so he'd had his moments with me
01:32:47
and so it was quite a nice thing to in
01:32:49
the end know that he was happy. Um and
01:32:53
of course Jock Hobbs
01:32:55
>> rest in peace.
01:32:56
>> Yeah. Well, you know, he jocked the
01:32:58
cancer had started to emerge during the
01:33:00
leadup to the event and so he'd had to
01:33:03
step down from chairing the board cuz he
01:33:05
was my boss
01:33:07
and but he was kept fully involved in
01:33:10
the whole thing. So to sit with him
01:33:11
after the final and know that we'd
01:33:13
achieved what he'd been it had been his
01:33:15
dream right at the start to bring the
01:33:17
World Cup to New Zealand. Uh and so for
01:33:20
him to be able to see that through, you
01:33:21
know, he died uh a few months after the
01:33:25
event, incredibly sad story, but but um
01:33:28
but he had at least seen it succeed
01:33:31
beyond even his expectations. Yeah, I'll
01:33:33
never forget that moment of him
01:33:35
presenting Mccor with his cat for 100
01:33:37
tests. It's incredible.
01:33:38
>> Um
01:33:39
>> you mentioned Mari McCulli before. There
01:33:41
must have been a bunch of people like
01:33:42
him whose when your phone started
01:33:44
buzzing and you saw a name on the
01:33:45
screen, you your heart sunk a little
01:33:47
bit. Who was on that list? There must
01:33:49
have been journalists.
01:33:50
>> Mari was top [laughter]
01:33:52
uh by a considerable distance.
01:33:55
>> Um
01:33:57
and
01:34:00
uh
01:34:01
we didn't we didn't gel [snorts] easily
01:34:05
mainly because I didn't understand
01:34:07
politics enough and I didn't really
01:34:09
realize the power imbalance between us.
01:34:14
I sort of regarded us more of colleagues
01:34:16
and whatnot. And I made a few false
01:34:18
steps and he came down on me, you know,
01:34:21
a ton of bricks.
01:34:24
But then
01:34:25
and and I that happened about 2 years
01:34:27
before the tournament or 18 months
01:34:29
before and I had to fight my way back
01:34:31
from that
01:34:33
um to gain his confidence after that was
01:34:36
it was pretty tough. Ah.
01:34:38
>> Um,
01:34:41
but also what I what I saw was how
01:34:45
Murray had the power within government
01:34:47
to make things happen and he over the
01:34:52
period that he was in charge, Minister
01:34:54
of Rugby World Cup and particularly in
01:34:57
the last 3 months before the event,
01:35:01
he made a whole lot of things happen in
01:35:04
government to support us And so he,
01:35:09
you know, he did a fantastic job
01:35:12
enabling us and enabling New Zealand to
01:35:15
succeed and and by the end of it, we'd
01:35:19
sort of, I think, made peace with each
01:35:21
other and even more afterwards.
01:35:24
>> Um, well,
01:35:25
>> I suppose you both had like a just an
01:35:27
unimaginable amount of pressure on you
01:35:29
for for getting it right.
01:35:30
>> Well, he had John Key on his back
01:35:32
saying, "Mate, we've staked our
01:35:34
reputation." cuz when when national got
01:35:36
voted in halfway through our preparation
01:35:39
key had come out and said I've got two
01:35:41
major objectives. One is the economy and
01:35:44
the other is rugby world cup. We're
01:35:46
thinking [snorts] that's us. Um and so
01:35:52
uh there was and and and then key said
01:35:57
to Mali, "Well, you're our guy. You make
01:35:59
sure this happens."
01:36:01
And so you're you're probably right is
01:36:03
that Murray was under under pretty
01:36:06
strong pressure from Key to make sure he
01:36:08
got it right. Um and he transferred some
01:36:11
of that stress onto me at times.
01:36:13
[laughter]
01:36:13
But but he was a brilliant enabler
01:36:16
>> in the end. So you know I realized
01:36:19
afterwards I was a bit naive and I'd
01:36:21
made some mistakes at the time he
01:36:24
started really getting into me and if
01:36:26
I'd been smarter I would have avoided
01:36:28
those and there wouldn't have been those
01:36:29
sort of issues. But I didn't I just
01:36:31
wasn't politically savvy enough at the
01:36:33
time and so I coped it from him and it
01:36:35
was uncomfortable. It was really
01:36:36
uncomfortable.
01:36:38
>> What like can you offer any examples?
01:36:40
>> Oh, I was just sort of sidelined a bit.
01:36:42
You even though I was the CEO of the
01:36:43
thing, they'd go around me a fair bit
01:36:45
and
01:36:46
>> stuff to get some things done.
01:36:48
>> Right. Just cuz they lost confidence in
01:36:50
you.
01:36:50
>> Yeah, a little bit. And
01:36:54
so I had to steal myself and say,
01:36:55
"Right, do I get out of this now or do I
01:36:59
hang on in there and fight my way back
01:37:02
into it?" And the only way I could fight
01:37:04
my way back into it was doing it their
01:37:07
way rather than doing it my way.
01:37:10
>> Okay?
01:37:10
>> And that was quite a learning for me.
01:37:13
Um, but you know, I shut my mouth and I
01:37:16
buckled down and that's what I did. I
01:37:19
didn't like it much. Um, but I knew that
01:37:23
if I wanted to stay in it, that's the
01:37:25
way I had to do it. So, I did it
01:37:27
>> and, you know, gradually, you know, got
01:37:30
it back on an even keel, which was good,
01:37:32
which meant that and that by the time I
01:37:34
got it on an even keel, it was probably
01:37:36
>> two or three months before the
01:37:37
tournament. So, I was able to actually
01:37:39
enjoy the tournament. In fact, you know,
01:37:42
the role of CEO quite of what you in a
01:37:45
in an event like that, you are the main
01:37:47
storyteller. And that was something that
01:37:50
I was good at. I could tell the story
01:37:51
that people would it would resonate with
01:37:53
them and they'd buy into it.
01:37:55
>> Well, by the time the tournament starts,
01:37:58
the need for me to tell those stories
01:38:01
had disappeared. It was already
01:38:02
happening. And so the you know the
01:38:05
running of the tournament rested with my
01:38:07
operational team headed by the Walsh who
01:38:09
was just unbelievable.
01:38:12
And so I could sort of relax during the
01:38:15
tournament while she made sure things
01:38:18
happened which she did. Uh so I actually
01:38:20
enjoyed the tournament. I actually
01:38:22
enjoyed rocking around and turning up
01:38:25
and watching all these games of rugby.
01:38:26
And
01:38:27
>> I suppose the job's done by that point
01:38:28
is
01:38:28
>> well my job was hers wasn't. she had to
01:38:31
make and I was responsible if it if it
01:38:33
went wrong,
01:38:35
>> but she's so capable
01:38:38
that it worked.
01:38:40
>> Um, and then you needed a bit of luck. I
01:38:42
the one of the there's a few things if I
01:38:45
stand up and tell a story I'll talk
01:38:47
about the Tongan team arriving at
01:38:49
Oakland airport and the Tongan community
01:38:51
in Oakland going out there and the red
01:38:53
flags and
01:38:54
>> and you know bringing traffic to a
01:38:57
standstill and their enthusiasm and the
01:38:59
way people sort of really bought into
01:39:01
that
01:39:02
>> early on there was a game at Eden Park
01:39:04
between Australia and Ireland and in the
01:39:07
stadium it felt like you were in Dublin
01:39:10
you know there were 55,000 people
01:39:12
dressed up in green supporting the
01:39:14
Irish. Um, and the Irish won a
01:39:18
completely unexpected victory which
01:39:21
turned the the expectations of the
01:39:23
tournament on its head cuz it we we
01:39:25
thought we would head towards Australia
01:39:27
New Zealand final, but it actually that
01:39:29
result meant that we were going to be
01:39:31
playing Australia in the semi as long as
01:39:33
we got that far.
01:39:35
And uh so that was a bit nerve-wracking
01:39:37
because we got to the semi playing
01:39:38
Australia, Robbie Deans as captain uh as
01:39:41
coach, Quaid Cooper as public enemy
01:39:43
number one. If they had beaten us then,
01:39:47
you know, that could have soued a whole
01:39:49
lot of people quite significantly,
01:39:51
>> but um it didn't happen.
01:39:53
>> Um but you know, there were just moments
01:39:55
in the tournament. Steve Chu and I were
01:39:58
driving to New Plymouth for a game and
01:40:00
we went through King Country in a little
01:40:02
town called Benedale and you know
01:40:04
Benadale's got a population of about 10
01:40:07
and one main street and the lamposts in
01:40:11
the street each of them had handpainted
01:40:13
murals on them depicting each of the 20
01:40:16
teams in the tournament and the one shop
01:40:17
was just covered in the bunting of Rugby
01:40:19
World Cup and we looked at each other
01:40:20
and thought
01:40:22
>> you know this is how far this
01:40:23
tournament's got into New Zealand. It
01:40:25
was brilliant. So there was sort of all
01:40:26
those brilliant memories
01:40:29
>> and you got recognized for it in the uh
01:40:31
2012 New Year's honors list.
01:40:33
>> Yeah.
01:40:33
>> What did you get? Um
01:40:35
>> companion of not quite sure what it
01:40:38
means but companion of
01:40:39
>> services to sports admin. Yeah. What
01:40:41
what did that mean to you?
01:40:42
>> Oh that was that was uh really nice. I I
01:40:47
think I saw the reaction of my family to
01:40:49
it. you know, my brothers and sister and
01:40:52
and Annie um and they were really
01:40:55
thrilled. I [snorts]
01:40:57
my my greatest satisfaction wasn't that
01:41:01
it was actually being part of select,
01:41:04
you know, successfully delivering the
01:41:06
tournament. That was just a nice sort of
01:41:08
way to top it off in the end. But but
01:41:11
then I saw the reaction of them and I
01:41:13
thought, well, you know, they care.
01:41:16
>> Um so, you know, that was nice.
01:41:20
>> [gasps]
01:41:20
>> Man, what a career. What a life.
01:41:23
>> It's gone in a few different directions.
01:41:24
>> Yeah. So, you're about to turn 67.
01:41:27
>> Yeah.
01:41:27
>> Yeah. How How do you feel at this stage
01:41:29
of your life?
01:41:30
>> Well, are you in a reflective stage or
01:41:32
you still smashing goals?
01:41:34
>> I thought I was moving into a reflective
01:41:36
stage a few times in the last 10 years.
01:41:39
You know, I would I would finish Rugby
01:41:42
World Cup and then I'm sort of saying,
01:41:43
Annie, oh, maybe I'll just cut back a
01:41:45
bit and whatever. Then I walked into
01:41:47
tourism and that wasn't cutting back. It
01:41:49
was fullon.
01:41:51
And then
01:41:53
uh by that stage we were looking we were
01:41:55
living in Wellington for the Rugby World
01:41:57
Cup and tourism and we wanted to get
01:41:59
back to Oakland and Dave Higgins had
01:42:01
been talking to me about getting
01:42:02
involved with Dookco and
01:42:05
um so in the end I said yeah okay let's
01:42:09
let's do that.
01:42:11
So that you know that there was nothing
01:42:14
quiet about that job. It was just full
01:42:17
on the whole time. And
01:42:21
uh it took me into really uncomfortable
01:42:23
territory because you know I was a kid
01:42:27
who had a pretty protected upbringing
01:42:29
and whatnot. And I was stepping into the
01:42:32
middle of uh something that you know
01:42:36
this was this was they they were filled
01:42:39
with they had a staff of kids that had
01:42:42
had hard lives.
01:42:43
>> They were talented but they you know
01:42:45
each had their stories that would were
01:42:49
depicted pretty hard times and they
01:42:52
didn't know me. You know, the
01:42:53
interesting thing, I could walk in there
01:42:55
and out of a staff of seven or eight,
01:42:59
they didn't have a clue who I was.
01:43:00
>> So, I had no
01:43:03
um head start on how they would think
01:43:07
about me. I had to earn everything
01:43:10
>> to get their respect and cooperation.
01:43:12
So, that was a that was a a really
01:43:16
interesting uh exercise of trying to and
01:43:20
it was all an open plan office. And
01:43:22
there's no me sitting in a in an office
01:43:25
by myself. It was we're all pitched in
01:43:27
together, including Dean and David. So,
01:43:29
it was a it was a vibrant, volatile
01:43:32
environment.
01:43:33
>> Yeah, I know quite a bit of the team.
01:43:35
Eclectic bunch of people. Yeah. Dean,
01:43:38
David, Kalina, um Stenway.
01:43:41
>> Odd bunch of people.
01:43:42
>> Well, [laughter] but but this was
01:43:44
>> wonderful people. But
01:43:45
>> but but this was you know I guess David
01:43:49
just David himself you know people don't
01:43:54
recognize his genius. I do.
01:43:59
He's got you know he's got a few
01:44:01
shortcomings.
01:44:03
Um but he has got a genius that I
01:44:05
haven't seen in anyone else. and
01:44:08
uh he would he would choose people that
01:44:14
there's no formula to it. It's just
01:44:16
whether he looked at them and thought
01:44:18
you can do a job for us. And so you're
01:44:20
right, it was
01:44:22
>> an interesting bunch and I learned an
01:44:24
enormous amount because there I am
01:44:27
uh you know suppose I was 60 at that
01:44:30
stage
01:44:32
never been exposed to this sort of
01:44:33
environment in my life hanging on in
01:44:36
there trying to look confident but you
01:44:38
know hanging on in there and then there
01:44:41
was one side of the business that was
01:44:43
about celebrity events and and there was
01:44:45
some neat stuff that we did like um
01:44:48
Nigel Lawson and or one night with
01:44:51
Richie Mccor and Dan Carter Vector
01:44:53
Arena. And so those sorts of things
01:44:55
which I was comfortable with. I knew
01:44:57
that sort of side of it. But then there
01:45:00
was the boxing side. Well, I you know
01:45:02
when I'd been talking to David and Dean
01:45:04
about doing the job, I'd never really
01:45:05
for a second given any thought to the
01:45:07
boxing side. And probably because at
01:45:10
that stage they didn't have Joseph
01:45:14
Parker wasn't a big player. Well, you
01:45:17
know, I walk in there and
01:45:20
uh realize, okay, I'm going to have to
01:45:22
be pretty closely involved in running a
01:45:24
series of boxing events
01:45:26
and started to to see what they were
01:45:30
doing with Joseph.
01:45:32
And you know, at that stage when we we
01:45:34
started, he was he was a complete
01:45:37
unknown
01:45:38
>> kid they' picked out of South Oakland
01:45:41
>> um who had some talent but but not
01:45:43
universally recognized. And Bob Jones
01:45:45
was one who who, you know, into boxing
01:45:47
but didn't rate Parker and was quite
01:45:49
critical of Dooku supporting them. And
01:45:55
they only they contracted two fighters,
01:45:58
Parker and uh a young Aussie kid called
01:46:03
Jeff Horn lived in Brisbane,
01:46:06
>> little welterweight. And
01:46:09
so they started running events to show
01:46:11
these kids off and to work them through
01:46:13
the world rankings, which are a maze.
01:46:15
You know, there's four different
01:46:16
rankings and and David and Dean would
01:46:19
just be constantly plotting how can we
01:46:21
get these kids through this to the point
01:46:23
where they could be challenging for a
01:46:25
world title. It was fascinating to
01:46:27
watch. And of course, I'm I'm trying to
01:46:29
get myself up to speed with boxing. At
01:46:31
the same time, Annie's looking at me and
01:46:33
thinking, "I don't know why you're doing
01:46:35
this, and I don't like it." You know,
01:46:37
she hated the boxing side, and most of
01:46:39
the family felt that the same way. So,
01:46:43
[laughter] so I'm trying to contend with
01:46:45
that. And um and yet we started to make
01:46:49
progress with these two kids. and and
01:46:52
David and Dean were just unbelievably
01:46:55
good about how they threaded them
01:46:57
through the rankings and how they wooed
01:47:00
the various world body people to needle
01:47:04
them into giving Joseph a go or Jeff a
01:47:06
go
01:47:07
>> and then us creating these boxing events
01:47:09
that were designed to show them off and
01:47:11
this is where David and Dean were
01:47:12
spending all of their own money um there
01:47:15
wasn't it wasn't particularly profitable
01:47:18
at that stage
01:47:20
but then the kids both started to
01:47:22
succeed and we started to get them going
01:47:24
and
01:47:26
uh and then it became apparent you know
01:47:28
what both these kids could get to the
01:47:30
point where they could fight for world
01:47:32
titles. So I'm one stage I'm doing a box
01:47:35
refereeing course to try and make myself
01:47:38
understand a bit more cuz I was looking
01:47:39
at the ring and thinking these are so
01:47:41
close I can't tell the difference as to
01:47:42
who's winning who's losing.
01:47:44
>> And anyway I did that that became
01:47:46
slightly clearer.
01:47:48
Uh but it was just the theater of taking
01:47:50
them through and then of course you know
01:47:52
Joseph got his chance but but to get his
01:47:55
chance and to make sure it happened in
01:47:57
Oakuckland. David and Dean put
01:47:58
everything on the line for that to
01:48:01
happen
01:48:02
>> and you know so and Joseph just snuck in
01:48:07
in the he he fought a guy called Carlos
01:48:09
Tackom Tackom
01:48:12
and it was an eliminator fight to see
01:48:13
who would fight for a world title and
01:48:16
seriously I thought he'd lost. I think
01:48:18
most people thought I had just missed
01:48:19
out and the the judges saw it our way.
01:48:22
So, he won that. So, he got a title
01:48:24
fight, but he they then had to put up an
01:48:25
enormous amount of money. But the
01:48:27
difference in that 2-year period, 18
01:48:30
months, 19 months, the first fight I was
01:48:33
invol involved in, Joseph fought it at
01:48:36
um Manacow Feladrome, and we had grossed
01:48:39
$28,000 of hospitality.
01:48:44
In the last two fights that I was
01:48:45
involved in, the Carlos Tackham and then
01:48:47
Andrew Ruiz who fought for the title,
01:48:51
>> uh we sold more than $2 million worth of
01:48:54
corporate hospitality um to people and
01:49:00
uh we did it we most of that was done in
01:49:03
in a space of 48 hours where we would
01:49:06
warm people up. We're going on market.
01:49:08
We're going on market. Then we'd go and
01:49:11
the whole thing would go crazy for 48
01:49:13
hours and we'd sell all this hospitality
01:49:18
and and then you know the I I'd said to
01:49:22
David and Dean Wright, sorry, but I'm
01:49:24
finishing. I've I'm worn out and they
01:49:27
desperately tried to hang on uh hang on
01:49:30
to me for a while. But I said, listen,
01:49:33
I'm sorry. I just can't do it anymore.
01:49:35
Um but Parker had his fight and he won
01:49:39
and he became the world champion WBO
01:49:42
heavyweight I think. Um a month or so
01:49:46
later they sell out Suncorp Stadium in
01:49:49
Brisbane and Jeff Horn beats Manny
01:49:52
Pacquiao to become world champion. Two
01:49:54
young kids. They only chose to. They
01:49:56
only contracted two. This is why I think
01:49:58
they've got brilliance there. Both of
01:50:01
them became world champions.
01:50:03
Um,
01:50:06
and even even when Parker was fighting
01:50:09
for the world, Annie wouldn't come.
01:50:12
Only one brother would come along. That
01:50:13
was it. Um, so, you know, [snorts] so I
01:50:16
had to get out. [laughter]
01:50:19
>> Creating tension at home. Yeah. And um,
01:50:21
David's had significant success since
01:50:23
then with the symphony format as well.
01:50:26
Yeah. He's a he's a genius. He is.
01:50:28
>> Yeah. Um, is there anything you're still
01:50:31
working on as a man at this stage of in
01:50:34
your life?
01:50:35
>> Well, well, I hadn't finished telling
01:50:36
you. But I was sort of there was a risk
01:50:39
I was drifting towards retirement and I
01:50:42
was still heavily involved in New
01:50:43
Zealand cricket and as a board director
01:50:45
and then I became the chair
01:50:48
but actually I then
01:50:50
uh got the opportunity to start
01:50:56
uh pulling together
01:50:59
the the board chairs of the various
01:51:01
sports in New Zealand at a national
01:51:03
level.
01:51:06
And you know this is the for the past 15
01:51:09
years this 20 years this is what I've
01:51:12
sort of almost specialized in doing is
01:51:13
grabbing groups of people
01:51:16
and getting them together into into
01:51:19
cohesive communities and so I got the
01:51:21
chance to do this that started 5 years
01:51:23
ago and that that's been incredibly
01:51:26
stimulating. So, you know, most of the
01:51:28
people listening to this will be yawning
01:51:30
now about, you know, this sort of thing,
01:51:32
but for me, it's incredibly motivating.
01:51:35
And and what it's done also is it's
01:51:37
given me a focus for this part of my
01:51:39
career that I didn't expect.
01:51:41
>> And so, I'm totally motivated around
01:51:44
this stuff now to make it work and to
01:51:46
get people, you know, as as
01:51:50
competent as they can be when they're
01:51:51
cheering the boards of these national
01:51:53
sporting organizations cuz they're full
01:51:55
of risk those jobs. So, [snorts] you
01:51:56
know, that keeps me going. So, I've I've
01:51:58
probably changed now from from I I I
01:52:02
don't think I'd have the resilience to
01:52:03
do a CEO role again,
01:52:06
>> but I've got the resilience to form
01:52:08
these communities and get them working
01:52:09
with each other.
01:52:11
>> Resilience or like just energy, time,
01:52:14
motivation.
01:52:15
>> I just, you know, I think each time you
01:52:18
do a CEO role, you get beaten up
01:52:22
>> quite a lot.
01:52:24
and I was sick of being beaten up, you
01:52:26
know, even though I'd had lots of good
01:52:28
times out of those roles, I just
01:52:31
couldn't be bothered doing that again.
01:52:33
>> And I so I didn't want to expose myself
01:52:35
to that. Um, so the these other ones
01:52:39
have less of that happening,
01:52:42
>> but are still really
01:52:44
intellectually stimulating to try and
01:52:47
get a bunch of people
01:52:49
um into a better shape than what they
01:52:51
are when you start. And that's been, you
01:52:53
know, that's been good fun. And that
01:52:54
that sort of led, you know, I mentioned
01:52:56
to you a little bit earlier about I'm
01:52:59
taking the government on at the moment
01:53:00
about some gambling legislation where
01:53:03
they in the first part of forming that
01:53:05
legislation
01:53:07
um they've completely stuffed up
01:53:09
>> and but I've I suddenly had a whole
01:53:12
community that I've been working with
01:53:13
that I could galvanize into this and the
01:53:16
government got completely surprised by
01:53:19
how strong we were, how quickly we were
01:53:21
strong to say to them, you're doing the
01:53:23
wrong M
01:53:24
>> so you know those sort of things are
01:53:26
good fun.
01:53:28
>> You're never going to stop. Eh,
01:53:30
>> I don't want to stop. But what I what's
01:53:33
happened now, and this has been the case
01:53:35
for the last four or five years, is I'm
01:53:37
totally in control of my own diary.
01:53:40
>> Yeah.
01:53:41
>> The sorts of things I do largely I
01:53:43
determine when I do them, which means
01:53:47
that that um I feel in control of my
01:53:50
life,
01:53:51
>> you know. Um,
01:53:54
last week I put some bookings in place
01:53:57
for Annie and I to go to Europe next
01:53:59
year for 6 weeks and we're going to walk
01:54:02
the Camino walk in Spain. Um,
01:54:06
now you know, we're not going to walk
01:54:10
800 km, which is the full length of one
01:54:13
of them, but we'll walk probably 3 to
01:54:15
400 km. And all we'll be doing is just
01:54:17
walking through countryside in Spain and
01:54:20
talking to each other and the other
01:54:21
people that are on the trip and just
01:54:23
basically,
01:54:24
you know, living in that that world. And
01:54:27
I can do that sort of thing now. So I'm
01:54:29
setting up my whole diary for next year
01:54:31
now carving out those sorts of windows
01:54:33
and it's quite a freeing thing to be
01:54:35
able to do that and yet at the same time
01:54:37
still be active in a lot of,
01:54:40
>> you know, different business things.
01:54:41
>> Yeah. Are you happy? Are you enjoying
01:54:43
this phase of life?
01:54:44
>> Oh yeah. Fantastic.
01:54:45
>> Yeah. Um, I I think I I mentioned to you
01:54:49
also earlier, you know, the reality of
01:54:52
your mortality
01:54:54
starts to hit home more the older you
01:54:56
get.
01:54:57
>> And so therefore,
01:54:59
um, the the motivation to not waste your
01:55:05
time
01:55:08
uh, is great, but but doing stuff that I
01:55:12
enjoy. Now, you know, a lot of the stuff
01:55:14
I do is hard slog, but I enjoy it.
01:55:17
>> Um, and then there's, you know, the
01:55:19
family stuff and whatnot and and Annie's
01:55:22
just retired from teaching, although
01:55:24
she's doing a lot of relieving stuff,
01:55:26
but, you know, we we can
01:55:29
go to a family home in Tapo now that
01:55:32
Steven Jones has moved out. [laughter]
01:55:34
And, um, [snorts] you know, we can do
01:55:36
that whenever we want sort of stuff. and
01:55:39
and getting involved in cycling's been
01:55:41
really interesting cuz they have been
01:55:42
through really tough times
01:55:44
>> and I knew that
01:55:46
>> and I thought it'd be really neat to
01:55:48
help them with the recovery process and
01:55:51
it's been it's been as interesting as
01:55:54
now I know nothing and I'm not learning
01:55:56
anything about what happens on the track
01:55:59
with cycling. I'm just concentrating on
01:56:01
on the organization and how it can run
01:56:04
as well as it needs to. So, you know,
01:56:06
those sort of things that I would never
01:56:08
have known two years ago that's what I'd
01:56:10
been involved in. But opportunities
01:56:12
arise and you look at them and quickly
01:56:14
say, "Oh, well, yes, all right, or no, I
01:56:16
won't get involved in that."
01:56:18
>> Well, you've got so much experience,
01:56:20
>> haven't you? And um your kids, your four
01:56:23
kids, all in their 30s now. Have you got
01:56:25
grandkids? Are you a grandparent?
01:56:27
>> Four grandkids.
01:56:28
>> Yeah. Um, and that's another phase of
01:56:29
your life, you know, you get into and
01:56:31
and you know, my kids are
01:56:36
turning out as Annie and I would hope.
01:56:39
So, we love and and really admire each
01:56:41
of them. Um, they've hooked up with with
01:56:44
good people. Um, so we like them a lot.
01:56:47
Um, and now the grandkitties have come
01:56:49
along and that's so there's four now and
01:56:53
by my count there should be eight by the
01:56:55
time they're finished if they're
01:56:56
listening. Um,
01:56:58
>> no pressure,
01:56:59
>> no pressure,
01:56:59
>> no urgency.
01:57:00
>> And so we're sort of adapting to that
01:57:02
life of of having to be part of those
01:57:05
kids' lives. And it's and it's
01:57:07
brilliant.
01:57:08
>> Yeah.
01:57:08
>> Um,
01:57:10
and so, you know, there's there's always
01:57:12
things happening and and so we are being
01:57:15
kept going forward. Um, so I don't want
01:57:19
to think about [snorts] stopping. M
01:57:21
>> you know I I can evolve what I do
01:57:25
but I can't see a time of stopping.
01:57:28
>> Your grandkids, how how do you hope they
01:57:30
see you as a man?
01:57:32
>> Uh you you quickly realize that it
01:57:35
doesn't matter what you have done or
01:57:38
what you think you've done,
01:57:40
>> they're not interested.
01:57:42
>> They are only interested in how you
01:57:45
connect with them. And so the
01:57:47
concentration goes on to
01:57:50
connecting with them in a way that that
01:57:52
is fun for both them and us.
01:57:55
>> And so um you know we've got to the
01:57:56
stage now where two of them we can take
01:57:58
them away down to Tapo for a few days
01:58:01
[laughter] and cross our fingers and
01:58:03
>> and um must be nice to give them back at
01:58:05
the end.
01:58:06
>> Oh god. Yes. And um but you know they
01:58:09
[snorts]
01:58:10
>> you know we every Saturday morning in
01:58:11
the winter we're off to soccer to watch
01:58:13
the six-year-old play. And it's just fun
01:58:15
watching them grow. Yeah.
01:58:16
>> Uh, and having a tiny bit of influence,
01:58:19
not much because it's their parents that
01:58:20
are leading them,
01:58:22
>> but we can chime in there and and just
01:58:25
be people that they like being with, and
01:58:27
that's that's what we want to make sure
01:58:29
it is.
01:58:30
>> What's a perfect day off for you?
01:58:33
>> You know, I'm useless having days off.
01:58:38
you know, if I'm if I'm sitting at home,
01:58:40
Saturdays and Sundays to me, I potter
01:58:44
around doing
01:58:46
different parts of work. Um, but I don't
01:58:50
begrudge any of it and it's not
01:58:51
intrusive and this, you know, it might
01:58:53
happen for 2 or 3 hours a day and it
01:58:55
won't stop anything that Annie and I
01:58:57
decide we're going to do. Um,
01:59:01
so I don't I don't switch off
01:59:04
much. I read a lot. I read
01:59:08
two or three prime novels a week. Um,
01:59:12
and you know that that's really
01:59:14
important. Um
01:59:18
but uh yeah and we walk a lot together
01:59:22
you know we walk around the streets
01:59:24
around here and in Tapo and stuff and
01:59:27
that's um that's really relaxing and
01:59:29
just staying connected to each other you
01:59:31
know cuz I think
01:59:32
>> when I was a CEO under the
01:59:35
I learned this in cricket
01:59:38
is that I sort of got consumed by it and
01:59:42
when you're consumed by it you you
01:59:44
sometimes I didn't see clearly enough
01:59:48
um around me in my family life and Annie
01:59:52
let me know and I sort of learned that
01:59:54
lesson. So even under the pressure of
01:59:56
rugby will cut uh it it wasn't a problem
01:59:59
to keep a good balance but we've just
02:00:01
ensured um that we stay connected with
02:00:05
each other um at all times and that's
02:00:08
that's really important.
02:00:10
>> Yeah, I know you missed one of your your
02:00:12
kids births. Uh Stephanie, you were
02:00:14
batting for New Zealand at the time. It
02:00:16
>> was brilliant. Um
02:00:18
so, so
02:00:19
>> I just I just point that out as like
02:00:20
just one of the I'm sure many sacrifices
02:00:22
you've made.
02:00:23
>> Oh, yeah. But it turned into a a a great
02:00:25
thing for us to remember because
02:00:28
>> so um this
02:00:31
we decided we'd have a second kit and
02:00:34
and we you know with pregnancies we were
02:00:37
lucky. It happened sort of quickly most
02:00:40
times. didn't even know about the last
02:00:42
couple um just happened. Um but with
02:00:46
Steph, we looked at the cricket schedule
02:00:49
and thought, "Right, there's a good gap
02:00:51
there in November. [snorts]
02:00:53
Let's go for it." And
02:00:57
um and Annie got pregnant and then New
02:01:01
Zealand cricket suddenly decided we
02:01:02
would go and play Australia in Perth
02:01:05
uh in November. And so I rang them up
02:01:08
and said, "Well, you know, this is a bit
02:01:10
of a problem." and they said, "Don't
02:01:11
worry, when's the baby due?" And the
02:01:12
baby was due about a week before the
02:01:14
start of the test. So they said, "Don't
02:01:16
worry, stay in New Zealand till the
02:01:17
baby's born and then come and join us."
02:01:20
Um, but of course, Steph was late. And
02:01:23
in those days, you didn't go in for
02:01:26
induced births or C-sections or
02:01:28
whatever. You sort of just waited. And
02:01:32
so she she just wasn't arriving. And
02:01:35
then um Annie said to me and Annie had
02:01:37
her mom with her who she probably had
02:01:40
more confidence in around birth than
02:01:42
[laughter] me and she said I'll just go.
02:01:45
So we went across and then it still
02:01:48
Steph didn't come until about the second
02:01:50
day of the test match and
02:01:53
um
02:01:57
uh they were obviously we had a New
02:01:58
Zealand crew over there for the test
02:02:01
match and Graeme V um Tony Vch's dad was
02:02:04
leading it and he came to me and said
02:02:05
hey Paul Holmes wants to interview you
02:02:08
and Annie on the 7:00 p.m. show uh the
02:02:12
home show which was huge.
02:02:15
>> So we'll do it by satellite. and you
02:02:17
come down to the ground and and Annie
02:02:20
will be at home with new baby. And so
02:02:23
they sent round, you know, all the
02:02:25
camera people to our house and deport
02:02:27
for her and um I was down at the ground.
02:02:31
Um it was only about 8:00 in the morning
02:02:33
so it didn't interfere with the cricket.
02:02:35
And Paul did this live cross and and
02:02:39
that was sensational in the sense that
02:02:42
he gave us we had quarter of an hour
02:02:44
talking to him and and then he said just
02:02:48
carry on talking to each other and we'll
02:02:50
bug her off and and we did that. Um
02:02:53
which was neat and and so you know it
02:02:56
became pretty high high profile about
02:02:59
Steph's birth. Um, so it was it actually
02:03:03
was was fun what the way all that by the
02:03:06
time I'd come back home some dear old
02:03:08
lady in Devport had knitted a New
02:03:10
Zealand cricket jersey for Steph and you
02:03:13
know it was all that and in those days
02:03:15
Dom it's hard to imagine now with the
02:03:17
media coverage that exists everywhere
02:03:20
but in those days we only had TV1 and TV
02:03:23
2 and News Talk ZB had just started
02:03:27
>> and then the music channels and so if
02:03:30
cricket it was on TV one, everyone was
02:03:33
watching it because there were only two
02:03:34
channels to watch. So you were really
02:03:36
well known, particularly as it turned
02:03:38
out, by older generations who, you know,
02:03:41
would sit around home watching cricket
02:03:43
on TV.
02:03:43
>> Yeah.
02:03:44
>> Suited them. And so you you actually I
02:03:48
was recognized by a lot of people
02:03:52
um just because that I was sitting on TV
02:03:54
in their in their
02:03:57
>> you know um family rooms
02:03:59
>> and it was sort of you know strange.
02:04:04
>> Yeah. And and the home show that you
02:04:05
mentioned before that was a massive
02:04:07
deal. Every everyone watched either the
02:04:09
homes show or Shortland Street. Yeah.
02:04:11
>> And this is before Yeah. before
02:04:13
smartphones before FaceTime. So to have
02:04:15
like a connection like that where you
02:04:17
could um see your baby was a big deal.
02:04:19
>> Oh, well, you know, I'd go away on a
02:04:21
tour
02:04:22
and
02:04:24
you get I'd have to write letters home
02:04:26
once a week and they'd take a week to
02:04:28
get there and
02:04:31
I could ring home, but you were taking
02:04:34
pot luck cuz you could you had no
02:04:37
smartphones or anything. You couldn't
02:04:38
organize a time. So, I just would guess
02:04:40
at a time and and if we got lucky, we
02:04:43
could Annie and I could talk to each
02:04:44
other. Um, but you could only afford to
02:04:47
talk for five, six, seven minutes cuz
02:04:49
the cost was horrendous
02:04:51
>> and and you know, I'm away for 3 months
02:04:53
and this is happening.
02:04:55
>> Uh, so you do forget
02:04:58
>> but that was what life was like. So, you
02:05:00
know,
02:05:01
>> we didn't know any different.
02:05:02
>> Didn't know any different.
02:05:03
>> Yeah. [snorts]
02:05:04
[gasps]
02:05:04
>> What are your best and worst habits?
02:05:08
Uh
02:05:10
my well from a work point of view my one
02:05:12
of my best habits is I'm really
02:05:15
diligent. One of my worst habits is that
02:05:18
I drive people crazy with
02:05:22
detail and you know just constantly at
02:05:27
them. So the two things go hand in hand
02:05:28
really.
02:05:29
>> It's quite funny. I had Sir Steve Hansen
02:05:30
on the podcast and he he his theory is
02:05:32
that um with most people their greatest
02:05:35
strength is also their greatest
02:05:36
weakness.
02:05:36
>> Yeah. Well, I think that's right. As I
02:05:38
sometimes forget that in my enthusiasm
02:05:42
>> and also given that I control my own
02:05:44
work life is that other people are on
02:05:47
the receiving end of and I'm I I sort of
02:05:51
um you know I'm still useless. I sit
02:05:54
there and and communicate mainly by
02:05:57
email and I do a lot of it on weekends
02:05:59
cuz I spend the whole week talking to
02:06:01
people and don't have time to to tidy
02:06:03
everything up. So at the weekends I sit
02:06:05
there and then people would be on the
02:06:07
receiving end of emails from me on the
02:06:10
weekend and they wouldn't know whether
02:06:11
to reply or not. And if I said please
02:06:13
don't bother you know I'm just getting
02:06:15
it off my thing and it wouldn't matter.
02:06:16
They feel like oh this guy I better
02:06:19
respond to him quickly. So you know
02:06:21
>> anyway that's uh
02:06:22
>> you need to use more emojis. [laughter]
02:06:25
>> I haven't quite I can do that on the
02:06:28
smartphone. I don't know how to do it on
02:06:29
a computer. Um but probably
02:06:34
my worst habit at home is a failure to
02:06:36
actually apart from walking which I'm
02:06:39
good. I really at this age need to be
02:06:41
doing some some proper stretching and
02:06:44
strength stuff. I used to do it when I
02:06:45
was playing but I'm hopeless and I know
02:06:48
I need to do it cuz it's going to count
02:06:49
if I don't.
02:06:50
>> Yeah.
02:06:51
>> And I keep telling myself this and I've
02:06:53
been telling myself for four or five
02:06:54
years but I just haven't
02:06:56
>> haven't uh got over that bar. I have to
02:06:59
for the commamino. I can't walk for two
02:07:02
or three weeks without actually
02:07:03
preparing for it. So hopefully that's a
02:07:05
catalyst.
02:07:06
>> What are you most afraid of?
02:07:09
>> Um
02:07:12
I you know at this stage of life would
02:07:14
be living life without Annie if if
02:07:17
something were to happen to her and I
02:07:19
think she probably feels the same. You
02:07:21
know I was actually just
02:07:25
working through the rest of the life
02:07:27
without her. we're so close
02:07:29
um
02:07:31
uh that it would be it would be really
02:07:34
tough. So, both of us, you know, don't
02:07:37
really want to think about this, but
02:07:39
that it weighs on us a little bit. You
02:07:41
know, and that's why we've got to stay
02:07:43
healthy and and also enjoy ourselves
02:07:45
while while we really can.
02:07:46
>> Surprise for great love, though, isn't
02:07:48
it?
02:07:48
>> Well, she's been great. I mean, we
02:07:50
>> you know, we've been together since
02:07:52
1979. We blind date. um and
02:07:59
married for 42 nearly 43 years. So,
02:08:04
you know, she's put up with a lot. Um
02:08:06
[snorts]
02:08:07
so have I [laughter]
02:08:10
just in case she's listening finally to
02:08:12
one of these.
02:08:13
>> If you regret that comment, I I'll
02:08:15
remove it. [laughter]
02:08:16
>> And um so we've, you know, we worked out
02:08:19
a way of working with each other and it
02:08:21
works. Um
02:08:23
>> yeah, what is the key? What is the key
02:08:24
to that sort of longevity? Uh um I I
02:08:27
tell you one and seriously one of the
02:08:30
most important things that we learned
02:08:33
was the value of her been having a real
02:08:37
purpose in life which was completely
02:08:39
separate
02:08:40
>> to anything I was doing. I mean the
02:08:42
problem is when you're doing the sort of
02:08:43
high-profile stuff I was doing for a
02:08:45
while, it tends to consume life around
02:08:49
you. And
02:08:52
um she had she had been a lawyer, had
02:08:56
then had our four kids and had raised
02:09:00
them and got them well advanced.
02:09:04
And
02:09:06
um
02:09:07
the risk at that time was that she'd
02:09:09
feel like she'd always be an add-on to
02:09:11
me in cricket or whatever.
02:09:14
>> And so she retrained as a teacher and
02:09:16
she she then started teaching full-time.
02:09:19
And it was fantastic for her. It gave
02:09:22
her her sense of real purpose. Um, it
02:09:27
was great for both of us because I knew
02:09:29
she was happy doing that and so she I
02:09:32
wasn't worried about her being worried
02:09:33
about what I was doing and the time it
02:09:35
would take and so it really worked. Um,
02:09:38
and so we've kept that going. She taught
02:09:41
for 17 years and still teaches a wee bit
02:09:45
relieving. Um, and that's a great thing
02:09:47
because it means she's got her own life,
02:09:49
her own lots of her own friends. Um, and
02:09:54
and I know that makes her happy and and
02:09:57
that takes a bit of pressure off me,
02:09:59
which means I can do some of the things
02:10:01
that I'm doing. And then but a whole lot
02:10:04
of what we do is together. So, you know,
02:10:06
you got that lucky balance really.
02:10:07
>> Yeah. Annie and the kids, how would how
02:10:11
would you like them to describe you when
02:10:12
you're not in the room? Maybe three
02:10:14
words.
02:10:15
>> [laughter]
02:10:16
[gasps]
02:10:17
>> How would you like them to describe you?
02:10:18
>> I like them. I I you know I think I
02:10:22
don't know. Um what do you say? Um
02:10:26
uh really funny. Like my ability to tell
02:10:30
jokes is amazing, but I it's only really
02:10:33
me that appreciates it. [laughter]
02:10:36
Um so they roll their eyes and and uh
02:10:39
>> well [snorts] puns dad jokes. Well, they
02:10:42
could be anything, but but you know,
02:10:44
it's just um I think they should better
02:10:47
appreciate my sense of humor. That's
02:10:49
that's something that would be great. M
02:10:53
>> um I think uh
02:10:57
you know I think as long as all of them
02:11:01
including Annie feel supported that's
02:11:04
important that
02:11:05
>> that I am there and have been there when
02:11:08
they've needed
02:11:10
>> me when they've needed that sort of
02:11:13
connection you know that change when
02:11:15
your parents have you take it in turns
02:11:19
sometimes it's Annie that has to be the
02:11:21
lead supporter and
02:11:22
just need to be there supporting her to
02:11:24
support them. And then the depending on
02:11:27
what it is, sometimes that switches
02:11:28
around, you know, and
02:11:30
>> and so that if they feel support and
02:11:34
love, then that's all of them and that's
02:11:37
great.
02:11:38
>> Um, but I feel it from them, so that's
02:11:40
I'm lucky. So, as long as they feel like
02:11:42
it's a two-way thing.
02:11:44
>> So, we've been going for 2 hours 10
02:11:46
minutes. when you when you revisit um
02:11:49
aspects of your life like this, like in
02:11:51
a greatest hits sort of format, I guess.
02:11:53
Um you know, the playing career, the
02:11:55
early years, um yeah, the boardroom, the
02:11:58
family stuff. Yeah. Are you proud of
02:12:00
yourself?
02:12:01
>> Yeah. Uh I am. Uh
02:12:06
uh but I've I've as I get older, I've
02:12:08
leared to keep things
02:12:12
uh in perspective a lot more. So, in
02:12:14
other words, you know, I can be
02:12:16
delighted about stuff, but also
02:12:18
understand that's just, you know, and
02:12:21
it it I guess what I'm trying to say is
02:12:24
that
02:12:25
it it it the family stuff is much more
02:12:29
important,
02:12:30
>> getting that right, keeping it right
02:12:32
than the work stuff. But actually, it's
02:12:35
the combination of the two that that
02:12:37
sort of makes me feel really good. But
02:12:40
then Dom, you know, as you talked about
02:12:43
a few minutes ago, I don't want to stop.
02:12:45
I mean, either on the home front or the
02:12:49
or the work front. I just want to find
02:12:51
things to do that are um uh contributing
02:12:56
to what's around me and and which I find
02:13:00
really satisfying to do.
02:13:02
>> So, that's really easy, you know, when
02:13:03
you're a grandparent because
02:13:06
you your kids need help. You know, it's
02:13:09
a hard life. I've they they look at us
02:13:11
now and say, "How the hell did you have
02:13:13
four kids?" You know, they've got two
02:13:14
kids, two of them, and they just can't
02:13:17
imagine having four kids, particularly
02:13:19
they were six and under at the time to
02:13:21
start with.
02:13:23
So, you see them rushed off their feet.
02:13:25
So, you know, you got to chip in and and
02:13:27
then when you do, you got to make sure
02:13:29
that the the grandkids enjoy it so that
02:13:31
it's not just a shove them in front of
02:13:33
TV and that's it type thing. is um
02:13:36
you've actually got to help them enjoy
02:13:38
the experience so they want to come back
02:13:39
and then it gets really good fun. But on
02:13:42
the work front I want to keep using my
02:13:43
brain. I want to keep helping
02:13:48
um
02:13:49
organizations do a bit better. Um
02:13:53
[snorts] that's why cycling so
02:13:54
interesting is that that they were a
02:13:57
basket case for a while. They started to
02:13:59
climb out before I got involved. Now
02:14:02
I've got a chance to to help them go
02:14:06
much further than that and get back to
02:14:08
proper stability. Um it'll take, you
02:14:11
know, there's a couple of years left in
02:14:13
and getting that far, I think. But but
02:14:16
you know, I'm really clear about that's
02:14:18
what my role is with them.
02:14:20
>> I'm excited to see what you do through
02:14:22
your 70s.
02:14:24
>> My sister just turned 74 today. She's
02:14:26
number two out of five.
02:14:29
Each of my siblings are still working,
02:14:33
you know, in their 70s. Now, I never
02:14:35
would have guessed that 10 years ago,
02:14:37
but it's an indication that life has
02:14:39
changed, that um, you know, people still
02:14:43
want to keep doing stuff
02:14:46
um to keep their lives interesting.
02:14:51
>> And so, yeah, but I don't want to think
02:14:53
that far. I'm quite happy just to think
02:14:54
about the next few months. And um I'm
02:14:58
also now a great believer that something
02:14:59
will come up.
02:15:01
>> You know a lot of things I'm doing now I
02:15:03
never would have guessed 5 years ago.
02:15:05
>> And I think you know as long as I do the
02:15:08
things I'm doing now well then that
02:15:11
means that opportunities will come out
02:15:14
of nowhere and if they look interesting
02:15:16
then
02:15:17
>> you know who the hell
02:15:18
>> do boxing never
02:15:21
>> in 2011 would have thought that's where
02:15:23
I would be for a while.
02:15:24
>> Yeah that was random. No one had that on
02:15:26
their bingo card for you.
02:15:27
>> I didn't. They didn't. Um, but it
02:15:30
happened
02:15:31
>> and it just now becomes part of my
02:15:33
>> rich memory of, you know,
02:15:35
>> the rich tapestry of life as they say.
02:15:37
>> Yeah. Is it nice reflecting like this?
02:15:39
>> Yeah, it is. I mean, it is. And you've
02:15:41
you've done a lot of homework on this
02:15:42
and um
02:15:45
h Yeah, it is. It is. Well, I think from
02:15:51
my perspective, if someone um like you
02:15:52
is going to give me a couple of hours of
02:15:54
your time, it would be um the least I
02:15:56
can do is some thorough research.
02:15:58
>> Thanks, [laughter] mate. No, it is good.
02:15:59
I mean, it's but I could probably do it
02:16:02
to you,
02:16:03
>> you know, if I've set myself. I could I
02:16:06
could sit there and research
02:16:09
um for quite a long time. I'd have to
02:16:10
talk to a few people, but you've done a
02:16:12
hell of a lot.
02:16:13
>> Um and I don't see you stopping. you
02:16:16
know, our conversation at the start here
02:16:18
about the podcast business you're now
02:16:20
building up um with JJ. It's it's
02:16:24
that's exciting. That's something, you
02:16:26
know, you wouldn't have thought about 5
02:16:28
years ago. And that's I think that's the
02:16:30
important thing about life is you
02:16:31
actually are ready to be able to see,
02:16:35
assess, and if you think it's right,
02:16:37
take opportunities
02:16:38
>> that are in front of you, and they won't
02:16:40
go away if you've still got that
02:16:41
mindset. It's only if you just close
02:16:43
yourself down and and whatnot that
02:16:46
things will start to disappear.
02:16:48
>> Oh, I see life like a like a rugby
02:16:49
match. So 50 is sort of halfway. So
02:16:52
we're in the second half now. Just in
02:16:53
the second half.
02:16:54
>> Same as you. There's a long way to go.
02:16:56
>> Um yeah, when I was 30, my my goal would
02:16:59
have probably been to retire by 50.
02:17:00
>> Yeah,
02:17:01
>> that was sort of an aspirational thing.
02:17:02
Now I couldn't think of anything worse.
02:17:03
Like you need purpose, don't you?
02:17:05
>> Well, when I was 30, I thought I'd be a
02:17:06
lawyer the rest of my life with my
02:17:08
brother. And I thought that was just
02:17:10
pre-ord pre-ordained
02:17:13
and then um got thrown up in the air.
02:17:15
Christo saying to me, why don't you come
02:17:17
see of New Zealand cricket?
02:17:20
>> Um
02:17:22
well, Martinstead, this has been a lot
02:17:24
of fun.
02:17:25
>> Me too.
02:17:25
>> You are a great New Zealander and thank
02:17:27
you so much for coming on my podcast.
02:17:28
>> Thanks Tom. Pleasure.

Podspun Insights

In this episode, listeners are treated to an engaging conversation between the host and Martin Snedden, a prominent figure in New Zealand sports. The episode kicks off with a lively introduction to the performance hub of New Zealand, featuring top athletes and investment strategies. As the conversation unfolds, Snedden shares his journey from being a cricket player to becoming a key player in sports administration, including his role in the Rugby World Cup and his experiences with Dookco events.

Snedden reflects on his childhood, his admiration for cricket legends, and the pressures of being a young player in the national team. The discussion takes a nostalgic turn as he recounts memorable moments from his cricket career, including the infamous underarm incident against Australia, which sparked a national conversation about sportsmanship.

Listeners will find themselves captivated by Snedden's anecdotes about the Rugby World Cup, the challenges of organizing such a massive event, and the emotional highs and lows that come with it. He emphasizes the importance of community involvement and the spirit of New Zealand during the tournament, highlighting how the event brought the nation together.

As the episode progresses, Snedden discusses his transition into sports administration, the complexities of player negotiations, and his experiences in boxing promotion with Dookco. The conversation wraps up with reflections on family life, the joys of being a grandparent, and the importance of staying active and engaged in life. Snedden's insights into balancing personal and professional life resonate deeply, making this episode a heartfelt exploration of a life dedicated to sports and community.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 92
    Most heartwarming
  • 90
    Most emotional
  • 90
    Best overall
  • 89
    Most satisfying

Episode Highlights

  • Admiration for Colleagues
    Martin discusses the hardworking nature of his colleagues at Dooko events.
    “They’re bloody hardworking.”
    @ 03m 35s
    December 07, 2025
  • Pride in the Rugby World Cup
    Martin expresses his pride in the successful Rugby World Cup he helped organize.
    “I was incredibly proud of that.”
    @ 14m 44s
    December 07, 2025
  • A Catch to Remember
    He made one of the greatest catches in cricket history, but it went unnoticed by the umpires.
    “I took one of the greatest catches of all time.”
    @ 27m 24s
    December 07, 2025
  • The Mark Greatbatch Test
    In a remarkable match, Mark Greatbatch saved New Zealand by batting for almost two days.
    “It was just one of those things where I thought, 'Wow.'”
    @ 39m 58s
    December 07, 2025
  • The Reality of Athlete Identity
    Athletes often struggle with their identity after retirement, as their self-worth is tied to their sport.
    “If you can't see your value as a person, then you've got a problem.”
    @ 47m 16s
    December 07, 2025
  • Jeff House's Unique Ritual
    Jeff House had a pre-match ritual that involved vomiting due to pressure.
    “He felt the pressure internally, you know, and so it was tough.”
    @ 59m 12s
    December 07, 2025
  • Community Involvement
    The Rugby World Cup inspired a surge of community involvement and support.
    “It just sort of mushroomed, you know.”
    @ 01h 15m 32s
    December 07, 2025
  • Opening Ceremony Success
    The opening ceremony was a brilliant success that galvanized support.
    “It was brilliant.”
    @ 01h 26m 56s
    December 07, 2025
  • Unexpected Victory
    Ireland's shocking win over Australia turned the tournament's expectations on their head.
    “The Irish won a completely unexpected victory.”
    @ 01h 39m 18s
    December 07, 2025
  • A New Phase of Life
    Embracing a reflective stage while still actively engaging in community and sports.
    “I feel in control of my life now.”
    @ 01h 53m 50s
    December 07, 2025
  • The Importance of Connection
    Connecting with kids is essential, and it's fun to watch them grow.
    “It's just fun watching them grow.”
    @ 01h 58m 15s
    December 07, 2025
  • Longevity in Relationships
    The key to a long-lasting relationship is having individual purposes.
    “We’ve been together since 1979. We blind date.”
    @ 02h 07m 52s
    December 07, 2025

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Dream Come True20:41
  • Player Safety1:07:02
  • Rugby World Cup Significance1:11:34
  • Christchurch Earthquakes1:18:06
  • Reflective Stage1:41:34
  • Grandparenting1:56:27
  • Watching Kids Grow1:58:15
  • Long-lasting Love2:07:52

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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