Alama Ieremia

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Alama Ieremia
Full nameNamulauulu Alama Ieremia
Date of birth (1970-10-27) 27 October 1970 (age 53)
Place of birth Apia, Samoa
Height186 cm (6 ft 1 in)
Weight100 kg (220 lb; 15 st 10 lb)
School Samoa College
Rugby union career
Position(s) Centre
Current team Auckland
Senior career
YearsTeamApps(Points)
1992–2000 Wellington 65 (70)
1996–2000 Hurricanes 42 (30)
2001–2004 Suntory Sungoliath 24 ()
Correct as of 14 June 2023
International career
YearsTeamApps(Points)
1992–1993 Samoa 5 (0)
1994–2000 New Zealand 40 (45)
1994–1995 New Zealand XV 2 (0)
1996 New Zealand Barbarians 2 (0)
Correct as of 22 April 2019
National sevens team(s)
YearsTeamComps
1993 Samoa 1
1997 New Zealand 1
Correct as of 22 April 2019
Coaching career
YearsTeam
2005–2007 Suntory Sungoliath (assistant)
2007 Wellington (assistant)
2009–2014 Hurricanes (assistant)
2014–2015 Samoa (assistant)
2015–2017 Samoa
2018–2022 Auckland
2023- United States (assistant)
Correct as of 14 June 2023

Namulauulu Alama Ieremia (born 27 October 1970) is a New Zealand rugby union coach and former international player for Western Samoa and New Zealand.

Contents

Early life

Ieremia was born in Sinamoga, a suburb of Apia, Samoa. [1] He was educated in Samoa at Addington Primary School in Christchurch, New Zealand and later at Samoa College. [1] He returned to New Zealand in 1991 to study geography at Victoria University, where he began playing rugby. [1]

Playing career

Ieremia played provincial rugby with Wellington between 1992 and 2000, which included a National Provincial Championship title in his final season with the club. He played Super Rugby with the Hurricanes from its inaugural season in 1996, with Alama having the distinction of scoring the first ever try in Super rugby, against Auckland Blues in Palmerston North - Auckland Blues went on to win the match 36–28. The Hurricanes finished 9th at the end of the season. Alama's best season came in 1997, when the Hurricanes made it to the Semi finals haven finished third at the end of the Regular season. However the Hurricanes went down to the ACT Brumbies 33–20 in Canberra. Ieremia was a regular selection for the Hurricanes, forming a reliable and formidable midfield partnership with Jason O'Halloran.

In 2001, Ieremia moved to Japan to play for Suntory Sungoliath, which included a season as captain, before returning to New Zealand in 2004 after retiring from playing rugby.

International career

Ieremia began playing international rugby in 1992 for the national side Western Samoa. [2] He made his debut on 13 June at Apia Park against Tonga, with Western Samoa winning 22–17. He earned 5 caps for Western Samoa, his last coming against the All Blacks at Eden Park on 31 July 1993, New Zealand winning 35–13, with the match being the first official international between the two countries.

With the lack of eligibility regulations in rugby before the professional era, Ieremia haven proven himself at Super Rugby level, was selected for the All Blacks in 1994. Ieremia's promotion to the All Blacks was rapid, due to the shock 2–0 series loss to France in June 1994. He was subsequently introduced for the three tests against the Springboks, playing at second five eighth with Frank Bunce, another who had been blooded by Samoa at test level, outside him at centre.

Ieremia was named in the All Blacks squad for the 1995 Rugby World Cup, but played only the pool match against Japan, where he also scored his first ever international try. For most of 1995 and 1996 the All Blacks' preference was for Walter Little as Bunce's partner and it was only an injury to Little that gave Ieremia his first extensive run as a regular test selection in 1997. An injury sustained during the 1998 Super 12 ruled him out of All Black selection that year, but he returned in 1999, and for the first part of the international season, he was used mainly at centre but for the bulk of the 1999 Rugby World Cup later in the year he was back at second five.

In 2000 he was again an All Black first choice, mainly again as a centre. Ieremia, a cheerful, articulate personality, was a strong, incisive runner and at 1.87m and 100 kg an imposing and powerful defender. He also had well developed skills and a solid boot. At his best, and when free from injury, he was one of the most consistently successful midfielders New Zealand rugby has had.

When he left New Zealand rugby at the end of the 2000 season to take up an overseas contract, Ieremia had played 40 matches for the All Blacks, including 30 tests.

Ieremia also represented Western Samoa at the 1993 Rugby World Cup Sevens and New Zealand at the 1997 Rugby World Cup Sevens.

Honors

New Zealand

Western Samoa

  • South Pacific Championship
    • Winners: 1992, 1993

Wellington

Coaching career

After retiring from playing rugby in 2004, Ieremia took up a coaching role with Suntory Sungoliath, specializing as backs and attack coach. After two seasons in Japan, which saw Suntory make it to the final for the first time in over five years, Ieremia returned to New Zealand in 2007 as an assistant coach with the Wellington Lions. [3] He helped guide Wellington to their second consecutive final, only to lose to Auckland 23–14. He was later named as the WRFU Academy head coach, a position he held for a year.

On 25 September 2008, Alama Ieremia was appointed to the Hurricanes coaching team for the 2009 and 2010 Super 14 season. [4] [5] Ieremia earned the accolade of becoming the first former player to become part of the coaching staff of the team. In his first season as attack coach, he helped the Hurricanes to third in the regular season, before losing to the Chiefs in the semi-final 14–10. Despite this, the Hurricanes had scored more points than any other team of 380, their nearest rivals being the Blues with 339. The following year, saw the Hurricanes drop to eighth on the table, failing to make the play-off for the first time since 2007. When Colin Cooper left the side in 2010, Mark Hammett retained Ieremia as the attack coach for the 2011 and 2012 Super Rugby season. [6] In 2012, he was praised in the media for bring through young All Blacks talent, and therefore was retained for a further 2 seasons. [1] When Hammett left the club in 2014, Ieremia went with him, joining the Samoan national team as attack coach. [7] His first game was a 33–14 loss to Japan. In February 2015, he was appointed interim general manager of Samoan rugby's high performance unit. [8]

Head coach of Samoa

On 23 December 2015, he was named head coach of the Manu Samoa, taking over from Stephen Betham, who resigned after the 2015 Rugby World Cup. [9] [10]

In his first match in charge, he led Samoa to a 19–all draw against Georgia, in which saw 9 players making their debut. A week later they went down to Fiji 26–16, before finishing their June internationals with a 30–10 victory over Tonga seeing Samoa finish second in the 2016 World Rugby Pacific Nations Cup. During the 2016 end-of-year internationals, Ieremia led Samoa to a single victory, beating Canada 25–23. The other tests saw Samoa lose to France 52–8 and Georgia 20–16.

In the 2017 mid-year internationals, Samoa lost all four games. This included a 78–0 loss to New Zealand, which was the first time since 1996 that Samoa had failed to score any points in a test match. The following week saw Wales defeat Manu Samoa in Apia for the first time since 1986, losing 19–17. The 2017 World Rugby Pacific Nations Cup saw Samoa finish in last place for the first ever time, this came following a first loss to Samoa since 2011, 30–26, and a historic win for Fiji in Apia 38–16. It was the first time since 2002 that Fiji had won in Samoa, and set a new winning margin in Samoa of 22 points.

Following a review following Samoa's June/July campaign, Ieremia resigned as Samoan head coach on 5 August. [11] He left the post with a 20% win rate, just 2 wins from 10 matches.

Auckland coach

In December 2017 he was appointed head coach for the Auckland Rugby Union. [12] [13]

Honors

Samoa (as assistant coach)

Wellington (as assistant coach)

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Toby Robson (12 May 2012). "Alama Ieremia has Hurricanes backline fizzing". Stuff. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  2. "Alama Ieremia". Hurricanes. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  3. Joseph & Ieremia Join Lions
  4. "Rugby: Ieremia, Phillips join Hurricanes coaching mix". New Zealand Herald. 24 September 2008. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  5. "Phillips and Ieremia to assist at Hurricanes". RNZ. 25 September 2008. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  6. "Hammettconfirmed as new Hurricanes coach". RNZ. 28 February 2010. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  7. Toby Robson (28 May 2014). "Ieremia says yes to Samoa, no to Hurricanes". Stuff. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  8. Liam Napier (12 February 2015). "Former All Black Alama Ieremia appointed general manager of Samoan rugby". Stuff. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  9. "Former All Blacks centre Alama Ieremia named Samoa coach". ESPNRugby. 23 December 2015. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  10. "Sport: Alama Ieremia appointed Manu Samoa head coach". RNZ. 23 December 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  11. "Ieremia resigns as Manu Samoa coach after string of losses". RNZ. 5 August 2017. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  12. "Ieremia to coach Auckland". RNZ. 11 December 2017. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  13. "Ieremia new coach of Auckland". Auckland Rugby. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
Sporting positions
Preceded by Samoan national rugby coach
2015–2017
Succeeded by