Ahead of the 100th birthday of our oldest living All Black, Roy Roper, he talked to Neil Reid about the benefits of community involvement, war-time rugby, making his test debut in a second hand jersey and how he stole Sir Winston Churchill鈥檚 rhubarb pie
Age hasn鈥檛 reduced the sharp sense of humour of the oldest living All Black as he nears his 100th birthday.
New Plymouth-based Roy Roper 鈥 who wore the black jersey in 1949 and 1950 鈥 is set to celebrate the milestone on Friday.
No former All Black has ever lived long enough to blow out 100 candles on their birthday.
Ahead of what will be a very special day for the proud Roper family, All Black No 515 spoke to the聽Herald聽about his life on and off the rugby field.
And when asked what the highlight was of playing for the All Blacks during rugby鈥檚 staunchly amateur era, he showed that his wit hasn鈥檛 left him, chuckling: 鈥淭he pay I got.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I got a razoo out of the rugby union.鈥
Roper鈥檚 time in the All Blacks came at a time when it actually cost money to play for the country鈥檚 national team; a tiny daily per diem might cover a meal or a couple of glasses of beer, but it came nowhere close to matching what they had sacrificed in lost wages to go into camp.
Roy Roper pictured standing in front of a photo of his 1950 All Blacks team at the New Zealand Rugby Museum in 2012. Photo / Stephen Berg/NZ Rugby Museum
鈥淏ut I just enjoyed being in the team and one of the guys able to rise to the occasion,鈥 Roper said.
鈥淚t was a great pleasure and a great thing to be picked.
鈥淵ou are in the game, and you were there to [try to] play for certain teams. And the All Blacks were the peak of it, and you were all trying to get there.鈥
Roper鈥檚 pending 100th birthday comes 74 years after making his All Blacks debut in the second test against the touring 1949 Wallabies.
The series was played at the same time as another All Blacks team toured South Africa; a team that was controversially missing players of Maori or Pacific descent when selectors decided on a white-only team due to South Africa鈥檚 Apartheid regime.
Despite being one of the quickest and regarded as one of the best wings in New Zealand 1949, Roper was overlooked for the tour after missing the previous year鈥檚 All Blacks trials.
Instead, he was part of a virtual third-strength team 鈥 including players excluded from South Africa tour selection due to politics 鈥 taking on the Wallabies at the same time in New Zealand.
Clippings from scrapbooks kept by the oldest living All Black, Roy Roper, who is set to turn 100 on Friday, August 11. Photo / Neil Reid
Ironically, one of his previous experiences of international 鈥 but non-test 鈥 rugby had been playing in an Australian jersey.
He donned Australian kit after being called up with two other players to play for the All Blacks 鈥 Morrie Goddard and Ron King 鈥 to fill in for the Australian Air Force team in a clash against the British Liberation Army in Brussels.
鈥淚 only got picked because the Aussies were short,鈥 he recalled.
Roper also played for numerous New Zealand Services rugby sides.
That includes playing for the New Zealand Services XV against Paris University in the French capital in 1945; it was the only match in which he performed a pre-match haka before.
His wartime travels also saw him on board the Queen Mary along with 13,000 American troops and servicemen from other countries, including New Zealand, for a journey from New York to Glasgow.
An official team portrait of 1949-1950 All Black Roy Roper. Photo / Crown Studios Collection
The duties of Roper, and other Kiwis onboard, were to provide sentry duties outside of the luxury lodgings of a passenger known as 鈥楥olonel Warden鈥; the travelling alias of British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill.
The plucky Kiwis dined out on the same tucker as Churchill when the famous war-time leader made a trip ashore.
鈥淚 was on duty with another guy on the passageway and when he [Churchill] was gone, we got into his boardroom,鈥 Roper said.
鈥淭here was a rhubarb pie on the bench so we took it and ate it, naturally. We were bloody hungry, we didn鈥檛 get much to eat on the Queen Mary going across the ocean for three or four days.鈥
Former All Black of 1949 and 1950, Roy Roper, is the subject of a tribute book privately published by his family. Photo / Neil Reid
While failing vision means he is unable to watch the current crop of All Blacks as they prepare for the upcoming Rugby World Cup, his mind is full of memories from his own playing days.
That includes the multiple-day travel to make it from Dunedin to Auckland to make his test debut.
Roper was approached by someone he didn鈥檛 know at the after-match function following Taranaki鈥檚 unsuccessful 1949 Ranfurly Shield challenge against Otago and told he had been selected.
A telegram later sent from New Zealand Rugby Football Union selectors to the Dunedin hotel Roper was staying in with the Otago team confirmed the news.
A telegram sent by the New Zealand Rugby Football Union to Roy Roper letting him know that he had been selected for the All Blacks to take on the Wallabies in 1949. Photo / Neil Reid
The day after the Shield clash, Roper began a long trip to Auckland. First was a train ride to Christchurch, then an overnight ferry trip to Wellington.
As well as a sense of pride, he took with him on the journey some painful injuries; badly bruised ribs and an injured big toe which required its toenail to be drilled 鈥渢o let the juice out鈥.
In Wellington, he underwent physio for his painful ribs.
鈥淚 got a bit of treatment in Wellington for my bruised ribs, caught one of the expresses later in the day and travelled all night to Auckland,鈥 Roper said.
鈥淚t was a long trip, going all the time.鈥
When it came time for playing gear to be handed out ahead of Roper鈥檚 test debut at Eden Park, given the state of the jersey given to him by management it was clear it wasn鈥檛 the first test it had appeared in.
鈥淚t certainly wasn鈥檛 new,鈥 Roper said.
鈥淚鈥檝e still got it, it鈥檚 pretty faded. But that is what it was like in those days. A lot of rugby unions didn鈥檛 have a lot of money and had secondhand gear that they handed out.鈥
Scrapbooks lovingly cared for by Roy Roper's family chart his short-lived but impressive All Black career. Photo / Neil Reid
Despite being at least the second wearer of the black jersey issued for his September 29, 1949, test debut, Roper said it was still a priceless item.
鈥淚t鈥檚 your first jersey, you don鈥檛 throw those away unless you have to.鈥
Also not new were the boots he wore during his test debut; the one and only pair he wore during his provincial and test career.
鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 afford to have another pair,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey fitted and you just stuck to them.鈥
The All Blacks went on to lose the test 16-9, with Roper scoring his side鈥檚 only try.
The following year Roper was back in the All Blacks for their four-test series against the touring British and Irish Lions.
He scored tries in each of the first two tests.
鈥淪ome of them were pretty quick,鈥 Roper said.
鈥淚 had a bit of speed at the right time, that helped, I was always doing my best. I was able to hold my own on the rugby field with most of those guys but couldn鈥檛 catch [Lions wing] Ken Jones. He was too quick.鈥
Roy Roper, diving, fails in his bid to try to catch flying British and Irish Lions speedster Ken Jones. New Zealand Herald photograph
But when it seemed he might have a long hold on a spot in the All Black backline, his rep career came to a shuddering halt later in 1950 aged just 26.
A history of his life compiled by family members states: 鈥淚n 1950, needing to earn a living, Roy concentrated on accounting studies and at the same time was building a family home and starting a family.
鈥淗e declared himself unavailable for the 1951 Australian tour and retired.鈥
But he made his mark worldwide during his short All Blacks career.
He was one of 24 New Zealand players past and present depicted in a Playtime Gum trading card series released in the late 1960s that included players from around the world.
Former All Black Roy Roper was one of 24 New Zealand players past and present depicted in a Playtime Gum trading card series released in the late 1960s that included players from around the world. Photo / Neil Reid
And All Blacks great Bob Scott wrote of Roper 鈥 a team-mate during the 1950 Lions series - in his book,聽The Bob Scott Story: 鈥淗e was very fast, very aggressive and very, very determined and, given the luck of a long tour, with inside backs to appreciate his skill, he would have won a reputation.
鈥淚 feel sure, as a three-quarter of true greatness.
鈥淗e was a clean-cut, alert sort of man, rather small but beautifully built, and he had the power of acceleration which distinguishes the really good rugby back. I wish his time in New Zealand teams had been longer.鈥
Given his eyesight, Roper鈥檚 knowledge of the current era of All Blacks rugby is via what he is told by family or picks up from radio commentaries.
鈥淚 haven鈥檛 been able to see a rugby match for a while now,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y eyes are gone, they don鈥檛 last too long sometimes when you get around 90.
鈥淚 try and listen to every game on the radio; I go to sleep in the middle of it most of the time.鈥
As well as being a test rugby player, Roy Roper was also one of the quickest men in track and field competitions. Photo / Neil Reid
After living several months with a son who is based in Hawke鈥檚 Bay, Roper is now back in his spiritual home of New Plymouth.
He is rightly regarded as a member of Taranaki sporting royalty via his exploits for the province both on the rugby pitch and via competitive athletics.
鈥淚 am back in the hometown, it takes a bit of beating,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to put it [what Taranaki means] into a phrase.鈥
Roper鈥檚 long life has been anything but ordinary.
His service to others has also been exceptional.
That includes decades of volunteer service at Taranaki鈥檚 famed Rugby Park ground, as well as giving his time to numerous sporting and school boards.
When asked what had been his secret to longevity, he said keeping busy and enjoying giving back to others had contributed.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a bit of luck involved in all of that,鈥 he said.
鈥淚 have had a good work ethic and been involved in sport associations, I have kept busy over those years. I have done as much as I can. The associations I have been involved with, I have been happy to work with.
鈥淚t is nice to do your bit in the various areas you are involved in. You try and do your bit.鈥
Neil Reid is a Napier-based senior reporter who covers general news, features and sport. He joined the Herald in 2014 and has 30 years of newsroom experience.
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