George NÃÂpia (; 25 April 1905 â 27 August 1986) was a New Zealand MÃÂori rugby union and rugby league player. He is remembered as an exceptional full-back and one of the most famous MÃÂori rugby players. He was inducted into the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame in 1990. In 2004 he was selected as number 65 by the panel of the New Zealand's Top 100 History Makers television show. NÃÂpia was featured in a set of postage stamps from the New Zealand post office in 1990. Historian Philippa Mein Smith described him as "New Zealand rugby's first superstar".
NÃÂpia was born in Wairoa, Hawkes Bay with the birth certificate stating he was born in 1905, although a passport application also had his date of birth as 25 July 1904. NÃÂpia later claimed to have been born in 1908, saying he had put his age up to be eligible for the All Black trials in 1924. According to two rugby historians in a later news item however, Nepia's claim about his date of birth would have meant he played first class rugby at the age of 13, and as this was unlikely, the records would stay.
After finishing primary school in Nà «haka, NÃÂpia's father sent fees for him to attend Te Aute College but without his father's permission, went instead to the nearby Maori Agricultural College where, according to NÃÂpia, the coach of the rugby said he would pay his fees if he was "material for the first XV".
In 1926, NÃÂpia married Huinga KÃ Âhere. NÃÂpia and his family settled on a Kohere's family farm at Rangitukia on the East Coast. They had four children, three sons and a daughter. One of his sons, George, himself a promising rugby fullback died at the age of 24 while on army service in Malaya.
NÃÂpia was selected for the Hawkes Bay provincial rugby team in 1922. At that time Hawkes Bay had one of the strongest teams in New Zealand and held the Ranfurly Shield for twenty four successful defences before losing to Wairarapa in 1927. NÃÂpia initially played on the wing but was later shifted to second-five eighth.
In 1924 NÃÂpia was selected as a full-back for the All Blacks tour to the United Kingdom. NÃÂpia was one of the stars of the tour. He played in all 32 games â being the only player to do so â and scored 77 points. As the team did not lose any matches, they came to be known as The Invincibles. NÃÂpia played at fullback and before each game, led the team's performance of a haka that had been composed for the tour.
NÃÂpia was omitted from the 1928 All Blacks tour of South Africa, probably on racial grounds. NÃÂpia returned to the All Blacks for tours to Australia in 1929 and against the British Lions in New Zealand in 1930. These were his last games for the All Blacks.
In 1935 NÃÂpia went to England to play rugby league professionally being signed initially by Streatham and Mitcham Rugby League Club in London for ã500, at the time the highest fee paid to any New Zealand Rugby League player. His family remained in New Zealand. Because rugby union was a strictly amateur game at the time, NÃÂpia was cast out from rugby union. NÃÂpia later transferred to Halifax. In 1937 he returned to New Zealand and played league for the Hornby club in Christchurch and was then selected for the New Zealand MÃÂori teach which beat Australia at Carlaw Park on August 11, and then the New Zealand rugby league team which beat Australia again three days later on August 14. During July and August 1937 NÃÂpia traveled to the South Island, representing both Hornby and Canterbury. In 1938 he moved to Auckland and joined the Manukau club and played two seasons for them.
Following his retirement from playing rugby NÃÂpia became a referee and worked as a farm manager in the Wairoa district. In 1975 his wife Huinga died. NÃÂpia lived out his final years with his son Winston in Rangitukia. He died in Ruatoria on 27 August 1986.
Timed to coincide with the 2011 Rugby World Cup, New Zealand playwright Hone Kouka wrote a one-person show, I, George NÃÂpia about NÃÂpia who was his great uncle. Kouka said the play evoked "vivid memories of the rugby legend" and was an opportunity at the time to showcase the best both of rugby and New Zealand theatre. Kouka spoke to the family before writing the play, and while they supported the project and trusted him, he recalled: "Opening night was scary, though. All the Nepias were in the audience. Thankfully they loved it". The play won four Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards in 2011.