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 Rugby Union News 
Friday, September 22 2023
Army bridge builder nails Black Ferns XV

Suzanne McFadden for LockerRoom

A young army captain who led the major rebuild of a flood-destroyed bridge, Laura Bayfield is now storming the rugby field, playing in the first Black Ferns XV side this weekend. Suzanne McFadden reports.

There’s no bridge too far for Laura Bayfield.

A New Zealand Army captain at just 24, Bayfield believes in taking every opportunity that comes her way.

At the age of 20, she led a team of military engineers to build one of the longest Bailey bridges in New Zealand - across the Waiho River on the West Coast - after raging floodwaters washed away the lifeline between two key tourism communities.

A proud sapper - or army engineer - Captain Bayfield is now second in charge of the 3rd Field and Emergency Response Squadron, based just south of Christchurch.

And all through her military career, she’s managed to stay on a parallel path with sport.

She’s tried her hand at rugby league, playing in the national women’s Premiership in her first year, and following in the strides of her fullback grandad, Roy Moore, who played for the Kiwis in the 1950s.

She’s battled back from two serious injuries - one, a fractured ankle that saw her choppered out of remote West Coast bush during the Godzone adventure race.

After only four years playing rugby, the soaring lock claimed the No 4 jersey as her own in the Canterbury side in this season’s Farah Palmer Cup. And now she’s made the inaugural Black Ferns XV to meet Samoa’s Manusina XV in Pukekohe this weekend.

Bayfield puts this latest opportunity right up there with building a bridge.

“It’s unreal - they’re such a cool group of people to be around,” she says. “We’re preparing for the game on Saturday but also getting an insight into the life of a professional athlete.

Posted by: AT 01:33 am   |  Permalink   |  Email
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