Taini Maremare JamisonOBE (néeRoyal; 23 February 1928 – 28 April 2023) was a New Zealand netball coach and administrator. She coached the New Zealand national team to its first world title at the 1967 World Netball Championships. The Taini Jamison Trophy, contested between New Zealand and visiting international teams other than Australia, is named in her honour.
After qualifying as a teacher, she had several different postings. When based in Horohoro, near Rotorua, she met her husband, Tom Jamison, who was coaching the local basketball team. Three months after they married, he died after an accident on the basketball court. She was already pregnant and her son was named after her husband. She did not remarry. Jamison spent eight years teaching in Horohoro before moving to Malfroy Primary School in Rotorua, where she stayed until reaching retirement age.[2][3]
Netball career
Jamison's interest in netball began at a young age. She progressed to being a member of the Rotorua representative team, which won the national championships, and she was selected for the North Island team on three occasions. She retired from competition in 1959, after which she spent a decade coaching the Rotorua team. She also competed in tennis tournaments.[5][6]
In 1967, Jamison coached the New Zealand netball team that won the World Netball Championships in Perth, Australia. Four years later, she coached the New Zealand team to the runners-up position in the 1971 World Netball Championships in Jamaica, when the team was away from home for almost four months. She was the first Māori coach of the New Zealand netball team, and is its most successful coach, having a percentage win rate of 90 per cent. Jamison was involved for nearly all of her adult life with Netball Rotorua and was its president from 1981 to 2001.[5][6][7][8]
Death and legacy
Jamison died in Rotorua on 28 April 2023, aged 95.[9]
In 2008, the Taini Jamison Trophy, named in Jamison's honour, was established. It is contested when any netballing nation or nations, other than Australia, play the Silver Ferns in New Zealand.[10]