Albert: We are going to compete

Sports
PNG Orchids co-captain Angelena Watego taking part in a training session in Sydney, Australia, yesterday.
PNG Orchids’ Shirley Joe tackling co-captain Janet Johns during a training session in Sydney, Australia, yesterday. Closing in to provide support is Lekiellia Brown.

A plant and insect expert at home, on the road Elsie Albert is a powerful force in the PNG Orchids forward pack.
She is into the third year of her bachelor of tropical agricultre degree at the University of Natural Resources and Environment in Rabaul.
“It’s about how to enhance the growth and development of crops in our environment at home,” Albert said as she wandered through Sydney’s Royal Botanic Gardens on Wednesday for the launch of the World Cup Nines.
But don’t be fooled by images of microscopes and butterfly nets.
Albert, who trained as a boxer before her parents thought it was too brutal, took up rugby league in high school.
The 23-year-old has become a mainstay in the Orchids pack over the past two years.
She loves two main things about the sport.
“It unites all the people back at home, and the second thing is I love the physicality of it,” Albert said.
“Some people ask me a lot why I play a sport where I can get hurt because it is tough physically.
“But I tell them as long as you’re fit and you train well, and you look after any injuries, then you don’t have much to worry about.”
It is more of a case of players having to manage the pain inflicted by an Albert tackle — just ask Fijian centre Tanika Marshall.
She was the player bumped a metre backwards in a wonderful ball-and-all tackle by Albert in the 44th minute of the June 22 Pacific Test at Leichhardt Oval this year.
The tackle went viral on social media and is a feature of the match highlights.
“I like to think my style is a classic sort of tackle,” Albert said.
“I’m not really worried about the comments from that tackle.
“I just did my job as a forward — run hard, hit hard, connect and make the tackle. That’s it.”
Albert played nines for PNG in July’s Pacific Games in Samoa, taking home a silver medal after losing the final to Fiji.
“It’s a lung-busting game for us forwards because it’s fast,” she said.
“But we’re here to compete and we’re ready.”
The player to watch in the Orchids side, with speed to burn, comes easily to mind for Albert.
“That would be Roswita (Kapo), our centre,” Albert said.
“She’s pretty quick off the mark.
“If anyone can break the line she will be the one.”
Albert sees the nines format as a vital step in the desired future for women’s rugby league in PNG.
“The women’s game is growing in PNG,” she said.
“Most of the PNG girls here for the nines are after the same thing that I want — to see a PNG team in the NRLW.
“I hope it will happen in my time as a player and it should.
“I’ve got no plans to stop playing any time soon … to see PNG women in the NRL … I would love that.”
The Orchids’ participation in the World Cup Nines is supported by the Australian government through the Pacific Sports Linkages Programme. – NRL

One thought on “Albert: We are going to compete

  • Govt are doing well but some very important area that people’s needs and wants must be prioritize like Road Development. 98% of people contribute to the country economy and yet they are riding on dusty, slippery,bushtrack and yet, Budget for sports is too high, there is a question? How much money sports contribute to nation building.

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