Aieshaleigh Smalley 585.png

Player Aieshaleigh Smalley

Full Name
Aieshaleigh Smalley
Date of Birth
Sep 23, 1991
Birth Location
Auckland, New Zealand
Nationality
  1. 🇳🇿 New Zealand
  2. 🇼🇸 Samoa
Height (cm)
165 cm
Weight (kg)
96 kg
Position/s
  1. Prop
Warrior #
10
NRL Debut Date
Sep 8, 2018
NRL Debut Details
WNRL 2018, Round 1, Sydney Roosters v NZ Warriors
Warriors Debut Date
Sep 8, 2018
Warriors Debut Details
WNRL 2018, Round 1, Sydney Roosters v NZ Warriors
Warriors Years Active
  1. 2018
  2. 2019
Signed From
Otahuhu Leopards
Junior Club/s
Manukau Rovers
Previous Club/s
Manukau Rovers, Otahuhu Leopards
Rep Honours
  1. NZ
Status
Active
Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aieshaleigh_Smalley
Rugby League Project
https://www.rugbyleagueproject.org/players/aieshaleigh-smalley/summary.html

mt.wellington

Contributor

Aieshaleigh Smalley (born 23 September 1991) is a New Zealand rugby league footballer who played for the New Zealand Warriors in the NRL Women's Premiership. Primarily a prop, she is a New Zealand international.

Born in Auckland, Smalley began playing rugby league as a teenager for the Manukau Rovers.

In 2017, while playing for the Otahuhu Leopards, Smalley was selected in the New Zealand squad for the 2017 Women's Rugby League World Cup.

On 2 December 2017, she started at prop in New Zealand's 16–23 final loss to Australia.

On 1 August 2018, Smalley was announced as a member of the New Zealand Warriors NRL Women's Premiership team.

In Round 1 of the 2018 NRL Women's season, she made her debut for the Warriors in a 10–4 win over the Sydney Roosters.

 
NZWarriors.com

We did it, sis: Promise fulfilled as Smalley debuts in style​

Alicia Newton Fri 29 Jul 2022, 12:49 pm
Smalley 2.jpg

It will go down as one of the most heart-warming stories of the year.

A brother and sister, arm in arm, after Alfred Smalley fulfilled his late mother's wish and made his NRL debut for the Sea Eagles in Thursday's 20-10 loss to the Roosters.

His older sister, Aieshaleigh Smalley, is a familiar face in the rugby league ranks - a former Warriors NRLW player and Kiwi Ferns representative who has been there every step of the way with her brother.

When the family lost mother Mary-Lisa to a sudden heart attack in 2017, Alfred was just 17 and had recently moved from Auckland to Australia to link up with the Sea Eagles.

For Aieshaleigh, she took on the role of mum at 26 years of age, helping raise Alfred for the past five years from afar.

On Thursday night the pair were reunited, Aieshaleigh flying in to Sydney from New Zealand after Alfred got the shock phone call on Monday night from coach Des Hasler to tell him he'd be making his debut.

After playing reserve grade on Sunday afternoon, Smalley brushed aside a four-day turnaround to jump at the opportunity to play a game in the NRL.

"I made a promise to my mum when I lost her in 2017 that I would stay here [in Australia] and try to crack the NRL and I’ve fulfilled that promise," Smalley said.

"It’s just crazy, unreal, pretty much a dream come true, I can’t believe it. I’m still shocked, to be honest.

"When I got [to the ground], that’s when everything started to sink in. When I ran out I lost my breath, I couldn’t breathe. It was so hectic.

"To have my family here as well, you dream of those kind of things as a kid."

Smalley 4.jpg

His 77th minute try was a sign of fate. It was right in front of his family that turned out for the occasion while he pointed to the sky to acknowledge his mum in a moment to cherish.

On any other given day Smalley is a furniture delivery man living in Revesby with his aunty as a part-time rugby league player.

He's usually sighted at Sea Eagles training once a week acting as an opponent for Hasler's side in their opposed sessions that usually last shorter than the return trip from Revesby to the northern beaches.

Other times Smalley is playing NSW Cup for the Blacktown Workers Sea Eagles, meaning he's never played a game alongside Daly Cherry-Evans and Kieran Foran, until now.

Smalley came through the under 20s system with the likes of Haumole Olakau'atu, Manase Fainu and Cade Cust, winning a competition in 2017 just three months after his mother's passing.

After Thursday night's game, Smalley's boss was even texting him to find out if he could work on Friday morning.

At least he'll go into his workplace with a new story to tell while the Sea Eagles will take comfort knowing that in a week of drama they've given one young man a moment he'll remember forever.

 

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