Morne van der Merwe, ex WP and Stormers prop, has only days to live.
He was diagnosed with a brain tumor two years ago and his wife, Cindy, is hurriedly putting together mementoes of his life to keep for the couple.s two young boys.
Planet Rugby
Van der Merwe was a stalwart of the Eastern Province, Western Province and Stormers teams of the late 1990’s and early 2000’s but the two years he spent playing in Wellington were among the happiest of his career.
Not only did he win a national provincial championship final in 2000 but he very nearly helped take the Ranfurly Shield off Canterbury the following year. In the eyes of many Lions fans, only referee Steve Walsh denied Wellington that opportunity.
They were wonderful times for the Van der Merwes, who had originally come to Wellington as part of an elongated honeymoon.
“He was a really good man and he was a very, very good prop,” said Hewitt. “I rate him as one of the top props that I played with in my career and I’m talking the top six or eight,” said the ex-hooker, who packed down alongside van der Merwe for those two seasons.
Hewitt knows what it is like to lose a team-mate too soon. Former Hawke’s Bay and Hurricanes comrade Jarrod Cunningham succumbed to motor neurone disease in 2007, aged 38.
“I’m blown away. When you told me, I just had to stop,” Hewitt said.
“My wife and I were just doing some stuff with our kids and, far out.
“One of my mates, Jarrod Cunningham, he’s gone and now Morne.
“You just think of your own mortality; it was only 10 or 11 years ago that Morne was with us.”
Hewitt was quick to recall that 2000 NPC final win over Canterbury and how he had to play the last 20 minutes with a broken arm, after van der Merwe was concussed and fellow prop Kevin Yates dislocated a shoulder. Van der Merwe eventually returned to the fray, as Wellington hung on to win 34-29 and snare their first NPC since 1986.
The game could have been gone well before Hewitt broke his arm, had it not been for van der Merwe.
Just before halftime, Canterbury’s Fijian flyer, Marika Vunibaka, broke clear near halfway and with no Wellington defenders ahead of him, seemed certain to score.
Miraculously, the 124kg van der Merwe managed to stick out a giant paw and haul Vunibaka down.
“I ran him down from behind, man,” a joking Van der Merwe maintained after the match.
“Good thing it was halftime then, because I needed a breather.”
Hewitt said that was the kind of deed he would remember Van der Merwe for.
“He was a top man, a great team man and did anything and everything you could want from a player.
“I couldn’t have asked for anything more from Morne.”
Sad.
Sad to read this, must be very tough on his family.
Our thoughts and prayers go out to them.
Never nice to read something like this!
When reading articles like this I always wonder whether there is an underlying relationship between such things and the playing of contact sports.
I see that in recent years the NFL in the States has had to concede that degenerative diseases such as Alzheimers can be bought on by continuous head trauma / concussions caused by contact sports.
Could there be deeper consequences that ultimately cause things like brain tumors and the illness suffered by Andre Venter?
All irrelevant I guess to Morne and his family.
There’s not much one can say except that our thoughts are with them all.
Our thoughts go out to Morne and his family
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