Playing for the Waikato Bay of Plenty Magic in 2009 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Born | Solonaima Maria Tuta'ia (1987-02-18)18 February 1987 (age 38) Tokoroa, New Zealand | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Height | 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Spouse | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Relative(s) | Siliva Siliva (2nd cousin) Faifili Levave | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| School | Lynfield College Mount Albert Grammar School Blockhouse Bay Intermediate | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Netball career | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Medal record | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Updated on 22 July 2019 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Solonaima Maria Folau (néeTuta'ia; born 18 February 1987 inTokoroa,New Zealand) is a retired New Zealandnetball player. She played regularly for theNew Zealand national netball team, the Silver Ferns.
Folau was born Solonaima Maria Tuta'ia inTokoroa on 18 February 1987, the daughter of Fuisami Tuta'ia, aforestry worker, and his wife, Niukini, a homemaker, who in 1983 had moved to New Zealand fromSamoa.[1][2] She was named for her grandmothers, Solonaima and Malia, and she began using her middle name when she entered school as her teacher had difficulty pronouncing her first name.[2] Maria Tuta'ia was an attendee ofLynfield College but in the final year of it, transferred toMount Albert Grammar School. At MAGS, she became a captain of its first Premier Netball team, which under her command came fourth at the Upper North Island Secondary Schools tournament andNew Zealand Secondary Schools' Championships respectively. In 2003, Folau was named in the New Zealand U21 squad and two years later she became part of the winning team that brought home the 2005 World Youth Cup from Miami. That year, she was called into theSilver Ferns team, making her on-court debut when the Ferns toured Jamaica.[3]
Folau played domestic netball for theAuckland Diamonds during theNational Bank Cup from 2005 to 2007. With the start of theANZ Championship in 2008, she signed with theWaikato Bay of Plenty Magic, partneringIrene van Dyk in the shooting circle. She played with the Magic for two years, before transferring back to Auckland to play with theNorthern Mystics, starting in 2010.[4]
During her senior international career, Maria Folau has won gold medals at the2010 Commonwealth Games,2006 Commonwealth Games and the2009 World Netball Series, in addition to a silver medal at the2007 World Netball Championships.[5][6]
In the2010 ANZ Championship, Folau was the first and only player to be sent off during the match against the Swifts for persistent breaking. This send off happened in the last two minutes of the match and she took no further part in that match.
She is renowned for scoring the crucial goals, such as in the gold medal match against Australia at the 2010 Commonwealth Games, and during the2011 ANZ Championship season when she scored the winning goal in the dying seconds against the Magic.
In 2014, Folau was inducted into the Mt. Albert Grammar School Hall of Fame.[7]
In 2018 after playing for nine seasons with theNorthern Mystics[8] she joinedAdelaide Thunderbirds ofSuncorp Super Netball for the2019 season.[9][10][11] Folau was the leading goalscorer for the Thunderbirds and won the club's best and fairest award, though she parted ways with the club at the end of the season.[12]
She represented New Zealand at the2018 Commonwealth Games and2019 Netball World Cup.[13]
In December 2019, Netball New Zealand announced that Folau had retired from domestic and international netball. She finished her career with150 caps for the Silver Ferns, the second-most capped player for her nation behindLaura Langman.[14]
In February 2022 it was reported that theQueensland Firebirds were in discussions with Folau.[15]
Folau is married to theTongan Australian rugby playerIsrael Folau. The two married inKangaroo Valley, New South Wales on 15 November 2017, in a private outdoor ceremony.[16] She subsequently changed her last name from Tuta'ia to Folau.[17]