Dannevirke-based businesswoman Mavis Mullins has a two in 13 chance of becoming the first female elected to the Hawke's Bay Rugby Football Union's board of directors in the union's 113-year history.
Mullins is the sole female applicant among 13 for two elected director positions which will be contested at a special general meeting of the union in Napier on June 1. The highest polling candidate will be elected for the position which will retire by rotation at the 2020 annual meeting of the union and the second highest will retire by rotation at next year's annual meeting.
A shearing-industry legend, Mullins was awarded the Outstanding Maori Business Leaders Award at the Aotearoa Maori Business Leaders Awards in Auckland earlier this month and later this year she will be inducted into the New Zealand Business Hall of Fame. Aotea's Mullins has sat on numerous boards including Landcorp, 2degrees Mobile, health boards, Poutama Trust and Taratahi Agricultural Training.
Former Taranaki, Manawatu and Wairarapa Bush representative Stu Cruden is the only candidate nominated by the Taradale Rugby and Sports Club. He is the club captain and a three-time Maddison Trophy winner with the club's premier team, twice as a coach and once as a manager from four finals.
The father of All Black first five-eighth Aaron Cruden, Cruden, is a former plant manager of the Silver Fern Farms Takapau plant and last year returned to the Bay after a five-year stint in Australia where he was general manager of Northern Territory Beef, a subsidiary of the Australian Agricultural Company, and during this time he oversaw the building of two plants from scratch. He is now the beef manager for Progressive Meats.