Gold Coast mum Anna Byrne, pictured with her All Blacks singlet-clad daughter Sahara Hart. Byrne is raising her two kids to support the All Blacks, despite their being born and living in Australia, like her.
She still calls Australia home, but forget True Blue - Anna Byrne is strictly All Black.
The Gold Coast mum was born and raised in Australia, is married to an Australian and has brought two little Ockers into the world.
But when the Rugby World Cup kicks off the family lawyer will be pulling on her All Black merch and settling in, probably alongside son Carter - have a guess where he got his name - to watch her team’s opening match against France in Paris early Saturday morning (NZT).
She should be there, Byrne said, with the family-of-four buying tickets to enjoy the Cup opener and three other matches alongside her mum and stepdad.
Asked why she supported a side fellow Australians would consider the Wallabies arch-nemesis, the 38-year-old’s answer is as sharp as the boot of her little boy’s namesake.
“They win.”
Or at least they did when she was a child going to Bledisloe Cup matches in Australia in the early 1990s with her Kiwi mum, Aussie dad and older brother.
“We were never given a choice [to support Australia] … and it was a time when New Zealand didn’t lose, so it’s very easy, when you’re not given a choice, to support a team you know is going to win.
“Because of that it makes it easier now to continue to support them when they’re not doing so great.”
Her dad had always supported the Wallabies, but his passion for the national side was left for dust by her mum’s All Black heart, something she passed on to her Aussie kids and, now, grandkids.
While mum Heather Byrne lives near Christchurch - the old home of former All Black captain and Crusaders’ stalwart Todd Blackadder - she’s a frequent Gold Coast visitor, and continuing influence on the next generation of Aussie All Blacks’ super fans.
“She’s hardcore, she’s insane. Now when she’s watching the rugby with my [6-year-old] daughter Sahara, my daughter goes nuts with mum … she sits there, in her All Black jersey, and screams at the TV with me and mum.”
Meanwhile, Carter - who turns 4 the same day as the Cup opener - is happy to back whoever mum’s cheering for, Byrne said.
He’s already pulling on his own kit for a community rugby/rugby league combination version of the game his namesake has left him rather large boots to fill.
“Damien named Sahara, so when we had [our second child] I got to choose his name, and I wanted Carter, after Dan Carter.
“My husband was like, ‘No, I’m not naming my child after an All Black’, so I started throwing out random names like Tennessee and Memphis, so he’d think Carter was a great name.”
A Barrett brothers fan, she’s got another name in mind should a new baby come into their lives.
“I’d love to have a third child and call it Jordie.”
Her husband had launched a counteroffensive to bring his kids back to their green and gold birthright, but has failed so far, Byrne said.
“He tries to buy them Wallabies shirts and stuff, and put them in that. And he’s always telling me, ‘Anna, you were born in Australia’. We’ll go to the pub with friends … I’ll be the only one in black, and they’ll be like, ‘You were born on the Gold Coast - choose the right country’.
“They’re not the most cohesive team at the moment. Because of that, I think they’re going to struggle.
“I don’t think they’ll make it much further than the pool stage. But I’d love to be wrong.”
Cherie Howie is an Auckland-based reporter who joined the Herald in 2011. She has been a journalist for more than 20 years and specialises in general news and features.