Michaela Brake breaks try-scoring record
- Publish Date
- Saturday, 22 February 2025, 2:00PM
Brake by name, break by nature.
Throughout her career with the Black Ferns Sevens, Michaela Brake has made a habit of breaking tackles and scoring tries.
In the side’s first match of the Vancouver Sevens on Saturday, the two culminated in the 29-year-old breaking the record for most tries ever scored in the women’s series.
With her third try in the Black Ferns’ 58-7 win against Ireland on Saturday morning, Brake (nee Blyde) improved her career to 257 – surpassing the mark set by former Black Fern Portia Woodman-Wickliffe.
“You’ve got to give full credit to Portia Woodman-Wickliffe, she’s been the top try-scorer for her whole career and she set those standards, she put women’s sevens on the map,” Brake told Sky Sport.
“To chase her has been an honour and I’m very grateful she was on my team. She’s been a role model of mine ever since I’ve been in this team, since 2012. It’s an honour to be up there amongst her, so I’m going to hold on to it for as long as I can – until [Australian] Maddi Levi surpasses me.”
Levi, 22, went into the Vancouver event as the leading try-scorer of the series, having notched 30 across the first three events and scoring 182 since making her debut in 2021.
For the Black Ferns, the win against Ireland was a strong way to start the campaign after a runners-up finish in Perth, where they fell to Australia in a two-point loss in the final.
The tournament sees the team welcome Stacey Waaka into the fray for the first time this season after she suffered a fractured fibula while playing the NRLW for the Brisbane Broncos last September.
“It was a good first game for the girls to get good momentum. Obviously with having Stacey [Waaka] back on that edge to get the ball back for us so we’re not having the play on defence as much, so when we have that momentum we can stack some pretty good moments and just hold onto the ball for as long as we can.”
Rookie Maia Davis made her debut off the bench, the 18-year-old getting her first points on the board with a late conversion.
“She’s going to be very crucial for the next few years with the build-up into LA 2028 so to give her this experience in Vancouver is awesome,” Brake said.
“She’s just going to build confidence every time she steps on to the field, and that was her first start. She’s got 15 years in this jersey, so she’s got a bright future ahead of her.”
This article was first published on nzherald.co.nz and is republished here with permission