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Tupapa Maraerenga F.C.

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Tupapa Maraerenga
Tupapa FC.png
Full nameTupapa Maraerenga Football Club
NicknameTupapa
Founded1968
GroundVictoria Park,
Avarua
Capacity1,000
Chairman Grover Harmon
Head coach Paavo Mustonen
League Cook Islands Round Cup
2025 Champions

Tupapa Maraerenga Football Club is a Cook Islands professional football club located in Avarua. It currently plays in the Cook Islands Round Cup and in the Cook Islands Cup.

Contents

History

Tupapa F.C. is the most successful club in the country. They have won 20 Cook Islands Round Cups and 11 Cook Islands Cups.

New millennium

The 2000s saw Tupapa and Nikao Sokattack compete for the title, with 4 championships for the former, and 6 for the latter. Tupapa won 3 in a row in 2001, 2002 and 2003, before Nikao repeating the feat, only to be interrupted by the black and whites in 2007. [1] [2]

First continental adventure

Tupapa became the first Cook Islands club to play on the continental scene, by participating in the 2001 OFC Club Championship. Drawn in group B, they finished 4th out of 5 teams, with 3 losses and 1 win. Their maiden win, which came against PanSa, was initially a 4–0 result, before being turned into a 2–0 win due to the team from American Samoa fielding ineligible players. [3] The club was scheduled to participate in the 2008–09 OFC Champions League preliminary round. However, they withdrew before the competition began.

After winning the 2011 Cook Islands Round Cup, [4] the team appeared in the 2012–13 OFC Champions League, starting in the preliminary Round. After topping their group, they were eliminated in the play-off round by Mont-Dore.

League dominance and return to the continental scene

The 2010s saw Tupapa cement itself as the new dominant force in the Round Cup, with the club winning 8 out of 10 championships (Puaikura winning the other 2). In 2017, the club took back the Round Cup from the hands of Puaikura, finishing 9 points ahead of runner-up Nikao Sokattak, thus returning to the Champions League. [5] Tupapa managed to overcome the preliminary rounds for the first time in 2018, winning all 3 games and topping their group. They were drawn in group A, where they lost all games and were eliminated.

In the 2019 OFC Champions League, they repeated the same feat by topping the qualifying group, ahead of Samoan opponents. They were drawn in group D with Auckland City and Magenta, in what was arguably the most difficult group of the competition. They unsurprisingly lost all games, with a -33 goal difference, only scoring 2 goals. After a 3rd consecutive league title, Tupapa returned to the Champions League, qualifying once again for the group stage, with their games scheduled to take place in New Caledonia. However, the club was forced to withdraw due to three of their players failing to confirm immunization to measles. [6] After winning the 2022 Tower Insurance Premiership, they earned a spot in the 2023 OFC Champions League qualifying stage, [7] but failed to progress after losing to Lupe o le Soaga SC. [8]

With another league title in 2024, Tupapa had won 16 out of the last 25 league titles. The league had not seen such a dominant club since Titikaveka's consecutive titles in the 1970s and 1980s. For the 2025 season, the club hired female coach Mii Piri-Savage. With the 2025 OFC Men's Champions League qualifying stage held at home for the first time, Tupapa progressed to the group stage thanks to a 3–3 draw against Royal Puma and a 2–1 win against Vaipuna. On this occasion, Piri-Savage became the second female coach at the OFC Men's Champions League qualifying stage, after Steffany Godinet in 2023, and the first ever at the group stage. [9] For their first appearance in the group stages in 6 years, Tupapa was drawn in group B alongside Hekari United, Ifira Black Bird and Central Coast F.C., once again failing to collect a single point, being eliminated with a –19 goal difference.

Honours

1992, 1997, 1998–99, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025
1978, 2001, 2004, 2009, 2013, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2023, 2024, 2025

Current squad

As of February 2026

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
1 GK Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Moana Rakei
2 DF Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Jordan Boon (on loan from Fencibles United)
3 MF Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Grover Harmon (captain)
5 DF Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK John Noovao
6 MF Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Ngametua Tuakana
7 MF Flag of New Zealand.svg  NZL Joshua Galletly
8 FW Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Geoffrey Strickland
9 FW Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Campbell Best
10 MF Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Kima Webb
12 DF Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Shane Tuteru
No.Pos.NationPlayer
14 MF Flag of Sri Lanka.svg  SRI Aadil Kamaldeen (on loan from Ngaruawahia United)
15 DF Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Oscar Wichman
16 FW Flag of England.svg  ENG Daniel Bunch (on loan from Manukau United)
17Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Sean Angene
18 DF Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Joshua Karika
19 DF Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Dallas Rongokea
20 GK Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Emmett Connolly (on loan from Western Springs)
21 GK Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  COK Temaruata Tearaitoa

[10]

Continental record

OFC Men's Champions League results
SeasonRoundClubHomeAwayAggregate

Women's team

Tupapa Maraerenga has a team in the Women's Cook Islands Round Cup. [11] It has been crowned champions 15 times, in addition to winning 15 FA Cups. [2] [1] After winning the 2024 Round Cup, they participated in the OFC Women's Champions League for the first time in 2025.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Cook Islands – List of Champions at RSSSF.com
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Annual Champions & FA Winners". cookislandsfootball.com. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
  3. "Oceania Champions Cup 2000". RSSSF. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
  4. Cook Islands 2011 at RSSSF
  5. Stokkermans, Karel (14 September 2017). "Cook Islands 2017". RSSSF . Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  6. "Tupapa withdraws from Champions League". Oceania Football Confederation. 1 March 2020.
  7. "Tupapa off to OFC Champions League qualifiers". Cook Islands News. 13 February 2023. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  8. "Tupapa Maraerenga bundles out of OFC Champions League". Cook Islands News. 25 February 2023. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  9. "History made as OFC Men's Champions League 2025 kicks-off in Honiara". Oceania Football Confederation. 28 March 2025. Retrieved 7 April 2025.
  10. "Match". Oceania Football Confederation. Retrieved 26 February 2026.
  11. "Tupapa-Maraerenga premier men wins Raro Cup". Cook Islands News (cookislandsnews.com). 9 November 2024. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
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