Tauranga twins, Ken and Ra Mahanga and Dev and Josh du Preez, are ready for the games.
Tauranga twins, Ken and Ra Mahanga and Dev and Josh du Preez, are ready for the games.
Spectators at the National Summer Games this week might be seeing double with two sets of Tauranga twins competing at the Special Olympics New Zealand event in Christchurch.
Both pairs are stepping into their first games, bringing enthusiasm, determination and the telepathic-like connection that has quickly made them standouts intheir teams.
The National Summer Games begin on Wednesday.
Ken and Ra Mahanga are 15-year-old identical twins in the Tauranga basketball squad and only joined the team recently.
Coach Tina Maitland said the change in them had been massive.
“When they came to us, they had some skills, but once we pushed the advanced techniques, they just absorbed everything.
“They’re like sponges, they’ll try anything you give them.”
Their rapid improvement earned both boys selection for the NZ Men’s Whaikaha basketball team, the national high-performance side for players with intellectual impairments.
Ken and Ra’s teammates and coaches all talk about their instinctive connection.
“If one moves, the other is already anticipating the next play. It’s incredible to watch,” Maitland said.
Asked about their ‘twin telepathy’, the twins quietly laughed.
They said they simply liked playing with their friends and were excited to improve their teamwork and communication.
While being alike gave them power on the court, Maitland said learning independence was just as important.
Ra and Ken Mahanga (left, at rear) with their team ready for nationals. Photo / Aimee Muller
“They’re lethal together, but sometimes they forget they’re on the court with others.
“We play them separately at times to help them grow a broader sense of family in the team.”
In the pool, another set of twins, Dev and Josh du Preez, aged 20, also bring their own brand of twin synergy.
Known to their coaches in Tauranga as the “Torpedo Twins”, they have only been swimming for two years, and have quickly become some of the squad’s most improved athletes.
Coach Dave Millington, who has worked with them for about the past nine months, said their work ethic set them apart.