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Coroner rules 25 year old Garden-Bachop death ‘natural causes’, sparking call for transparency

No evidence of drugs, alcohol, or suspicious circumstances.

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Summarised by Centrist

A coroner has ruled that former Highlanders and Māori All Blacks player Connor Garden-Bachop died of natural causes, bringing formal closure to the investigation into his death.

The 25-year-old died in his sleep from a sudden cardiac event associated with a mildly dilated heart. The finding confirmed there was no evidence of drugs, alcohol, or suspicious circumstances.

Independent journalist Penny Marie acknowledged the ruling while renewing focus on comments previously made by late former Māori All Black Shane Christie about transparency around sudden deaths in rugby.

Marie said the coroner’s decision “brings some formal closure for Connor’s whānau, and that needs to be respected.”

At the same time, she referenced an earlier interview she conducted with Christie before his death in 2025. In that conversation, Christie spoke about what he saw as a need for coronial and medical processes to “fully explore all potential contributing factors” in cases of sudden deaths involving young rugby players.

Marie said Christie’s message was not anti-vaccination. “Shane’s plea was that we do not shut down questions about why young players are dying suddenly,” she said, adding that he was “not campaigning against vaccination but against silence and stigma around difficult questions.”

Marie said Christie had called for “unity, curiosity and accountability, not division,” and that his interview remains available online for context.

The coroner’s ruling formally concludes the investigation into Garden-Bachop’s death.

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