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Team of heroes saving our stars

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 20 Juli 2013 | 22.07

Former NRL players who are part of the NRL Welfare Unit. Source: Jeremy Piper / News Limited

"HELLO," he says. "Who is this?"

The caller sounds nervous. In a faint voice, he says his name.

"Who mate?" Dean Widders says to him. "I can't hear you."

The caller speaks up and reveals his name.

"Oh," Widders says, now knowing he is speaking to an NRL star.

"How are you, mate? What can I do for you?"

Widders smiles for a moment before his joy is swallowed by a deep frown. One of nine full-time welfare staff working at NRL Central, he knows this call isn't going to be good.

"The phone always rings," Widders says. "A lot of people need help. It can be anyone at any time and I am always prepared for the worst."

The Sunday Telegraph's special investigation into NRL welfare can reveal at least one player a day calls for help.

Admitting to gambling, depression, alcoholism or simply asking for advice on how to deal with injury, the players call and the 44 full-time welfare staff, which include the likes of Widders, Nigel Vagana and Andrew Ryan, listen.

Forget the salary cap cops and the integrity unit, the TV rights chasers and the recruitment officers, the NRL Welfare Unit is the emerging force that just could be the most important department in the game.

The Welfare Unit is the cutting edge department confronting and addressing the biggest issues in our game. The Sunday Telegraph can reveal:

* The NRL Welfare Unit is working with at least 12 players with gambling issues;

* They are working with at least 12 players who have admitted to having an alcohol problem;

* At least 16 NRL players have suspected depression, with an average of one at every club;

* Four NRL clubs are monitoring players' sleep to help diagnose depression;

* The Welfare Unit has a goal to make sure every NRL player owns their own home by the time they retire;

* They have a team of 25 that mentors players through apprenticeship with an average of 12 players at every club now completing a trade.

GAMBLING AND ALCOHOL

THE TIGERS charge down the tunnel, chests puffed and fists' clenched. The Broncos are already waiting on the field. The players scream "let's go" and slap each other on the back. Owen Craigie is the only player walking. The former Origin star comes out last and then stops before he reaches the field. He looks to a Tigers officials.

"Is my pay in, mate?" he asks.

"I have to pay some people off after the game."

Owen Craigie lost everything. A staggering $3 million to gambling throughout his career. He has told people at the Welfare Unit he dropped balls because he was thinking about money. He also has no doubt gambling destroyed his career.

The NRL Welfare Unit estimates that there are at least two Owen Craigies playing in the NRL today. They are doing everything they can to help them avoid blowing it all.

Paul Heptonstall was the man in the tunnel that Craigie asked about the cash. The former Tigers employee is now heading the NRL's welfare program. He admits gambling is a problem in the game.

"There would be definitely some Owen Craigies in the NRL today," Heptonstall said. "And a lot of those people have reported themselves to the club. Gambling is a problem because it is silent. They can gamble online at home without anyone knowing and it is a problem that can ruin lives."

The Welfare Unit has taken the extraordinary step of encouraging players to call NRL and tell them if one of their teammates has a problem. Respected former players like Widders, Vagana and Ryan tell players they are letting down their mate if they don't report the problem.

"I have players ring and tell me they are concerned for someone else," Widders said.

"We encourage them to do that and they want to because they keep an eye out for one and another. Teammates now are starting to look out for each other. They know the signs and are willing to report it.

"The whole thing we teach is that if you don't do anything about it you are letting down your mate. We educate them about the damage and how to know if someone is in trouble.

"We teach the guys to look out for little signs.

"Is a guy asking you for money? Has he asked for loans from the club or from others? When he is out does he spend ridiculous amounts of money or disappear? He is probably gambling all his money."

The Welfare Unit this year hired professional actors and sent them to all the NRL clubs to show them how a problem gambler might act.

"A lot of approaches come in to the welfare staff after this sessions," Heptonstall said.

"Stuff like, 'Can you keep an eye on him because I lent him money and I'm seeing some stuff'."

Widders is one of the former players charged with helping suspected gamblers. It isn't an easy job.

"I have to be soft when I approach them," Widders said. "You don't want to go straight up to them and accuse them of having a gambling problem. You don't want to point at a couch and say, 'Sit down, you have a problem.'

"You work towards that by first making contact and just talking to them. If I hear of someone, I just ring them and ask them to catch up for lunch. You talk about footy and just ask them how they are going and they will eventually tell you.

"If they want to do something about they will own up. And that is the only way you can help them. They need to admit they are having a problem.

"I have at least four or five that I am working with now that have admitted to having a gambling problem.

"The good thing about the game is that the culture is not bad. The culture doesn't encourage them to make it worse. They want to help.

"Everyone wants to make them better."

Alcohol is also an issue, but it is not as bad as you think. Many league players have sworn off the grog. The NRL's hard line on behaviour has filtered through.

"I don't know if alcohol is the problem, but they use it as an outlet," Widders said.

"I have been dealing with four or five that have needed to deal with issues that have led them to alcohol. We need to start talking to them young. We need to fix it there. The thing is the game doesn't put up with it anymore. We have set high standards.

"They will ruin their careers now and we tell them that. Their issues come out when they are drunk and that is when they get into problems. They will lose it all because clubs don't muck around and I tell them that."

THE UNIT

SEVEN MEN and two women sit behind their desks at NRL Central. They tap on their keyboards, shuffle through papers and they banter about everything from cricket to Kevin Rudd.

Ryan, Widders and Vagana are among the nine that joke and laugh while confronting the biggest issues in the game.

There are another 35 fulltime staff working on the ground, with the unit growing to 44 from just one in 14 years. They are charged with implementing programs that equip players to deal with any issues they have.

From money to depression. Alcohol and gambling. And life after football.

"It is wide ranging," said Widders, who is charged with looking after the Indigenous players. 

"My role is to assist players in all areas of the game, everything to apprenticeship programs to welfare and education."

Heptonstall heads the unit. He is looking to root out problems before they become serious.

"We don't want to be reactive, just picking them up when they are on the back page," Heptonstall said. 

"We don't want them to get there. I can tell you there are plenty more issues out there that don't hit the media.

"We want to work out this issues and get them before they get there. At the NRL we have a responsibility. The core responsibility of a club is to have footy players that win footy games, they aren't there to make sure they are successful after football. But at the NRL, we feel it is our responsibility. We want to produce good men that are prepare for life."

Vagana, Widders and Ryan are among the men that talk directly to the players. The former stars have their trust and know exactly what each and every one of them might be going through.

"I take at least five phone calls a day," Vagana said.

"Basically what we do is work with their lives off the field. Off the field covers about 20 or 30 areas. Everything from family, literacy, culture challenges, relocations. Players can call with serious issues or just to ask about their form. We want these kids to be the best they can and be prepared for whatever comes there way."

TRADING UP

AN NRL career can end at any time. In fact, 60 players will play their last NRL game this year and the average career span is just 52 games. The NRL want every player to be able to walk into a job.

Former NRL journeyman Adam Peek thinks every player should work one day a week. The prop, who played for seven clubs, not only thinks it will help them with their football, but also prepare them for life.

Peek estimates about 50 per cent of NRL players he knows have had no job skills and limited employment prospects when they retire. He and a team of 25 club apprentice mentors are attempting to change that. An average of 12 players at every NRL club are now involved in a trade.

"There are plenty of blokes I know who have retired and had nothing," Peek said. "Some don't own their own houses and struggle to find a job. They really struggle with it, and have a tough time. We need to prepare players for life after football.

"We can get a bloke to finish an apprenticeship by the time he is 20. We can begin working with them when they are young and get them a trade while they are still playing."

Peek thinks every player should work, even at the height of their careers.

"I found I played my best football when I kept busy," Peek said. "I was one of the few that worked during my career and it helped with the way I played. Working one day a week, and through the off-season is a good thing. I tell all the NRL players they should work.

"I am pushing NRL clubs to get their players working and I would like to see every player at least working in the off-season. The game has a responsibility to ensure these guys have something to fall back on if it all comes crashing down."

Former Bulldogs and Shark Corey Hughes is one of a number of ex-players putting back into the game. He and fellow former Shark Luke Covell are helping put 16 young players through apprenticeships.

"I was lucky enough to learn a trade before football," Hughes, a carpenter, said.

"But these guys go straight from school into full-time football. They are straight into money and careers and that is fine until it ends and if you don't have anything to fall back on, you are in a bad place. Everyone who comes into the '20s thinks they are going to make it and they don't need anything else. We are trying to change that. "

Hughes works about 12 hours a week. He speaks constantly to his young brigade, making sure they are turning up to work and enjoying what they do."

The NRL's work has 500 NRL & NYC players who have completed or are currently enrolled in a Vocational Education Program.

Several other former and current NRL players are involved. Dene Halatau, Michael Weyman, Jason Clark and Matt Ballin are all mentor players while still playing themselves. Former Bulldog Brad Morrin is at the forefront of the fight. The company he works for the, Australian Training Company, provides young players with pre-apprenticeships.

DEPRESSION

PEEK STOOD in a corporate suite at ANZ stadium during Origin III. Handing out cards. He stuffed them into hands, slipped them into pockets and left them on the bar. The cards had numbers for organisations that deal with depression. He knows it is not only a problem in society but also the game.

"Depression is an issue," Peek said. "I had some problems when I finished my career and it had an impact on both me and my wife. Other players I know have had it. We are on the front foot at the NRL. We have programs and we are addressing it.

"It is hard to deal with and we are trying to make people are aware of it. Looking back, and knowing what I know now, I can say I played with many guys that had depression. I know what the indicators are now, and they had it. We need to teach every player what the indicators are and teach them how to help their mates."

Heptonstall revealed four clubs are monitoring players sleep in a bid to diagnose depression. He and his unit are teaching both clubs and players what to look out for encouraging them to ask for help.

"It can be extremely tough for these young guys with football careers," Widders said.

"They have huge pressure to make it, not only from themselves but also from their community and family. A lot of people put unfair pressure on them."


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Marquee plan to get Izzy back

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Israel Folau during the Wallabies training session. Source: Philip Hillyard / News Limited

DEPARTING Bulldogs boss Todd Greenberg sat next to Wallaby winger Israel Folau at the State of Origin on Wednesday night.

It got tongues wagging about the superstar's next career move and the possibility of him returning to the NRL in 2014.

They watched from seats outside the chairman's suite at ANZ Stadium, where Folau is employed as an ambassador to mix with sponsors and guests.

The Sunday Telegraph can reveal the NRL will now consider introducing marquee player signings, outside of the salary cap, to help keep superstars like the former GWS player in the game.

The Bulldogs have a leagues club that makes a $30 million annual profit yet can't sign the Wallaby winger because of the salary-cap restrictions.

A marquee player exempt from the cap would allow them to pay Folau $1 million-plus a year and secure his signature tomorrow.

The NRL's chief operating officer Jim Doyle says the marquee player allowance has to be considered amongst other ideas.

"We will consider everything," Doyle said. "The salary cap has to be modernised. We all agree on that. It is designed to keep a level playing field and stop clubs from going broke.

"But we have to make sure something is in place to ensure we keep our best players."

Greenberg would not go into detail about his night at the football and conversations with Folau.

But he likes the system so successfully used in football and other major sports.

"It's got merit and we should consider it," he said.

The marquee player allowance has made the A-League the massive success it is today, allowing Sydney FC to sign Alessandro Del Piero, Newcastle Emile Heskey and the Wanderers Shinji Ono.

It has lifted crowd numbers, sponsorship, revenue and TV ratings.

The NRL will have to move quickly if they want Folau back in 2014.

He is under contract to rugby union until December and will play in the Bledisloe Cup matches before making a decision.

He has yet to commit to the Waratahs or ARU for a contract extension.

Those closest to Folau say he has enjoyed the rugby union stint but he prefers rugby league.

The marquee player signings would be a huge boost for all clubs, not just the Bulldogs.

The Roosters, who have enjoyed a 63 per cent home crowd increase since signing Sonny Bill Williams from the All Blacks, could secure him on a long-term deal.

The Wests Tigers could have kept Benji Marshall for the rest of his playing career and in a job after football and still been able to sign the club's most promising youngsters.

Karmichael Hunt would have been kept in rugby league, too, instead of switching to AFL.

Former NRL boss David Gallop was against the marquee player signings because it favoured the richer clubs and some couldn't afford it.

But as one prominent official said: "Why should the weaker clubs hold back the rest of the game?"


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

McKenzie eyes All Blacks as Reds exit

Ewen McKenzie's tenure as Reds coach is over after the side's loss to the Crusaders in Christchurch. Picture: Phil Walter Source: Phil Walter / Getty Images

THE full scope of the job that Ewen McKenzie now faces as Wallabies coach was exposed in Christchurch just a month out from his first collision with the All Blacks.

Just as the Wallabies pack was bullied into a chastening third Test crash by the British and Irish Lions, the Reds challenge in Super Rugby was extinguished without the pack power to light a flame for the backs.

The breakdown efficiency and verocity of the Crusaders made sure the Reds were largely on the back foot all night. From that position, it doesn't matter how good your halves are in Will Genia and Quade Cooper.

It would be interesting to imagine Cooper behind an All Black pack. The Christchurch crowd on Saturday night might still boo him in black such was their relish for that sideshow fun.


Re-live all the action in Match Centre, featuring video highlights!


McKenzie will have to assemble a more forceful Test pack in front of Cooper and Genia for the August 17 Test against the All Blacks in Sydney. James Horwill, Rob Simmons and James Slipper, in the beaten Reds pack on Saturday night, will have to find far more in gold.

All Black kingpins Dan Carter and Kieran Read were huge and will be out to put a lock on the Bledisloe Cup again.

McKenzie wasn't thinking Wallabies behind his hollow eyes after the 38-9 loss.

"Different scenario, different circumstances, different time...tonight was not about that," McKenzie said.

How far short of the grand upset the Reds had planned was painful for McKenzie.

"We spoke before the game of making this memorable. Unfortunately, we are stuck with a memory none of us want," Mckenzie said.

"You don't want to finish up that way.

"It rankles with me and the guys that it was an uncharacteristic performance to see our defence let us down. We haven't given up four tries all season.

"Mind you the Crusaders were good. They were really sharp and once we got behind one the scoreboard it's hard to chase the game against them."

McKenzie now turns spectator and will watch Sunday's Brumbies-Cheetahs play-off in Canberra with his Wallabies' glasses on.

Big forward performances will be rewarded because the Wallabies have to find that starch and firepower to compete against the All Blacks.

The Crusaders also showed more grit in the tough moments and their kingpins Kieran Read and Dan Carter really stood tall.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Ego's not a dirty word says Mal

Mal Meninga shares a laugh during the Queensland Maroons State of Origin training session. Source: Bradley Kanaris / Getty Images

THE claims that Queensland's Origin success has created a division within the Australian Test team would be concerning were they not so ridiculous.

I was on the 1985 tour of New Zealand when there was a genuine divide between the Queenslanders and players from NSW, and I can tell you as much passion as there is between the states at the moment, those problems are a world away.

I don't doubt there would be some feeling there, and that would be born out of the understandable frustration being felt by the NSW players not having won a series since 2005.

In 1985, the divisions were so bad that at training, the Queenslanders would be standing down one end of the field as a group, while the coach Terry Fearnley addressed the NSW players down the other end of the field.

I know Tim Sheens well enough to know he would never allow such a poisonous atmosphere while he was in charge of the Kangaroos.

In 1985, we played a three-Test series against the Kiwis in the middle of an Origin campaign - a campaign NSW was leading 2-0.

After winning the first two Tests, Fearnley - also the Blues coach at the time - then decided to axe four Queenslanders from the Australian team for the third Test.

They lost.

While talking about the feeling between the two Origin teams in the lead-up to Game Three this year, Greg Bird mentioned how hard it was to bury maroon and blue loyalties to unite under green and gold.

But I think some of his comments were probably picked up and run with by those trying to make more of it than what it really was.

I know Greg well, and like him a lot. And I am a big admirer of how he plays for NSW and Australia.

He is also good mates with Nate Myles.

Both men are tough, hard, passionate, ferocious and parochial players for their states.

But they are both able to put that aside and put their arms around each while packing down together in the scrum of the Gold Coast Titans or Kangaroos.

Those that seized on Bird's comments claimed that the supposed division in the Test team was a product of perceived arrogance from the Queensland members of the Test team.

Queensland's victory in the third Origin match on Wednesday night is all the proof you need that these players are as far removed from arrogance as you can get.

If these players were arrogant, they would not have won on Wednesday, as simple as that.

And they would never have been in a position to even think about winning eight series in a row, let alone actually achieving it.

These players have a tremendous amount of self-belief, and they also have the healthy egos that all successful people need to be the best.

But that should not be misconstrued as arrogance.

If they were arrogant, their winning run would have ended after three series, or maybe four.

They would have fallen into the arrogance trap of believing that all they had to do was turn up, and things would automatically fall into place.

Arrogance would have meant that they had such contempt for their opponents that they felt they didn't need to do the hard work, or give attention to the little details to get the job done.

Had they thought that way, NSW would have not only won on Wednesday night, they would be on their own winning streak.

Throughout this run of eight years, something that seems to have been lost in the appreciation of Queensland's achievement is the standard of the team the Maroons have been playing against.

The Blues are a fantastically talented, and passionate team.

To beat them, you have to be at your absolute best. Every single time.

There are a lot of things that go into this team; things like hard work, talent, passion, respect, unity and humility.

There is no room for arrogance. What they are and what they have built just mean too much.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gill relishes McCaw challenge

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 19 Juli 2013 | 22.07

Liam Gill will be a pivotal figure for the Reds against the Crusaders. Picture: Bradley Kanaris Source: Bradley Kanaris / Getty Images

AS a schoolboy, Reds trump Liam Gill devoured video of master flankers Richie McCaw, George Smith and David Pocock like a pupil immersed in reading an instruction manual.

Nothing quite beats co-starring in the videos as he does these days because he can relate so much more to his own performance.

That Gill, at 21, is such a pivotal figure in tonight's sudden-death qualifying final in Christchurch says it all about how expert he has become so quickly.

It was a case of "The Kid v The King" last season on the same patch when he duelled strongly with Crusaders icon McCaw in the second half.

Gill will have his hands full tonight with starting flanker Matt Todd but is certain McCaw will be injected as a game-changer off the bench, as he was last season for 36 influential minutes.

"I've watched video of last year's match quite a few times," Gill said.

"Just watching the decisions Richie made, the way he protects his No.10 (Dan Carter) and the support lines he runs was another part of my sharp learning curve.

"He's everywhere with his impact. He can be the quickest to the ball or he can move bodies with his size.

"I enjoyed it all and can't wait for another crack at the Crusaders just like all the boys heading into this final."

The fancy stuff will make the highlights reel but it is harassment across the park that is the key to a huge Reds upset.

Last year, two Crusaders kicks were charged down, classy fullback Israel Dagg's handling let him down with tacklers zeroing in and the Reds were in it to the death.

The Reds have Wallabies throughout their own tight five and they have to play like it to assert authority because the all-All Blacks tight five certainly will.

As much as the Crusaders can be fortified by their 14-0 record in finals matches in Christchurch, they know the Reds have the firepower to cause trouble on a cold, dry 6C evening.

Crusaders captain Kieran Read said swarming pressure on Reds halfback Will Genia was as important in the 75th minute as the first.

"We've talked about it. He's the best halfback in the world, I guess," Read said.

"We have to be pretty connected and spot-on around the rucks."

It was Genia who settled the 2011 Super Rugby final against the Crusaders. He speared through on the inside when Dan Carter overtracked in defence, beat McCaw for good measure and took off on a 60m solo run into history.

"No one player decides the result but you do need your big players to front on the big occasions," coach Ewen Mckenzie said of Genia and Quade Cooper.

McKenzie shrewdly mapped out pre-season trials against the Crusaders in 2010-11 to add to the contact in regular season games.

"Part of the idea was to play the Crusaders as often as we could, get our guys familiar with playing them and help inoculate ourselves against their best players," McKenzie said.

"We have plenty of guys who want to put their hands up in this final and we've got one of the best defences in the comp so we want to use that too."


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Lockyer back to haunt Blues

Lockyer was an influential figure in Queensland's Origin planning. Source: Brett Costello / News Limited

DARREN Lockyer is back to haunt the Blues.

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Lockyer, Origin's most capped player with 36 appearances, retired from representative football after spearheading Queensland's 2-1 series win in 2011.

But Lockyer has remained part of the Maroons' Origin camp, taking part in performance reviews aimed at upholding Queensland's dominance under Meninga that began in 2006.

Queensland Rugby League boss Peter Betros revealed the Maroons' quest for eight straight began in December, when Lockyer was summoned for the first of a series of Origin planning sessions.

Meninga spoke of a youth policy and his desire to inject fresh blood, headlined by Daly Cherry-Evans and Josh Papalii, into the Queensland set-up.

But it was Lockyer's critique, touching on player welfare and the perils of burnout, that helped the Maroons establish training patterns that underpinned their series win.

"We actually brought in Darren Lockyer for some input into our program. He stayed involved right through the Origin period," Betros said on Friday.

"Darren was involved in the planning, he provided some very valuable input into our success this year. His experience over a long period of time is invaluable."

Locky said when players come into camp, they can already be tired.

The NRL is a very tough competition and the last thing that they need when they come into camp is to be run into the ground.

"We structured our training in a way to ensure the guys weren't burnt out and it had the desired effect."

Other key planks were Meninga's push for new faces and his idea to introduce the squad to the heroes of 1959, the last Queensland side to beat NSW before the birth of State of Origin.

"The fact Cherry-Evans, Papalii and Chris McQueen got a run this year is testament to the success of our program," Betros said.

"A lot of people pointed to the age of our Origin players. Mal and the QRL were very aware that we had to bring along the next generation of players.

"Mal was right behind the 1959 initiative and that helped the current group understand that while NSW hadn't won a series in seven years, Queensland went 21 years without winning a series before Origin.

"Mal has done a superb job, his mind is generally on how to bring elite Queensland players through to the top of the game."


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Scott still in hunt at Open

Adam Scott tees off during the second round of the the Open Championship at Muirfield. Source: ADRIAN DENNIS / AFP

ADAM Scott is hanging in contention at the British Open after a one-over-par 72 in his second round at Muirfield.

While Scott failed to make inroads on the leaderboard, he remained in the hunt for a second major title on a day when many were again struggling on the testing links course.

Scott trailed by six shots to American leader Zach Johnson who had a late tee-off time.

Masters champion Scott was still the best of 12-strong Australian contingent midway through the second round on Friday, and feels he's in position to make a move on the weekend.

"I think I'm in pretty good shape," the Australian world No.4 said.

"We'll see where the lead is at the end of the day but it's tricky out there.

"If I'm still in a similar kind of shape I can put a move on tomorrow and get right in it."

Scott looked the only Australian assured of reaching the weekend, with Jason Day one over for the day, and three over for the tournament, after four holes of his second round.

Marcus Fraser faces a nervous wait after a late collapse meant he carded a three-over 74 to sit perilously at five over.

Geoff Ogilvy (eight over) and Marc Leishman (nine over) are unlikely to be spared, however, after disappointing second rounds.

Scott and Fraser were among a host of players who had to contend with brutally quick conditions on a sun-baked Muirfield course on Thursday afternoon.

But things were more suitable on Friday morning, with the course watered overnight to soften it slightly.

Still, Scott couldn't get his rhythm going with the putter, dropping two shots on the front nine.

But he kept his round under control and pulled back a valuable stroke with a birdie on the par-5 17th, using a driver from the fairway to reach the green in two.

Scott is looking to make amends for his dramatic late collapse at the 2012 event, where he effectively handed victory to South African Ernie Els.

Having since captured his first major title at Augusta in April, Scott stepped on to the first tee on Thursday already feeling like a weight had lifted off his shoulders.

However he still remains hungry to lift the Claret Jug and atone for last year's disaster.

Fraser was gutted after his second round, feeling he had played some of his best golf but had been cruelled by several instances of bad luck.

"I felt like I played pretty well all day and then just got completely shafted a few times," Fraser said.

England's Lee Westwood was the big mover of the morning, at one stage grabbing a share of the lead before dropping several shots late to sit three shots off the pace.

He sits alongside Tiger Woods, who remained in the hunt with an even-par 71.


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Live: second Ashes Test, day two

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Tim Bresnan successfully appeals for the contentious wicket of Phillip Huhghes. Source:Getty Images

AUSTRALIA will look to take advantage of their good start to the second Test as day two gets underway at Lord's.

Follow the action and get all the best analysis and reaction from the ground and around the world with our live blog.


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Three plays that cost NSW Origin

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 18 Juli 2013 | 22.07

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NSW Coach Laurie Daley with Mitchell Pearce after NSW loss during Origin Game 3. Source: Brett Costello / News Limited

IT was a 10-minute period in the second half which cost us the match and the series and has typified the main difference between the two teams for too many series now.

It's the 51st minute, Queensland clinging to an 8-4 lead, they have come out of the shed looking tired and vulnerable through the centre field after the Blues inflicted a relentless middle third assault on the Maroons for the previous 30 minutes.

Last tackle.

The Blues are a metre out and James Maloney calls for the football. The play needed here is to dribble the ball into the in-goal, a repeat set will heap further misery and pressure on the Queenslanders.

Maloney rejects the simple and obvious and instead, goes for the all or nothing play, a cut out pass to Michael Jennings, who's under pressure and knocks on.


Listen to Fox Sports rugby league podcast, 'There's Always Next Week', for a comprehensive wrap-up of the Origin decider, and a preview of NRL round 19.


Queensland let off the hook.

The Maroons however still struggle for yardage, leg weary, still displaying vulnerability and as a result moments later, the Blues find themselves in a similar scenario.

Last tackle, 10m out, Mitchell Pearce has the ball in his hands, the Queenslanders are sitting on their heels, trying to buy time, their defensive line in pieces.

Again a ball in the in-goal is like gold, you can feel this champion Maroons defence is about to crack.

Pearce tries a little bit of everything - he runs at a hole, considers a pass and then finally, when finding he had run himself into a dead-end, he tries for the kick - he fluffs it.

Queensland take possession.

This time Queensland find some energy in their legs, start to get some dominance in their yardage and a set or two later find themselves in an attacking position.

It's last tackle, the 60th minute and Cooper Cronk is in the identical position that Maloney and Pearce have been unable to take advantage of.

Cronk calls for the football, he does the simple, the obvious, better than anyone. He shapes to grubber the ball into the in-goal and at the last moment notices a Blues defender has rushed him from the outside, in. So instead he passes short to Justin Hodges who strolls over to give the Maroons an eight-point lead which NSW can't peg back.

Composure and coming up with the right play at the right moment from the playmakers has once again proven the difference between NSW and this record breaking Queensland side, which now is not only considered the greatest State of Origin team of all time, but one of the greatest teams rugby league has ever seen - fullstop.

Laurie Daley came up with a strong game plan and should be commended for his tactics in Origin III. 

The Blues began the game appearing to play too sideways, when suddenly tactics changed, with NSW blasting through the Queensland middle, with inside balls, footwork and short passing in and around the ruck.

In attacking positions the tactic of running plays at the defensive combination of Johnathan Thurston and Greg Inglis was a terrific one. NSW came up with a try and were unlucky not to score another couple, with Thurston and Inglis coming in under pressure.

In the second half, Laurie switched the attacking pressure towards Hodges and although they couldn't accrue points, they broke the line consistently and came so close to gaining the lead. So close ... the story of the past how many series?

Effort great. Game plan great. Execution poor.

A lot of the blame has been levelled at Pearce, but that's the life of a halfback, heroes in victory, maligned in defeat.

It's a position where effort is not enough and that was Pearce's greatest contribution to the team - his effort.

His execution however fell well short and he will be the first to acknowledge that.

Who were the Blues' best in 2013? Josh Dugan and Andrew Fifita. Dugan might have missed our lone victory but he was sensational, and if he can keep his life and career on the rails, he should be in the Blues team for a long time to come.

Fifita was the series' biggest surprise. He is the most improved player in the country and was our most damaging runner throughout the series. Big things to come for Fifita.

The Player of the Series was without doubt, Cameron Smith. I've stated many times I consider him the best big game player of all time. He has won eight out of 10 Origin series, the two losses when he was a rookie.

He now stands, at least the equal of Wally Lewis as far as influence on State of Origin football goes. 


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Bulldog's Bite: Daley's heartache

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Coach Laurie Daley during NSW Blues Origin Training. Source: Gregg Porteous / News Limited

LAURIE Daley sat in his backyard on Thursday, let out a long sigh and summed up NSW's pain with seven simple words.

"It is another 12 months of heartache."

Daley told The Daily Telegraph his Blues would "keep fighting". He also apologised to Blues fans.

Bulldog: You shattered?

Daley: I am, and I'm disappointed. But not as much as the players. It hurts, but I'm just feeling for our players. They gave it everything. I am proud of them. They were outstanding - they just kept fighting and fighting. They never gave up. Unfortunately we just weren't good enough to win when the moment arrived.

Bulldog: Mitch Pearce's performance?

Daley: I am supportive of all my players. But to ask whether Mitch will be in the team next year ... 12 months is a long time. Again, the team will be picked on form and merit. We will see where we are next year. I like Mitch, he's a great kid and I support him.

Bulldog: I hate to remind you but there are two Origin games in Brisbane next season.

Daley: It won't be any harder than what we've been through this year. 

Bulldog: NSW certainly had a host of half-chances?

Daley: Yes, plenty. When you are playing a champion team, you have to take those chances. In a true Origin game, which that was on Wednesday night, you don't get many opportunities so when they come around you have to make sure you are clinical. That is where we let ourselves down.

Bulldog: Have you been running over the key moments again and again in your head?

Daley: There were plenty of them. I am sure ... we will continue to analyse them.

Bulldog: Your are torturing yourself, Laurie.

Daley: We have to put strategies and plans in place for next year. It (a series win) is going to happen. We are getting there but disappointed we couldn't do it this year. We have to keep fighting.

Bulldog: Does Queensland have a psychological edge?

Daley: I don't think there is psychological edge. Sometimes you have to make your own luck and they did that. There were moments when we had our chances. Effort-wise, we were courageous and strong. They gave it their best. They can walk off with their heads high. It wasn't an easy campaign but we stuck at it.

Bulldog: Darius Boyd denied NSW by grounding in-goal with the faintest of fingertips. It was cruel for NSW.

Daley: One replay looked like he rolled over it. But at the end of the day they finished off better than we did. It was tremendous game of footy. Hard. For me that was a true Origin game. Not giving an inch and it came down to the last few minutes. That has always been how Origin is.

Bulldog: The streaker. Some laughed but the incident happened at a serious time with just three minutes remaining.

Daley: Most definitely. In a game so hard-fought, three minutes can be like 10 minutes. I know they were the rules (to disallow the try but give Queensland an extra set of six) but I would have liked them to go back and have a play-the-ball, which was on tackle five.

Bulldog: Is he an imbecile?

Daley: Look, it's disappointing. That type of behaviour at a sporting event is not called for. What do you do?

Bulldog: Guys like Greg Bird and Paul Gallen. They must suffer more than others because they have been there so long and not won a series.

Daley: Exactly right. I know how much they hurt and how much they love the NSW jersey. And I know how much they will give the team next year. It is another 12 months of heartache but we will remain positive. The application is there, so is the desire, the passion and self-belief.

Bulldog: Twelve months of heartache. That's a long pain.

Daley: It is. You put a lot of time and effort into your planning. It all boils down to a couple of minutes at the end of the day. We get on with it. Queensland were very good. We weren't good enough.

Bulldog: There was a feeling NSW was ready to roll over Queensland late.

Daley: I was always confident, even at half-time. When Trent Merrin scored that try I thought: "Here we come". There was 10 minutes left and we were ready. But, like the champion team they are, Queensland didn't give an inch. We couldn't quite do it.

Choc's game  ball goes to  a real warrior

HE was part of a beaten side but Anthony Watmough produced a moving and touching moment after full-time.

Bulldog: What was the dressing room like?

Daley: It was gut-wrenching. It was hard to take. But you know what? We met a special guy through the week (Dennis Inggs, who has stage four melanoma) who is going through a tough period in his life, which is a lot tougher than what we're going through. It puts things into perspective.

Bulldog: I understand Watmough won the NSW game ball and presented it to Dennis?

Daley: Yeah, "Choc" (Watmough) gave him his game ball. It was a huge gesture. Dennis had an impact on all our players. I have a cousin, she is battling away. At times you think you're doing it tough but when you put it into reality, they are going through a time that is a lot more difficult than what we are going through. At the end of the day it is a big game of footy but they are going through tough times. There is always someone doing it tougher than you.

Bulldog: Were NSW the better side in two of the three games?

Daley: I think it was an even contest. Game two we were off the pace, games one and three I thought we played to where we wanted to be at times. There is a lot of improvement left in this team. We are starting to get depth. We have introduced some guys into the squad and had guys here for a couple of years. Our senior players have still got games in them. For us, it is an exciting time but I feel sorry for the fans but thank them for their patience and support. They have done it tough but have always been behind the team. It will be worthwhile once we get there.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Benji off to 'boring' rugby

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Benji Marshall trains with the Wests Tigers at Concord Oval. Source: Mark Evans / News Limited

BENJI Marshall has officially been granted a conditional release from Wests Tigers to switch to a code he once deemed "boring".

The Daily Telegraph can reveal Marshall was told of the development last night, freeing him for a defection to rugby union despite Wallabies coach Ewen McKenzie questioning whether he could cut it at 28 years of age.

The decision comes after Marshall posted a four-minute video on Wests Tigers website yesterday revealing why he walked away from the Concord-based club.

And The Daily Telegraph on Thursday unearthed a quote from Marshall back in 2005, when he said: "I watch a bit of rugby union and it's pretty boring. Playing league is the best move I ever made."

Wests Tigers board does not want Marshall playing for a rival NRL club but would consider it if approached.

"There are a number of conditions attached to the release," Wests chief operating officer Grant Mayer said.

"The only one I will discuss openly and publicly is that we would not like to see Benji play for any other NRL club for the term of his contract (which runs until the end of 2015) unless we authorise a release."

It appears Marshall has no desire to sign with another rugby league club anyway.

Strangely, Marshall said yesterday he harboured some desire to return to Wests Tigers after retirement.

"It's been a hard time for myself and my family but as you all know I have made my decision to move on from the club at the end of this year. It was probably the hardest decision I have had to make," Marshall said.

"I feel like I have done everything in the game at this club, including winning a premiership, representing my country, captaining my country, winning a Four Nations, winning a World Cup and winning the Golden Boot.

"Without (the fans) support, a lot of that couldn't have been achieved. I feel like I am the person I am today based upon what I have done at this club.

"At the end of the day, my decision was based on what was best for myself and my family. Not only that but what was best for the club also.

"I know some people won't be happy, but some will be happy to see me go.

"That's life, rugby league is a game and the club is bigger than me.

"I will honour my words about not playing for another (NRL) club. There is no other NRL club for me to play for. The Tigers are my home and will always be my home.

"I have seen guys like Mark O'Neill leave, go to England and then come back to the club. I am hoping to do the same in some capacity after I retire, maybe be involved with the club. Hopefully get back into it somewhere."

Marshall stressed he was not angry at the club.

"There is no hard feeling between myself or the club," he said. "At the end of the day they did what they thought they could in the (salary) cap to keep me but this decision goes far further beyond than money.

"If it was in the past I could have taken more money to go elsewhere. I feel like I have given my life to the club. Eleven years is a long time. I will never forget the years I had here. Hopefully I can play my 200th game here for the club and leave on a high."

Speaking at the 2005 grand final breakfast, Marshall had no desire to play rugby union.

"It's pretty boring," he said at the time. That will hardly be applauded by fans of the three Super Rugby franchises interested in Marshall; the Waratahs, Melbourne Rebels and Auckland Blues, whose coach Sir John Kirwan will fly to Sydney on Sunday to meet him.

Meanwhile, McKenzie said Marshall could struggle to adapt to the different space on a rugby field given his age and acquired habits from league.

"The good players can learn but it's just a question of how long they take; how long the investment is before you get the return," McKenzie said.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Live: second Ashes Test, day one

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England's Ian Bell celebrates scoring 50 during the Ashes Test at Lord's. Source:AP

The Ashes comes to the home of cricket for the second Test of the 2013 series.

After losing the series opener in heartbreaking circumstances, Australia are desperate to get one back on the Old Enemy.

The tourists have already made their move by dumping No.3 Ed Cowan and left-arm bowler Mitchell Starc, replaced by Usman Khawaja and Ryan Harris respectively.

Will the changes help Australia to a famous win? Or will England continue their recent dominance over the Aussies?

Follow all the action with our live blog, which will bring you all the best reaction from the ground and around the world via social media, as well as the best video highlights.

JOIN US FOR LIVE COVERAGE OF EVERY MOMENT OF THE ASHES SERIES FROM THE FIRST BALL, INCLUDING A LIVE MATCH CENTRE WITH SCORES, STATS, HAWKEYE DISPLAY OF EVERY DELIVERY AND VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS THROUGHOUT EACH SESSION.


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The meaning of true grit

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 16 Juli 2013 | 22.12

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Dennis Inggs with wife Sara and kids Ethan (6yrs), Yasmin (4yrs) and Kai (9mths) at the Cancer Care Apartments. Source: Sam Ruttyn / News Limited

THEY don't tell time by the clock out on the rice farms down near Griffith.

Each morning Dennis Inggs would be on the tractor by the time Ray Hadley came on radio and he'd work through two hours of Hadley and then Alan Jones until noon.

"Then you'd have lunch," he says.

A fortnight ago on Tuesday, he had had enough of this pain in his side and took himself to the doctors, telling him his ribs were playing up.

His X-ray found a lump that sent him for a CAT scan the following day.

By Friday he was at St George Hospital for more tests and, last Tuesday, they told him he had stage four melanoma, which is as bad as it can get.

A tumour the size of a grapefruit in his lung, causing the pain, and seven small tumours on his brain.

Dennis Inggs is 30. 

The doctor told him they would try to help him make it to December, when his fourth baby is due.

"I didn't like his verdict," Dennis says.

"I said, 'Don't give me that until I'm in the ground. Until then I'm fine'."

How he got it he doesn't know. He had skin checks every 12 months and they still can't find a lesion. Doctors suspect it might have entered his blood through his retinas.

Dennis and wife Sara have three kids, Ethan, 6, Yasmin, 4, and Kai, 9 months.

He did what every good man would do and he thought about his family. And what makes a family, he thought, but memories.

So he wrote to Hadley and told him he wanted to create some memories that his children, still so young, might retain as they got older.

He asked if Hadley could him get tickets to Wednesday's State of Origin. Something big the kids might remember.

"I know it's pretty special, it's a decider," Hadley said.

Dennis said: "It might be the last one I ever see."

Hadley did more than organise the game.

On Monday, Dennis and Sara, and Sara's brother Travis, attended the Blues' traditional last dinner.

Coach Laurie Daley got Dennis to present Boyd Cordner with his debutant's medal, then say a few words.

"Which I tried not to get too emotional about," he says.

Bravery, we know, comes in all forms.

For years Dennis and Travis, just 20 himself and playing in the local competition, have watched the likes of Paul Gallen and Robbie Farah, Greg Bird and Mitch Pearce, pick themselves up and go again.

What they do as footballers is brave, it really is, requiring a commitment and discipline few can handle. That is why Origin is the best of the best.

For others, bravery is how they handle their situation.

That is what Dennis must do, and in their own way what the Blues must do Wednesday. It is what they kept seeing in Dennis on Monday night.

"But you don't look sick," a couple of players said to him.

And he doesn't feel sick. Instead, his choice was to enjoy his night. Travis sat next to Gallen. Daley made sure Sara felt part of it all. Dennis kept looking around the room at all these names he reads about and sees on TV hardly believing he was there.

"It was like going to a family barbecue where you knew everybody," he says.

"My wife was so accepted. Travis next to Gal ... "

After presenting Cordner with his medal, Dennis spoke about playing for more than just 80 minutes of football.

He didn't know if they realised, he told them, but Origin was more than them on the field for 80 minutes.

Ethan follows the Bulldogs and Sara is a Storm fan. Dennis has always been a Raiders man.

"But we all go for the Blues," he said.

"That's the time we come together. We try to make a tradition of it as a family."

For how long and in what form that tradition will take is now uncertain.

"I might not see next year's Origin," he says.

Dennis has already asked Travis to help raise his kids when he is gone.

On Wednesday he will visit the Melanoma Institute in North Sydney hoping, as late as his cancer is, new trial treatments might prolong his diagnosis. It is the most important day in the rest of his life.

"They've got a new treatment that is attacking the genetic mutation instead of the cancer," he says.

"I've got an appointment to see if they can offer me that, if I have the right type of cancer.

"It could be months, mate, it could be years."

Then later Wednesday night a limousine organised by Hadley will pick them up and take them to Origin, where Daley wants them on the sideline with the players during the game.

"It's going to be special, mate," he says.

"Very, very, very special."


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Marshall ignored NRL calls

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Benji Marshall thanks the crowd. Source: Robb Cox / AAP

BENJI Marshall ignored weeks of phone calls and messages from top NRL staff, who feared he could be lost to rugby union if they didn't intervene, The Daily Telegraph can reveal.

It was another day of drama in rugby league, with Marshall's pending code switch and the departure of Parramatta CEO Ken Edwards from the troubled Eels taking the spotlight off Wednesday night's State of Origin decider.

NRL chief operating officer Jim Doyle made several attempts to contact Marshall while the star playmaker considered his future.

The ex-NZRL boss and Marshall share a relationship from the Kiwi side, but Doyle didn't get to have a detailed discussion until Tuesday.

While Marshall is expected to switch codes after requesting a release from the Tigers on Monday night, Doyle is still trying to change his mind. 

"I'll continue to talk to him every day to try and convince him to stay in rugby league," Doyle said. 

"The last thing we want is to lose a player like Benji, after what he's done for the game. That's a big part of the reason why I was trying to talk to him for the last couple of weeks."

NRL boss Dave Smith also spoke with Marshall Tuesday, but League Central's hopes of keeping the 28-year-old in the code depend on whether the Tigers permit him to play for a rival club. 

"Sadly it seems he is pretty clear about his intentions," Smith said. "It would be great to see him stay in the game and we are happy to talk with him at any time."

The Tigers briefed the NRL during negotiations, which began in April when former club CEO Stephen Humphreys allegedly promised Marshall a two-year extension. 

But Humphreys' departure sparked a change of heart, with interim Tigers boss Grant Mayer and board members insistent that the club was not contractually obligated to extend Marshall's deal. 

"There's a very clear letter written into the contract by (Humphreys) to sit down with Benji Marshall when the new TV deal is done. That was about a regrade, not an extension," Mayer said.

The terms of Marshall's release request were thrashed out during a meeting of the Tigers' retention committee Tuesday night.

The NSW Waratahs and Auckland Blues are favoured to sign Marshall.


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F1 mid-season report card

Contenders ... six men head to Silverstone with a realistic shot of winning. Source: AAP

WITH the school of Formula 1 out for the European summer, we're having a look through the mid-year report card to see how the star pupils are performing in the class of 2013.

KIMI RAIKKONEN

We don't really know what to expect from this pupil each week. While he has been spectacular for the bulk of the year so far, there are still times when he is missing in action - see Malaysia and Canada. After Montreal, Lotus said they will be much closer to the pace for the rest of the year, which so far has been true. There is speculation Raikkonen is considering transferring to another form for next year, which may not help his focus on the rest of the term. Nevertheless, he is the closest challenger for the position at the top of the class.

Mid-year mark: B+

MARK WEBBER

It's not been the greatest final year so far for the lanky lad from Queanbeyan. Highlights have been limited, but they have been spectacular. Forgotten in the post-Malaysia controversy was his stunning performance that netted him the lead in the first place. He showed that pace again in the closing stages at Silverstone. But once again he has been plagued by that ol' chestnut, poor starts. Between that and his qualifying pace - just one front row start this year - Webber has always left himself with more work to do than most in the race. And with Pirelli's less-than-sturdy tyres forcing drivers to be conservative when the red lights go out, fighting your way forward simply isn't as easy to do.

Rd. Country Track Date
1 Australia Albert Park March 17
2 Malaysia Sepang March 24
3 China Shanghai April 14
4 Bahrain Sakhir April 21
5 Spain Catalunya May 12
6 Monaco Monte-Carlo May 26
7 Canada Montreal June 9
8 Great Britain Silverstone June 30
9 Germany Nurburgring July 7
10 Hungary Hungaroring July 28
11 Belgium Spa-Francorchamps September 1
12 Italy Monza September 8
13 Singapore Marina Bay September 22
14 Japan Suzuka October 6
15 Korea Yeongam October 13
16 India New Dehli October 27
17 Abu Dhabi Yas Marina November 3
18 USA Austin November 17
19 Brazil Interlagos November 24

Mid-year mark: B

NICO ROSBERG

Finally regularly showing the potential we all knew he had, even eclipsing the particularly bright British pupil who moved alongside him this year. Most poor results have been down to his equipment, not the operator. A more consistent Mercedes/Pirelli combo might have seen him challenging for top of the class.

Mid-year mark: A-

FERNANDO ALONSO

This pupil has had a spectacular fall-off in results towards the mid-year break. His mid-term report would have been spectacular: after Spain, he had two wins, a podium and a DNF, driving the wheels off a Ferrari that - once again - wasn't quite the fastest car in the field. But the Prancing Horse has largely been lame since. Apart from the podium in Canada, his only other highlight has been his brilliant facial hair. Will be hoping the men and women at Maranello start producing the right answers when school resumes at Hungary.

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Mid-year mark: A-

LEWIS HAMILTON

This student moved form classes over the holidays, and has taken some time to get used to his new surroundings. He has displayed the ability that allowed him to top the class in 2008, but has yet to consistently best the blonde-haired German sitting next to him. Special consideration should be taken, though, as he recently broke up with his pop-star girlfriend. Not too much, though, as he's recently been spotted hanging out with Rihanna.

Mid-year mark: B+

SEBASTIAN VETTEL

The German pupil showed again why he topped his class for the last three years running. Has had his off days this year, but we feel that's more related to the tyres and the equipment than any lack of ability. He misses out on an A+ though thanks to his bad behaviour in Malaysia, blatantly ignoring his teacher's instructions and doing what he wanted, and not apologising afterwards.

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Mid-year mark: A-

NOTABLE MENTIONS

Felipe Massa, B
Started the year with a bang, but his marks have tailed off to 2012 standards. Luckily, Alonso's have followed the same trend, so it's not entirely down to him.

Daniel Ricciardo, B+
This pupil appears to have more potential than his results show. He's under pressure to perform with a transfer to his mentor's form now available for next year, but he has risen to the challenge. His best results have come in recent races, but he needs to keep producing in order to earn the transfer he wants.

Romain Grosjean, C-
Still not showing he can play well with others, and is lacking the spark he showed last year. Appears to have picked up his game substantially after a particularly tough test in Monaco.

Jenson Button, B
The results don't show how much he's trying, but his motivation will only last so long. May also benefit from a change in seating plan. The pupil he currently sits next to seems to be bothering him a bit.

Sergio Perez, B-
Was very quiet to start the year, until his teacher gave him a pep talk after China. Now he's having trouble playing with others, too! Needs to lay off the red cordial before play time.

Pirelli, A-
The Italian student gets an A- because they completed the task they were asked to do, even if they did do it a little 'too' well...


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Meninga future hinges on players

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Queensland coach Mal Meninga addresses his team. Source:AAP

HE EQUALS Phil Gould's record for most Origin games coached and Mal Meninga says he will wait for player feedback after the series before deciding whether he wants to break it.

Meninga said he had the hunger to continue but would await the official Origin review before making a decision.

Meninga was adamant the result of tonight's decider at ANZ Stadium would have no bearing on his choice.

Meninga is contracted to the Queensland Rugby League as Maroons coach until the end of 2015, but he will decide his own future.

Wednesday's Game Three sees him equal Gould on 24 matches as an Origin coach and Meninga is already the most successful mentor in the concept's storied history.

Meninga has previously floated the idea of stepping into the background and letting Melbourne Storm assistant Kevin Walters take control.

Yesterday, at the Maroons final training session at ANZ Stadium, he said it was largely up to players and officials.

"I get asked that question every year. I'm enjoying it. Hopefully the players enjoy me being the head coach of their team and we will see what happens down the track," he said.

"It depends upon whether I'm making a worthwhile contribution and the players enjoy the programs that we have implemented.

"I have only coached this team for 24 games so I am still hungry. It is basically (one) NRL season.

"I love this time of year. If you are a player or coach you want to be involved in Origin."

Maroons five-eighth Johnathan Thurston said he hoped the inspirational figure continued and said the prospect of his retirement had not been mentioned.

"We've all built up a really good relationship with Mal not only on a professional level but certainly as a mate and we'd love him to continue on," Thurston told The Courier-Mail.

One of Meninga's greatest successes is the rapid rise of lock Corey Parker as a representative force.

While Cooper Cronk was rightly hailed the match winner following his field goal late in last year's decider, Parker was named players' player.

It was a vote of confidence for a work horse who spent six years in the Origin wilderness after debuting in 2004.

Parker has been the Broncos' best player this season and has cemented a starting role for the Maroons after Ashley Harrison was left out for the 26-6 win in Game Two three weeks ago.

"It is nice to get that feedback from the guys in this arena," Parker said of his players' player award last year.

"Within myself I always felt I had the ability. 

"Regardless of the side I'm in I just try to do my job and my job is to work hard.

"This year, for me, I just wanted to fill a role and I hope I have done that."


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Ed's head on the chopping block

Written By Unknown on Senin, 15 Juli 2013 | 22.07

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Ed Cowan walks from the pitch after losing his wicket to part-time bowler Joe Root. Source:AP

THE excitement and disappointment of a dramatic 14-run loss in the first Test have disguised the depth of Australia's batting woes.

That a 19-year-old batting at No.11 on debut can be Australia's highest scorer for the match is an indictment on many of those batting above him.

Likewise, wicketkeeper Brad Haddin was the second-innings hero with a bold 71 when he almost snatched victory at Trent Bridge.

Australia has little time to regroup, with the second Test starting at Lord's on Thursday.

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The spirit and intent Australia has shown to regroup after such a terrible year on and off the field is a credit to the players and support staff, led by new coach Darren Lehmann, but the figures are stark.

Of the six batsmen in the first Test, only Phil Hughes should be satisfied with his performance, scoring a mature and measured 81 not out in the first innings batting as a foil to the free spirit of Ashton Agar.

Just how much Australia has relied on its bowlers to do the batting recently is highlighted by some staggering statistics.

This is just the third time in Test history that a team has managed last-wicket partnerships of more than 50 in both innings. The other occasions were also by Australia, in 1895 and 1924.

The aggregate of 228 for the 10th wicket in the match is a Test record and in 17 Tests since the start of last year, Australia's 10th wicket has added 686 runs at an average of 40.35.

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Ed Cowan is under the most pressure. He played two poor shots in his new No.3 position to be out for a golden duck and 14.

"He had a tough game," Lehmann, who is also a selector, said yesterday.

"Like everyone's position, you've got to make runs and perform. We'll sit down as a selection panel over the next couple of days and work out what we think is the best XI to play the next Test match.

"Like everyone, you've got to make runs."

Lehmann said Cowan had been given clear instructions on his role.

"We've told Ed how we want him to play and how we want him to bat," he said. "That hasn't changed from when he first came into the side, I would think.

"Having not known what's happened or what's been said before, we picked him to do a role.

"He'll be disappointed with the shots. So are we.

"That's just part and parcel of what we're about, we're trying to learn and get better. I'm sure he'll get better at that as well."

Cowan's logical replacement is Usman Khawaja.

Lehmann admitted Cowan wasn't the only concern for Australia's batting.

"We've got a lot of work to do, full stop. The thing for us is getting our batting right, our top order right and making runs.

"Our tail has done really well over a long period of time now but it's time for the batters to make sure they're making the runs and giving the tail a bit more time."


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Warner's absence makes no sense

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David Warner watches from the sidelines during the first Ashes Test. Source:Getty Images

IT defies belief David Warner is about to leave the Ashes tour for an Australia A tour of Africa.

I get the thinking, send him to South Africa and Zimbabwe to find form and bring him back later in the series, but I strongly disagree with it.

Unless Jimmy Anderson bobs up in the Zimbabwe side, Warner scoring runs won't count for anything. He would be far better served facing James Pattinson in the nets.The standard of bowling he will face in Africa and the conditions will be chalk and cheese to the challenges that await him in England.

Apart from the practice issue there is the question of Australia being caught short of batsmen if something happens on match morning.

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It's true Warner has not played for a month but he has been practising in the nets every day and, to me, the whole match practice thing is overrated. Sometimes you have to take the plunge

By practising in the nets Warner would be no lesser prepared than a batsman starting a new season, and plenty of batsmen have started summers with a century in their first match.

I would promote Usman Khawaja in place of Ed Cowan for the second Test.

I love Cowan's work ethic but he does not look comfortable at the crease.

The choice of Australia's bowling attack for Lord's is interesting with speculation suggesting tall seamer Jackson Bird is putting pressure on Mitchell Starc.

My go-to man for this tour was always going to be Ryan Harris, but maybe Bird has outbowled him.

I can understand the push for more control but no matter what attack Australia chooses the most obvious improvement must be in the collective run scoring of the top order.

There is no faulting Australia's effort or commitment. But we need more runs.

It really is that simple.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Chief denies soft serve

Talkback ... AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou hits out at critics suggesting he will go soft on the Bombers. Source: LUKAS COCH / AAP

AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou says people should not assume he has set the scene for a soft landing for Essendon in the drugs scandal.

Demetriou said his comments about the "classification issue" of anti-obesity drug AOD-9604 should not be construed as a sign the league was pre-empting the outcome of the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority inquiry into the club's supplements program.

P W D L % Pts
1 Hawthorn 15 13 0 2 141.97 52
2 Geelong 15 13 0 2 132.74 52
3 Essendon 15 12 0 3 130.19 48
4 Sydney 15 11 1 3 142.20 46
5 Fremantle 15 11 1 3 126.27 46
6 Richmond 15 10 0 5 116.69 40
7 Collingwood 15 10 0 5 109.40 40
8 Port Adelaide 15 8 0 7 108.89 32
9 Carlton 15 7 0 8 111.45 28
10 West Coast 15 7 0 8 107.08 28
11 North Melbourne 15 6 0 9 116.05 24
12 Adelaide 15 6 0 9 102.46 24
13 Brisbane 15 6 0 9 80.33 24
14 Gold Coast 15 5 0 10 89.02 20
15 Bulldogs 15 4 0 11 76.71 16
16 St Kilda 15 3 0 12 83.14 12
17 Melbourne 15 2 0 13 53.98 8
18 Greater Western Sydney 15 0 0 15 49.95 0

He said he was answering a question about the drug that the World Anti-Doping Agency says is banned, but an Australian Crime Commission report said was not on the prohibited list.

"I wasn't pre-empting or softening ... it was one of the more nonsensical things I've heard," Demetriou said.

"I was asked, 'Does the AFL believe AOD-9604 was a banned substance?' I said I'm not giving a running commentary but I will say there is some uncertainty about the status of AOD-9604.

"Why don't people listen to the whole interview (with 3AW's Neil Mitchell).

"We have not got the final report ... and once we get the report, we'll know."

The AFL Commission briefly discussed the drugs saga on Monday night. Demetriou said possible penalties were not raised.

"Because it may or may not come before the commission, we don't discuss much because the report is not finished," he said.

The report is expected next month but will not have any input from the man at the centre of the scandal, sports scientist Stephen Dank.

Despite recently urging Dank to talk to ASADA, Demetriou said Dank had spoken to the ACC.

Meanwhile, Melbourne's financial rescue package, reputed to be $2.7 million, is yet to be finalised.

"We've got a bit more work to do on it ... but we have given them an approval in principle to support them," Demetriou said.


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Police raid Powell's hotel

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Jamaican sprinter Asafa Powell, now embroiled in a doping scandal, here competing at last year's London Olympics. Source:AFP

ITALIAN police have raided the hotel where Jamaican sprinters Asafa Powell and Sherone Simpson are staying after each tested positive for banned stimulants.

Udine police captain Antonio Pisapia told AP that rooms of the athletes and physical trainer Christopher Xuereb of Canada were searched and that drugs were confiscated. 

Pisapia said it was unclear if the drugs were legal or illicit and that the substances were being analysed. 

Powell and Simpson tested positive for the stimulant oxilofrine at the Jamaican championships last month, their agent announced on Sunday. 

Pisapia said no arrests were made in the raid early on Monday morning at the Fra i Pini hotel in Lignano Sabbiadoro in northeastern Italy, and that nobody was under investigation. 

Jamaican athletes have trained in Lignano for years. 

In another development, Adidas has suspended its sponsorship of Tyson Gay after the American sprinter returned a positive doping test. 

After being told a banned substance was detected in an out-of-competition test in May, Gay pulled out of the upcoming world championships. 

In a statement, Adidas said ''we are shocked by these recent allegations and, even if we presume his innocence until proven otherwise, our contract with Tyson is currently suspended''. 

The sportswear giant had backed Gay since 2005, and said such sponsorships were terminated ''if the athlete is found guilty of the possession, or use of drugs, or any other prohibited substance by the relevant governing sports body having jurisdiction over the athlete''. 

Gay has said he will have his B sample tested soon, possibly as early as this week. 


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

This one's for all of us: Bird

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 14 Juli 2013 | 22.07

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Greg Bird heads out for NSW Blues Origin Training at Leichhardt Oval. Source: Gregg Porteous / News Limited

BLUES players want to win this year's elusive State of Origin title for their long-suffering NSW fans, not injured skipper Paul Gallen.

Back-rower Greg Bird yesterday spoke about losing Gallen for Wednesday night's decider but rejected suggestions his side would 'do it for 'Gal'.'

"I think there's a little but more riding on it than just doing it for Gal," Bird said.

"Everyone in NSW wants it done for them.

"Everyone in the team definitely wants to get it done for themselves personally.

"I don't know whether we'll do it for Gal, but I think we'll probably do it for everybody.

"I probably won't take it (any extra responsibility) all upon my own shoulders. We'll spread it around.

"The leaders in the team will step-up and takeover. I don't think one person needs to be given that job.

"The more experienced guys in myself, 'Lewie' (Luke Lewis), 'Choccy' Watmough will pick up the slack in the middle and do a lot more talking.

"With a lack of Gal at Cronulla, you see his team really share the load and step-up and they have won a fair few games without him.

"So hopefully, this NSW team can do the same.

"I don't think we will fully adjust (without Gallen).

"It's always going to be hard losing your captain.

"Someone that has the workload and inspirational value that Gal has, the boys will pick up the slack and we'll have to do the job without him."

Bird has overcome an ankle injury and will definitely take his place in the NSW side.

Just where though remains the mystery.

There have been suggestions Bird may start at five-eighth with James Maloney starting from the bench.

The Blues camp has discussed this option to protect Maloney from Queensland's rampaging back-rower Sam Thaiday. NSW though said last night the move was unlikely.

Bird had been in doubt for the big match but was declared a certain starter last Friday.

"It pulled up a little bit sore on Friday after running around on it. That's only to be expected after having the first run," he said.

"(Yesterday) was a proper test for it. If everything goes all right I will be close to 100 per cent for Wednesday.

"I'll just have to see how it pulls up after this."

NSW will start the match heavy underdogs but Bird is unconcerned. He knows NSW has the team to win.

"I don't really care what the general punter thinks to be honest," he said.

"The general punter doesn't really give is a chance they haven't given us a chance for the last seven years. They've probably been right.

"But the general punter ain't going to be running out there next Wednesday night and taking a hit-up and making tackles.

"So to be honest I don't care what they think.

"We'll be out there and we're confident in what we can do. We'll get the job done." 


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Aussies fall short in dramatic Test

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England's hero ... Jimmy Anderson takes ten wickets for the match. Source: Andrew Yates / AAP

AUSTRALIA has failed by just 14 runs to win a dramatic first Test at Trent Bridge as the controversial umpire decision review system had the final say.

1st Test - Trent Bridge

10 July 2013 - Day 5, Session 2

Australia 2nd Innings

B. Haddin 71 147 9 0 48.3
J. Pattinson 25 57 2 1 43.86
J. Anderson 31.5 11 73 5 2.29

A defiant Brad Haddin (71) was given not out to a caught behind appeal off England hero Jimmy Anderson by umpire Aleem Dar.

However England reviewed the decision, celebrated when they saw the hotspot replay, then celebrated again when Dar finally reversed his decision.

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James Pattinson was unbeaten on 25 in a last wicket partnership of 65 as Australia was bowled out for 296 chasing a victory target of 311 for what would have been a record run chase at Trent Bridge.

It was the first time England has won the opening Test of an Ashes series in 16 years. 


Re-live the first Ashes Test from Trent Bridge with our blog!


As the winning target was reduced and the tension grew memories of Edgbaston 2005 were revived, when Brett Lee and Michael Kasprowicz added 59 for the final wicket before Australia lost by just two. 

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Brought back as vice-captain for this series after being dropped, Haddin resumed on 11 with Australia still needing 137 to win.

The greatest successful run chase ever staged at Trent Bridge was the 284 England ran down against New Zealand in 2004. 

With 29 needed to win Haddin almost ran himself out and with 26 required he survived a difficult chance when Steve Finn launched himself at deep backward square leg but failed to grasp the hard hit sweep. The ball went for four. 

A deadly combination of Anderson (5-73) and England captain Alastair Cook at first slip combined three times as Australia lost 3-24 against the second new ball.

Haddin smashed three boundaries in a row off Steven Finn to bring up his 11th half century in 45 Tests in an over that cost 15, reducing the target to 49. 

Ashton Agar was unable to repeat his batting heroics from earlier in the match.

Coming off a blazing 98 in the first innings, Agar was caught by Cook off Anderson for a patient 14 which consumed 71 balls with Australia still requiring 104 for victory.

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Mitchell Starc went the same way for just one in Anderson's next over and Australia was 8-211, needing another 100 to win.

There were groans of anguish from the often silent sell-out crowd when Cook dropped Peter Siddle on 10 off Anderson with Australia needing 86 to win.

However Cook snaffled the next chance off Siddle (11) in Anderson's following over, prompting more wild celebrations with Australia needing 80 to win. 

Promoted from number 11 to number eight in the batting order Agar, the 19-year-old debutant, added 43 with Haddin for the seventh wicket in more than an hour and a half.

Australia resumed at 6-174 requiring another 137 runs for victory and took the score to 207 before Agar fell.

Agar had played carefully and comfortably against the quality off-spin of Graeme Swann, taking 15 balls to score his first runs of the morning, sweeping for two. 

Haddin brought up the first boundary of the morning after almost half an hour, swinging Swann forward of square leg.And Agar collected his first four of the innings in the following over, driving a full, wide delivery from Anderson to the backward point boundary.

Haddin and Agar had a minor victory, seeing off Swann.

With no sign of a wicket Cook took the second new ball after 82 over but strangely had just two slips in place, indicating the lack of bounce in the slow, dry pitch.

Haddin clearly decided to take the new ball on when he could.

At the beginning of Anderson's second over with the new ball Haddin sliced a shot over mid-off for two and then after tumbling awkwardly scrambling a second leg bye slashed the last delivery of the over deep beyond cover to the boundary.

This productive few minutes left Australia needing 105 for victory and seemed to prompt at least a hint of panic by England.

Cook kept himself as the only slip, pushing extra men deep on both sides of the wicket to have four on the boundary.

But then suddenly the game changed when Agar nicked to Cook three balls later.  

England has won the last two Ashes series but did not claim the first Test in either, holding on for draws in matches dominated by Australia.

Edgbaston in 1997 is the last time England won the first Test of a series but did not bring ultimate joy, with Australia going 3-1 up before losing the final Test.

The last time England won the first Test and went on to take the series was 2-1 in 1986-87, Mike Gatting's only two victories as England captain.


Watch the second Ashes Test LIVE and in HIGH DEFINITION on Fox Sports, starting on Thursday!


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Marquez wins German MotoGP

Honda rider Marc Marquez of Spain races to win the MotoGP at Sachsenring. Source: AP

SPANISH rookie Marc Marquez earned his second win of the season with victory at the German MotoGP at Sachsenring on Sunday to go top of the championship standings.

The 20-year-old hit the front early and built up his lead to claim victory with Britain's Cal Crutchlow second and six-times world MotoGP champion Valentino Rossi third.

Marquez's winning time was 41min 14.653sec over the 30 laps with Crutchlow 1.559s back and Rossi coming home more than nine seconds further back.

With title leaders Dani Pedrosa and Jorge Lorenzo both absent after collarbone injuries, pole sitter Marquez lost ground at the start to find himself fourth by the first bend.

But he hit back, taking the lead from home hero Stefan Bradl along the main straight on the third lap.

Marquez, in his first MotoGP campaign, was following up his Grand Prix of the Americas victory in Texas in April. He has finished on the podium in all seven races he has finished in 2013, his retirement at the Italian MotoGP the only blot.

Victory allowed Marquez to overtake compatriot and Honda teammate Pedrosa, who was forced out after fracturing his collarbone in Saturday's practice, to go top of the world standings with 138 points - two clear of Pedrosa.

Reigning world champion Lorenzo was ruled out of the race on Friday, when he injured the same left collarbone he broke two weeks ago and underwent surgery on Saturday in Barcelona to reinsert a supporting plate.

''I'm happy, it's great to win, but you shouldn't forget that both Pedrosa and Lorenzo weren't here,'' said Marquez.

''I hadn't expected to control the race like that.''

Both Yahama Tech 3's Crutchlow and Rossi on the Yahama factory bike complained about losing grip on their rear tyres, but the British rider produced a brave performance after twice crashing in Friday's practice session. 

''I was trying to catch him (Marquez). I had a good start, even though it might not have looked like it. I struggled a bit with the rear tyre,'' said Crutchlow who raced with an injured hand.

''I am pleased with the finish position we had here, having come off the floor twice on Friday.

''It's not been a great weekend and I admit I don't feel great.''

Rossi, who picked up his first win for three years a fortnight ago in Assen, admitted he had hoped to finish higher.

''I am happy, but I had thought I'd do better,'' said the 34-year-old.

''I had a few problems with the rear tyres - we just have to keep working hard.''


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Replay: First Ashes Test, day five

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James Anderson leads the celebrations as England go 1-0 up in the Ashes. Source: Gareth Copley / Getty Images

ENGLAND have won the first Ashes Test in the most dramatic of circumstances.

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The 14-run victory was sealed when Brad Haddin was given out after England opted to review Aleem Dar's decision to give the Aussie wicketkeeper not out.

It brought to a close one of the most memorable Ashes Tests in recent history, and sets the stage for the rest of the series.

Relive all the drama and get the reaction from social media - and you can be sure there was plenty of it - in our live blog below.

JOIN US FOR LIVE COVERAGE OF EVERY MOMENT OF THE ASHES SERIES FROM THE FIRST BALL, INCLUDING A LIVE MATCH CENTRE WITH SCORES, STATS, HAWKEYE DISPLAY OF EVERY DELIVERY AND VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS THROUGHOUT EACH SESSION



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