August 2022 – Page 31 – Michmutters
Categories
Sports

transfernews; Cameron Munster future; player signings, Wayne Bennett Dolphins; Latrell Mitchell; Roosters salary cap, Angus Crichton re-signs

Cameron Munster may soon be headed north with Wayne Bennett reportedly closing in on his marquee man.

Meanwhile, the Roosters have reportedly locked in a key forward after months of speculation surrounding his future.

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DOLPHINS NEW MARQUEE TARGET

Rugby League reporter Ben Dobbin believes Cameron Munster is set to sign a four-year deal with the Dolphins which would make him the highest paid player in the NRL.

“Munster is a Dolphin, in 2024 I think Munster is a Dolphin,” Dobbin said on Triple M.

“I think it will be a four-year deal,” Dobbin said.

“So that will be roughly around $6 million?” Gorden Tallis then asked.

“Is he worth it? Yes, can he change the fortunates of a club? Yes he can,” Dobbin said.

“Can you put tools around him and will it attract other players? Yes it will.”

While strong in his belief Bennett has his man, Dobbin revealed Bennett could make an audacious bid to lure Latrell Mitchell to Redcliff if the Munster bid fails.

The NRL supercoach mentored Latrell during 2020 and 2021, coming desperately close to a premiership last season.

“If they don’t get Cameron Munster, I’m going to throw you a smokey right now. I believe they will go after Latrell Mitchell… Wayne Bennett’s relationship with Latrell Mitchell runs deep,” Dobbin said on Triple M.

Tallis, however, believed Latrell Mitchell has his roots firmly placed at the South Sydney club, explaining he is the “happiest” he has ever been.

“It is too far away from his farm, I think for Latrell, there is a bigger picture for him,” Tallis said.

“I have never seen a guy more settled and going back to the country and doing what he is doing, that is more important to Latrell now than money.

“I think he is the happiest (he has been).”

MORE NRL NEWS

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‘A SHADOW OF HIMSELF’: Dragons blasted for handling of rising star

WHISPERS: Knights half eyes early exit, Panthers link to Tigers star heats up

Ciraldo signed to save Dogs! | 01:55

CRICHTON’S FUTURE SECURED

Roosters gun Angus Crichton has revealed his is set to re-sign with the Tricolours, ending speculation surrounding his immediate future.

Initially, the 26-year-old’s two-year contract extension was said to be a handshake deal with no formal contract being registered with the NRL.

Crichton himself acknowledged the speculation has been “tough” but never considered playing for any other club.

“I think we are really close to finalizing something, so hopefully in the next little bit I will sign on for the next two years,” Crichton told 9News.

“It has been tough to have that hanging over my head and to get it sorted will be a massive weight off my shoulders.

“I don’t want to play for any other team.”

Reports linked the Origin backrower to a move to the Tigers with the Roosters’ salary cap facing a big squeeze.

The Daily Telegraph’s Buzz Rothfield revealed the immense cap pressure the Tricolours are under, with seven of the competition’s highest paid players on their books.

“In 2022 they have got Tedesco on $1.1m, Luke Keary on $850,000, Joseph Manu ($720k), Jared Waerea-Hargreaves ($700k), Angus Crichton ($700k), Sio Siua Taukeiaho ($625k) and Victor Radley ( $510k) for a total of $5,205,000,” Rothfield said on NRL360.

With the impending arrival of Brandon Smith and an increase in salary for young gun Joseph Suaalii, Roosters bosses now have to squeeze the remaining 21 players into what is left of their salary cap.

The departure of Ronald Volkman, Freddy Lussick, Daniel Suluka-Fifita and Lachlam Lam has opened cap space.

Sam Verills and Siosiua Taukeiaho are also set to leave at the season’s end, meaning the Roosters could have even more money to re-sign players for 2023 onwards.

Matty nails Buzz impersonation | 00:51

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Categories
Australia

Organized crime strips more than $1b from NDIS; experts call on Plibersek to tighten marine protections; gunman arrested after shots fired inside Canberra Airport; China-Taiwan tensions grow; Labor to bring in tens of thousands of skilled migrants; education ministers pledge to tackle teacher shortages

The immigration minister isn’t the only Labor frontbencher doing the half rounds this morning.

Minister for Government Services Bill Shorten has taken questions from Patricia Karvelas given this masthead’s reporting on organized crime stripping as much as $1 billion from the NDIS.

NDIS Minister Bull Shorten.

NDIS Minister Bull Shorten. Credit:alex ellinghausen

“I think any dollar which gets ripped off between taxpayers and people on the schemes too high,” Shorten told Radio National.

“I think there is a problem. I said it before the election. And since the election, I’ve started alerting colleagues, pushing the agency, [and] talking to state ministers about the need for government agencies to work together to combat the scourge of fraud.”

The minister said NDIS rotting appears to be occurring in two or three ways.

“Through coercion and other criminal tactics, accessing the accounts and putting in invoices. So that’s one way,” he said.

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“But I also suspect that there’s ghosting where false invoices and false clients might be being made up. I want to find out if that’s true. But then there’s another way… it’s just the padding of bills by people who might be not connected to organized crime, but they’re just robbing the scheme.

“I also worry that the fraud or overpayment is occurring through a lack of scrutiny of the invoices.”

Shorten accused the Morrison government of making it harder for genuine people to get onto the NDIS as an easy fix to “chasing [actual] fraud”.

“I’m meeting the agency today. I want to satisfy myself that the resources [for fraud detection] are what they should be. And if we need more resources, we have to find them because, frankly, it’ll pay for itself if we could stop some of the money being ripped off.”

Categories
Business

$23b fundie hunts beaten-up tech stocks

He acknowledges that the inflation fight is not over, but says a pivot from the Federal Reserve does not have to involve rate cuts; the Fed keeping rates on hold for a period or even reducing the size of the super-sized increases it has delivered recently would represent a change in direction that the markets are likely to embrace.

He has noticed a few signs of a shifting mood in the markets recently, from signals that turbocharged inflation rates in Brazil have peaked – sparking a rally in the country’s small and mid-cap stocks – to a greater number of institutional investors positioning for a potential end to deep risk aversion.

hedging effect

When the Global Select Fund started investing in a beaten-down healthcare stock recently, it jumped about 10 per cent just as Richyal started buying. His market soundings suggested the move was driven by a degree of short covering as well as by hedge funds getting long.

“Because everyone’s so hedged, there might be a fear that the pain trade is up, and then you might get a scramble to actually reposition long.”

That would be good for Richyal’s portfolio, which is dominated by long-duration stocks, which were beaten up in the first half of this year but are now rising off their lows. He says it’s time for investors to start looking at higher-quality stocks in parts of the market that have been heavily sold during the past six to nine months, such as technology.

“Some parts of the market really have already suffered. That doesn’t mean that the index at an aggregate level can’t come down further, and it doesn’t mean that some pockets can’t de-rate further.

“But if we start to gravitate towards those parts of the market that have had the pain, and are stabilizing and where you’re seeing some fundamental improvement, it is the right thing to do right now.”

The market has clearly soured on recently listed tech companies and those that went public in the past few years, either via floats or during the SPAC craze of 2021. But Richyal is looking for nuggets here, too.

“This is the correct time to sharpen your pencil and find an IPO that’s actually a good quality company but the baby has been thrown out with the bathwater,” he says. “Because there’ll be some pretty solid businesses over the next five, 10, 15 years who may just have derated because they happened to IPO at exactly the wrong time, or they happened to de-SPAC at exactly the wrong time.”

Richyal and Lees’ cautious optimism appears to be catching. Legendary hedge fund investor George Soros has also been buying tech stocks, loading up on Amazon, Salesforce and Google’s parent Alphabet such that all three are now among his 10 biggest holdings.

According to Bank of America, their US clients have been net buyers of stocks (that is, more buyers than sellers) for six consecutive weeks, with institutional buyers leading the way in the last two weeks. Tech stocks have been particularly popular – last week had the biggest weekly inflows to the tech sector since 2008.

As BofA says, there is risk in this tilt to tech; Although the June quarter earnings numbers for US tech giants held up reasonably well, there are questions about whether these stocks will prove quite as defensive as investors think, particularly as US economic growth slows further.

And as this column has been banging on about for months, the excesses of the past decade, let alone of the past few years, look a long way from being washed out of this market.

inflation outlook

But even if investors feel the recent market momentum is unwarranted – the S&P is now up 16.7 per cent since its low in mid-June, the Nasdaq Composite is up 22.6 per cent and the ASX 200 is up 9.3 per cent – ​​they need to be at least considering the idea that the market has bottomed and risk- on sentiment can keep running for a while.

How long sentiment remains robust will probably depend on the outlook for inflation. The Fed has made it clear that inflation remains uncomfortably high and interest rate increases will be needed well into next year. It will be worried about rising equity markets too, as this loosens financial conditions.

But investors in bonds and stocks are effectively shrugging their shoulders and betting that the Fed will take its foot off the interest rate accelerator to engineer the sort of soft landing in which the US avoids a recession.

Richyal is watching inflation too, although not for the reasons you might think.

“We still think that even though some of the strongest disinflation trends may be coming to an end in certain cases, the most important trend – demographics – is still going in the same direction. We are still living with aging societies, regardless of whether that’s west or east, global north or global south. And that primary trend is going to overwhelm most other trends.”

Many economists argue that aging populations will be inflationary: the trend of fewer workers pushes wages higher, and consumption of healthcare and similar services explodes. But Richyal has a somewhat contrarian view.

As the population ages, older people will tend to downsize where they live, meaning investment in fixed assets (particularly property) actually falls. The experience of Japan, which Richyal describes as “an ideal petri dish” because it has had a rapidly aging population and has been battling deflation for decades, suggests “that decline in fixed asset investment means you don’t actually need that many people” .

Richyal also borrows from work done by Australian economist Gerard Minack, who was previously Morgan Stanley’s chief global investment strategist and says the data disputes the idea that a reduced workforce pushes up wages.

“The key to the aging-is-inflationary argument is the assumption that falling labor supply leads to increased bargaining power for labour,” Minack wrote last year. “Japan shows the reverse applies: fast labor supply growth went hand-in-hand with fast wage growth, then slowing labor supply growth slowed wage growth.

“Japan is not exceptional. Slowing labor force growth is a cause of, not an antidote to, secular stagnation. It is a false hope to think that aging will end secular stagnation. And neither Japan nor the US is exceptional: the link between demographics and disinflation is obvious elsewhere.”

Richyal does see risks to his argument, particularly around the appetite for borrowing in the economy; if this is considerable, persistent inflation is possible.

But the power of deflation from aging is such that he believes “we could just end up in Goldilocks again, where it’s just not too cold, not too hot, because these forces all just wash each other out”.

If that’s the case, Richyal believes investors will want long-duration stocks such as those he owns – high-quality tech and healthcare companies that investors will reward for delivering growth in what he believes could be a low-growth, deflationary world.

Categories
Entertainment

Actor Luke Hemsworth opens up about life with his younger brothers Liam and Chris: ‘We don’t compete’

Luke Hemsworth doesn’t compete with his younger actor siblings Liam and Chris Hemsworth.

The 41-year-old actor admits he and his brothers like to “one-up” each other in “everyday life” and give out constructive criticism, but he would never pit himself against the pair when it comes to acting.

However, the former ‘Neighbours’ star quipped that the “gorgeous” hunks might think differently when it comes to each other.

Speaking to Men’s Health Australia, Luke said of Liam, 32, and Chris, 38: “I don’t compete with them for anything in acting.

“They might compete together because they’re both 6ft4 and knock down gorgeous.

“But it’s fun to be supportive.

HOLLYWOOD, CA - NOVEMBER 04: Actors Liam Hemsworth (L) and Chris Hemsworth arrive at the premiere of Marvel's "Thor: The Dark World" at the El Capitan Theater on November 4, 2013 in Hollywood, California.  (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
Camera Icon Actors Liam Hemsworth (L) and Chris Hemsworth arrive at the premiere of Marvel’s “Thor: The Dark World” at the El Capitan Theater on November 4, 2013 in Hollywood, California. Credit: Kevin Winter/Getty Images

“It’s fun to learn lines with them. It’s not like we’re not critical of each other, that’s for sure.

“But it’s criticism designed to take a performance to another level.

“In everyday life, we’re normal brothers. We definitely try to one-up each other. We like to have fun. We like to laugh.”

Meanwhile, Luke previously admitted he felt “stung” after being overlooked for a role in the ‘Star Wars’ franchise.

He auditioned for the titular role in 2018’s ‘Solo: A Star Wars Story’, and he was devastated when he was overlooked for the part in favor of Alden Ehrenreich.

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Categories
Sports

St. Jude Championship live leaderboard, scores, Cameron Smith penalty, reaction, rules, explanation

Australian Cameron Smith was penalized two strokes by US PGA Tour officials, dimming his chances of a victory at the St. Jude Championship to become world number one and putting a dent in his campaign to take out the $25m FedEx Cup playoffs.

World number two Smith started the final round in Memphis, Tennessee, four strokes off the pace instead of only two after the punishment was applied for improper ball placement.

Smith, who has deflected questions this week on reports he will jump to LIV Golf after the PGA playoffs, made the violation on the par-3 fourth hole in the third round at TPC Southwind.

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FINAL LEADERBOARD

S1 — Will Zalatoris (-15)

T1 — Sepp Straka (-15)

S3 — Lucas Glover (-12)

S3—Brian Harman (-12)

S5—Trey Mullinax (-11)

S5—Matt Fitzpatrick (-11)

T5 — Tony Finau (-11)

S5—Andrew Putnam (-11)

S5—Adam Scott (-11)

S5—Colin Morikawa (-11)

S5—Jon Rahm (-11)

Cameron Smith suffered a setback.  Andy Lyons/Getty Images/AFP
Cameron Smith suffered a setback. Andy Lyons/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

Gary Young of the PGA Tour rules staff said that Smith plunked his tee shot into the water on the hole and when he dropped the ball outside the penalty area, it rolled back and came to rest touching the red hazard marking line.

Rules committee members reviewed video replays of the hole and brought in Smith to talk about the infraction.

“At that point, he said yes, my ball was definitely touching the line,” Young said. “He wasn’t aware that no portion of the ball could be touching the line.

“You have to take complete relief from that area.”

The two-stroke punishment boosted Smith’s score from a three-under par 67 to a one-under 69 that left him on nine-under 201 through 54 holes, four adrift of 54-hole leader JJ Spaun.

“He felt it was OK to play it from there but unfortunately the rules say differently,” Young said.

“The rules give the player, as long as the player has shown reasonable judgment in determining whether or not his ball was in or out of the penalty area in this situation with his own naked eye, I thought it was simply going to be a situation where I asked Cam the question and he was going to tell him that he was comfortable that his ball was outside the penalty area.

“When I asked him the question, unfortunately, he said to me, ‘No, the ball was definitely touching the line’. So at that point there’s no turning back. That was a moment where I know that the player has knowledge that the ball was touching the line, he just simply didn’t understand the rule that it requires the entire ball to be outside of the penalty area and in his relief area. So that was the tough part.”

“He just said to me, ‘The rules are the rules.’ I just accepted it and left the office.”

Elsewhere, fellow Australian Adam Scott’s four-under-par 66 took up to the top of the leaderboard at 11 under midway through the final round.

‘Ready to cop some heat’ Smith talks LIV | 00:49

Smith seeks his seventh career PGA title and his fourth of the year after the Tournament of Champions, the Players Championship and taking the Claret Jug last month at St. Andrews.

A victory would vault Smith over Masters champion Scottie Scheffler of the United States to the top of the world rankings for the first time in his career.

Smith said his game has not been affected by distractions this week such as numerous questions about his future and reports compatriot Cameron Percy said the Smith has already made a deal to join LIV Golf.

“My goal here is to win the FedExCup playoffs. That’s all I’m here for,” Smith said earlier this week. “If there’s something I need to say regarding the PGA Tour or LIV, it will come from Cameron Smith, not Cameron Percy.

“I’m a man of my word and whenever you guys need to know anything, it’ll be said by me.”

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Categories
Australia

Sydney shooting: More details emerge after double murder of Lametta Fadlallah and Amner ‘Amy’ Al Hazouri in Revesby on Saturday

Police say the “rule books have been thrown out the window” after the deadly double shooting of two women in suburban Sydney on Saturday night.

Lametta Fadlallah, 49, and Amner ‘Amy’ Al Hazouri, 39, were killed after a hail of bullets were fired into a car in Panania, just before 9pm.

Watch the video above for the latest on the Sydney shooting

Watch the latest News on Channel 7 or stream for free on 7plus >>

Police believe the shooting occurred at Hendy Avenue, Panania, before the vehicle traveled to Weston Street, Revesby, where emergency services were contacted.

Local woman Rebecca, who was preparing her young kids for bed, said there was no mistaking the sound that rang out in the quiet street just before 9pm.

“My kids heard it; we all did,” Rebecca told The Daily Telegraph.

“Like bang bang bang, yeah, we knew straight away it was a gun.”

Lametta Fadlallah was likely the intended target, police said. Credit: 7NEWS

The vehicle with four people inside it then sped away for about a kilometer before coming to a stop in nearby Revesby.

Peter Aitkin was sitting on his veranda when the victims’ car pulled up directly outside.

“There was a lot of yelling, but I had no idea what it was all about,” the retired firefighter told The Daily Telegraph.

“I thought at first the woman in the back might have had a heart attack and that’s why the car has pulled up.”

The same commotion prompted a neighbor to call triple-0.

“The man was yelling at the woman to get back in the car,” the neighbor said.

“She was screaming, I couldn’t really understand what she was saying but she was hysterical, so I called the police.”

Emergency services arrived at the scene to find Fadlallah and Al Hazouri inside the car with gunshot wounds.

Two women were shot dead in Sydney. Credit: 7NEWS
Two other people were in the car at the time of the shooting. Credit: 7NEWS
Police canvassed several locations on Sunday. Credit: 7NEWS

Fadlallah, identified as a mother of two, could not be revived and died at the scene.

Al Hazouri was taken in a critical condition to Liverpool Hospital, where she later died.

A girl, 16, and man, 20, were also in the car at the time and were left shaken but physically unhurt, Homicide Squad commander Detective Superintendent Danny Doherty said.

He said the other occupants were incredibly lucky not to have been killed or seriously injured.

“This is an appalling attack on two women, who lost their lives in a planned murder and assassination that’s happened in a public street in Sydney,” Doherty said on Sunday.

“It’s not acceptable by any standards. It’s unprecedented, really, and we’re determined to get the answers for the family.”

Crime editor of The Daily Telegraph, Mark Morri, told Sunrise there was a big difference between this murder and other gangland shootings in Sydney.

“To actually kill a female in public like this, like they are a gangland figure, I’ve never seen it in the 40 years I’ve been here,” he said.

“Not to say that women haven’t been killed, they have… but the big difference we have seen with this one is where the rule book has been thrown out.”

Burnt-out cars were found in nearby suburbs in the hours following the attack and police are investigating if the vehicles are linked to the shooting.

Security vision seized by police shows attackers in dark clothing pouring petrol on the cars before making off.

“These are the hallmarks of a planned attack,” Doherty said.

“It was methodical, it was planned.”

At least two burnt-out cars were found nearby. Credit: 7NEWS
Two burnt-out cars were found nearby. Credit: 7NEWS

Police were familiar with Fadlallah for having past connections to underworld figures, and one theory is that she was the intended target of the attack.

She had been in a long-term relationship with Halal Safi, a standover man and drug dealer found dead earlier this year.

Doherty said the three other people in the vehicle had no links to organized crime.

Al Hazzouri, a hairdresser known as Amy to her friends, is considered to have been an innocent bystander caught up in a barrage of deadly gunfire.

Amner ‘Amy’ Al Hazouri was caught in the crossfire and died in hospital. Credit: 7NEWS

He urged the public to come forward with information about the attack.

“The time is now. This is unprecedented,” Doherty said.

“We should be asking questions, how could this happen? How did we get to this point, where two women have lost their lives in Sydney, in a public street?”

Doherty said underworld figures used to operate by “unwritten laws” under which women and children were protected from being attacked – but it appeared these rules no longer applied.

“I think this has just demonstrated how low they’ve got at this point, where any person that may be associated with someone who they want to target … they don’t discriminate, whether you’re male or female,” he said.

“The rule books have been thrown out the window.”

Strike Force Laurantus has been established to investigate the incident.

Anyone who may have information, or dashcam or CCTV footage from the surrounding areas, is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

Van owner confronts would-be thief.

Van owner confronts would-be thief.

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Categories
Business

Coles shopper loses battle for compensation in court after slipping on lettuce

A Coles shopper has lost her court battle for compensation after she slipped on a piece of lettuce at the supermarket and claimed the fall caused her knee and spinal injuries.

Kanwaleen Bhelley claimed that she suffered a whole person impairment (WPI) of more than 5 per cent following the incident at a Coles store in the suburb Wyndham Vale in May 2020.

The Melbourne woman had told a medical panel that the lower back injury meant she experienced pain after driving for an hour and did not run out of “fear” of her knee and back becoming “painful”.

She said the spinal injuries had also “reduced her attendance at concerts, general socializing, and attendance at her temple, which requires long periods of sitting”, the court judgment noted.

She sought compensation from Coles after supplying a medical report from a sports physician. But the supermarket giant rejected the report and referred the matter to a medical panel who determined Ms Bhelley’s injuries did not meet the threshold required for compensation.

Instead, the panel found Ms Bhelley had suffered age-related degenerative changes to her spine and sacroiliac joints which was associated with rehabilitation treatment of her right knee.

“She can stand for about 10 minutes before she has to stretch her back,” the panel wrote in its report.

“She can walk for about 30 minutes, (but) after about 500m she notices mild right knee pain, so stops walking to sit or stand for about 10 minutes. She can traverse stairs without difficulty, using alternate stair treads for both ascending and descending, with no lower back or right knee issues.”

The panel also ruled her condition was stable.

The 43-year-old then lodged an appeal taking her case to Victoria’s Supreme Court, alleging the panel did not apply or misapplied the guidelines used to determine her impairment.

“Mrs Bhelley submitted that, absent such error, the panel would have determined that her degree of whole person impairment resulting from her spinal injury was 5 per cent, satisfying the significant injury threshold and in turn entitling her to claim non-economic loss damages, ” the judgment read.

But Judge Andrea Tsalamandris handed down her ruling on Friday finding the panel had not erred in its assessment and dismissed her appeal.

However, she acknowledged that Ms Bhelley could still experience pain or symptoms.

Read related topics:melbourne

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Categories
Technology

This Week In Games Australia: Welcome To The Rollerdrome

Welcome back to This Week In Games Australia! This week: rollerdrome leads another week of exceptional indies. We’ve got Animal Crossing likes in catizensstyle makeovers in Fashion Police Squad, Fall Guys antics in Kirby’s Dream Buffet, and much more! What are you playing this week? Let us know in the comments below.

August 16

catizens (PC)

If you played Animal Crossing and thought, this is great, but it would be better if everyone was a catthen good news. catizens is here to give that. Sort of. There’s more of a city-builder element going on here than there in AC, and I don’t remember my villagers having to defend against raids from rat people trying to take their stuff. Check out the trailer. You’ll know right away if this is up your alley or not.

Fashion Police Squad (PC)

One of my favorite demos from this year’s Steam Next Fest moves into full release this week. Fashion Police Squad combines the Build engine aesthetic of Duke Nuke and the camp drama of drag racing. You’re not shooting to kill, you’re shooting to slay. Every enemy you shoot with your weapons of high fashion takes their outfits from drab to fab, improving their lives and saving them from the menace of boring wardrobe. A fantastic idea, brilliantly executed. Get around it.

Monster Tribe (PC)

Monster Tribe is a hybrid of creature collector with a classic, SNES-era RPG. But also, there’s crafting and an element of dungeon crawling as well? This one is doing a lot, and I’m keen to check it out. With all these ingredients in the pot, can it carve out an identity for itself? I’m excited to see.

Way of the Hunter (PS5, XSX, Xbox)

I don’t like the idea of ​​killing animals for sport. I think it’s a fucked up thing to embrace as a hobby, so I was never going to play this. If games like Call of the Hunter are your thing, no judgment, I’d rather you shoot digital animals rather than real ones.

August 17

rollerdrome (PS5, PC, PS4)

I think this one’s gonna be our game of the week. The latest title from Roll7, the creators of the excellent Olli-Olli series, is a game about skating around and shooting guys. I know people are going to make comparisons to Normal Jewison’s rollerball, and that’s fine. I’m keen to see if rollerdrome can stand on its own.

August 18

Kirby’s Dream Buffet (NS)

Ruby’s personal game of the week, and let me tell you: she cannot believe Nintendo is giving her two kirby games in the same year. It’s kirby meets Fall Guys, which is a very Nintendo way to approach the brawler royale space. This will be a digital-only release so unless Limited Run wants to get involved down the line, you’ll only be able to get it from the Switch eShop.

Robo Revenge Squad (PC, NS, PS4, XBO)

This looks like a combination of Robot Wars and tower defence. Should make for an interesting multiplayer experience, I think, but the trailers aren’t doing a great job of conveying what the game es. Keen to check it out and see what’s going on here.

August 19

The Ascent: Cyber ​​Heist DLC (PS5, XSX, PC, PS4, XBO)

Throwing this one on the list because The Ascent is great, and I will take any excuse to reinstall and play more of it.

Cursed to Golf (PS5, XSX, PC, NS, PS4, XBO)

I know, for many people, myself included, golf can feel indistinguishable from being trapped in hell. The team at Chuhai Labs may feel similarly because their new game Cursed to Golf is all about golfing your way out of purgatory. Upgrade your little guy with abilities that let him defy physics, like adjusting the ball’s trajectory mid-flight, and get the hell out of hell.

Expedition Agartha (PC)

Expedition Agartha is a first-person dungeon crawler with Chivalry‘s sense of swordplay. There’s also a kind of Borderlands-like soft cel-shaded look to the visuals going on? I don’t know what that’s about in the context of its world, but it certainly looks cool. If you’ve been done with Kingdom Come: Deliverance for a while and craving more, maybe this will scratch that itch for you.

Madden 23 (PS5, XSX, PC, PS4, XBO)

Wait, wait, wait. I know we’re Australians and most of us don’t give a shit about American football, but don’t scroll past. Years of reviewing any game I could get my hands on taught me that sometimes, trying a game you don’t think you’ll enjoy can be beneficial. the Madden series was one of those games I found really enlightening. It taught me a lot about American football and how the game actually works, and it’s actually very, very good at this. Moreover? Getting to grips with this bizarre, mutant form of football was super fun. I’m just saying, if you’re partial to a sports sim, consider it. I think it’s generally a lot better than most Aussies give it credit for.

RPG Time: The Legend of Wright (NS)

Imagine being back in primary school and your friend drawing a kind of ad-hoc D&D campaign for you in their notebooks. That’s the thrust of RPG Time: The Legend of Wright. This one’s cute, and will be fun to play with your kids.

We Are OFK (PS5, PC, NS, PS4)

We Are OFK is an interactive narrative adventure game about a band putting an album together. You’ll have to bicker over lyrics, argue in texts, get to know each bandmate, and step through interactive music videos on your way to musical stardom.

August 20

Figment 2: Creed Valley (PC, NS)

This is one of the better trailers I’ve seen in a little bit. figure 2 is a very self-aware, puzzle-adventure game about imagination and musical boss fights. I really like the vibe of this one, I’m gonna be checking it out. There’s a demo on the Switch eShop if you want to get a taste before diving in.

Categories
Entertainment

Robyn Griggs dead: Soap star dies after cancer battle

Robyn Griggs, a television and film star best known for her roles on soap operas Another World and One Life To Live, has died at the age of 49 after losing her battle with cervical cancer.

The star’s official Facebook account announced the sad news in a statement over the weekend.

“Hi everyone, with a heavy heart, I am saddened to announce Robyn’s passing,” the post began.

Her account also shared some recent photos of Griggs, visibly ill but smiling, Page Six reports.

“However, she is no longer suffering and would want us to remember that and the good memories. I will never forget how open she was to telling her story about her, and accepting me helping her tell it.

“She wanted to help people and spread the word of her story to do it. I was honored to do so. RIP my friend, I love you and smile when I think of you.”

Griggs, who married golf pro Mark Wiley in 2013, was very transparent with friends and fans when it came to her health troubles, as she was diagnosed with stage 4 cervical cancer in 2020 and as recently as last month revealed that she had developed four new tumours.

“I have four new tumours. Two new tumors on my liver, one on abdominal muscle and large one on right side lymph node, ”Griggs posted to her account de ella July 7.“ So in pain and I go to chemo Monday am. I told them whatever it takes, I’m in for the fight.”

The account also confirms that on August 11 – just two days before her passing – the actress moved into hospice care.

“She has fought with determination, strength and grace that is nothing short of inspirational. Please continue to keep Robyn and her family from Ella in your thoughts and prayers at this difficult time.

Griggs played Stephanie Hobart on One Life To Live in a total of six episodes in 1991. She went on to play Maggie Cory on Another World for two years.

She later starred in films such as 2003’s Severe Injuries and 2010’s hellweek.

This story originally appeared on Page Six and is republished here with permission

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Sports

Alyssa Healy runs out Beth Mooney in The Hundred, sparking Northern Superchargers’ win over London Spirit

Alyssa Healy has delivered a bit of brilliance in the field to run out Australian international teammate Beth Mooney and help inspire her Northern Superchargers side to their first victory in this year’s Women’s Hundred in England.

Healy’s airborne dismissal of Mooney, who scored 97 not out in the London Spirit’s opener to the 100-ball-a-side competition, proved the turning point in the Superchargers’ five-run win at Headingley.

Spirit’s pursuit of 4-127 was going along smoothly enough at 1-54 with Mooney still looking in control when she had a mix-up in running with second-wicket partner Amelia Kerr.

Turning for the second run, Mooney was in trouble, but the throw from mid-wicket from Beth Langston looked to have reprieved her because it was wide and high to wicketkeeper Healy.

But the Australian World Cup star leapt high to her left and not only collected it but managed to flick an underarm throw that hit the stumps and left her international opening partner stranded, out for a threatening 30 off 20 balls.

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From that point, the run chase was always in trouble, especially when Danielle Gibson top-edged Alice Davidson-Richards to fine leg next ball.

Spirit ended up needing 13 off the final series of five and despite an excellent effort from Sophie Luff, the visitors fell five runs short.

Earlier, Bess Heath had been key for the Superchargers, with a blistering 57 off 34 deliveries featuring 10 boundaries digging her side out of trouble.

Healy had also played her part with the bat, smashing 22 off 16 including one huge six over long-on before she perished, seriously annoyed with herself, after plonking a juicy full-toss off Kerr straight into Alice Monaghan’s hands on the boundary.

Maxwell stars with bat and ball

In the men’s tournament, Glenn Maxwell shone with bat and ball to help London Spirit maintain their perfect record in The Hundred.

Englishman Adam Rossington took center stage with the competition’s fastest 50, smashed off just 15 balls, as Spirit made mincemeat of their 144-run target against the Superchargers at Headingley.

But Australian star Maxwell was similarly pivotal in wrapping up the seven-wicket win with 18 balls to spare, as the Lord’s franchise almost certainly earned a place in the knockout stages already by winning their fourth straight match.

The Victorian cracked an unbeaten 43 off just 25 balls to steer them home after earlier granting just six runs and taking a key wicket off 15 balls in a spell that helped strangle the Superchargers.

AAP

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