Categories
Business

Australian mum’s travel hate booms into $20m business Luxico

When it comes to holidaying, deciding whether to go with the expected comforts of a hotel or the relaxed amenities of an Airbnb generally comes down to the guest and the mood of the trip.

For mum and businesswoman Alexandra Ormerod, travel has always been high on the priority list – and she had no plans for that to change when she and husband Tom decided to start a family.

But with a little one in tow, the pair soon realized that the simple pleasures they once took for granted in a hotel room were no longer applicable for a young family.

“We have a lot of family overseas… we are avid travelers and after our first daughter was born we quickly discovered in our travels that hotels were dead to us and that came as a bit of a shock,” Ms Ormerod told news.com. ouch

“We soon found it very challenging to be traveling with a small child and finding accommodation that was of a standard better than a serviced apartment.

“We realized quite early on that places like Europe and Asia have a more mature market than Australia, so there are a lot more villas to hire in different locations. Whereas when you came to Australia and you effectively had the option of a holiday home. That home would be hired through a real estate agent and generally you were restricted to a coastal location and picking the keys up from the local fish and chip shop because the office was closed.

Ms Ormerod said the “disconnected experience” and “transactional approach” to hiring holiday homes in Australia meant guests “never really knew what they were going to get” on arrival.

With a background in advertising, Ms Ormerod said her work in travel and tourism along with her husband’s involvement in property development and real estate meant they identified a gap in the market for couples, friends and family groups seeking options in the luxury end of the holiday homes market.

As a result, ‘Luxico’ – which essentially combines hotels and holidays homes into one – was born in 2013.

“Luxico was a bit of an obvious outcome,” she explained of the company, which is now worth almost $20 million.

“We found there was a real niche for designer accommodation which we identified as not really existing at the time Luxico was born.”

Having a house on the Mornington Peninsula, Ms Ormerod said a lot of neighbors and Melbourne residents had “big homes” in the area which sat empty for most of the year. So she and Tom started renting out properties in the area which signaled a huge area of ​​demand for beautiful, high-end homes temporarily.

“We found there was a lot of demand for that $1000-a-night or more price point that was not being serviced,” she said.

“So we then built on that to try and service that demand, and try to take the experience away from a transactional offering to a more hospitality or hotel offering [within a luxury home].”

Each Luxico stay comes with a concierge service – essentially a local who ‘checks you in’ to the home. Each concierge acts as a point of call for guests, with no request too big, small or bizarre. The homes range from $250 to $15,000 or more per night.

“It’s bringing the human element back into that holiday home stay, and all our concierges are from the local area,” she explained of the company which exclusively manages $700 million worth of property across Australia.

“The extra services you can have – from chefs, to butlers and specialist touring – are all part of the optional extras.

“But for the everyday traveller, the feedback has been that the concierge had given them insider tips to the area … maybe told them of an amazing hidden gem they wouldn’t have otherwise known about that made their holiday.”

While celebrity clients make up a large bulk of the brand’s clientele, Ms Ormerod said “mums and dads” still make up the majority of bookings.

“Luxico is an end-to-end service so we exclusively manage all of the properties that we offer,” she said, adding that if a family is looking to book two or three hotel rooms – a home works out to be better value.

“So we are managing the guest experience not just through the booking process, but the experience they have in home and even afterwards.

“So from the slippers, to the towels to prepared toiletries, the concierge is going in there and provisioning and preparing the home so if you are traveling with small children we will bring in a toy box so they have something to play with. So it’s all those little touches that make the experience a continuance of the booking process.

“It’s more a holistic experience, connecting you with local products, experiences and service providers that will build on that stay.”

Read related topics:airbnb

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Categories
Technology

Panasonic, Nikon Stop Producing Entry-Level Cameras – channelnews

The two largest Japanese camera manufacturers have pulled out of the eleven lucrative entry-level point-and-click camera market.

Nikon and Panasonic have both suspended development of cheaper model cameras, instead turning their attentions towards the professional market.

Compact digital cameras were big business in the 2000s, with global shipments peaking at 110 million cameras in 2008. The casual market has long turned to the smartphone; global shipments dropped to just 3.01 million cameras in 2011 – a 97 per cent fall from the peak.

“We’ve halted developing any new models that can be replaced by a smartphone,” a Panasonic spokesperson said. The company has been downgrading its Lumix digital camera since 2019, not selling any models under A$530.

Likewise, Nikon has discontinued lower-end models in its Coolpix range, with just two high-powered lens models available. The company is “closely monitoring market trends” in regards to this line. It has completely withdrawn from development of SLR cameras.

In June, Terushi Shimizu, CEO of Sony Semiconductor Solutions said that smartphone cameras will make DSLR cameras obsolete by 2024.

”We expect that still images from smartphones will exceed the image quality of single-lens reflex cameras within the next few years,” he said at a business briefing.

“Around 2019, it was said that the three elements of the battery, display, and camera will evolve in smartphones.

“While the other two are technically saturated, there are still expectations for the camera to evolve.”

Categories
Entertainment

New hope for children at risk of New Zealand’s most iniquitous disease | new zealand

NAthanial Harland was four years old when his daycare teachers noticed the usually playful boy was lethargic and alone in a corner. That day a doctor listened to the child’s chest and told his family of him to take Nathaniel straight to hospital – he had a heart murmur.

Further testing showed his heart had been damaged from an earlier, undiagnosed bout of rheumatic fever, a serious but entirely preventable disease that has been all but wiped out in most developed countries but which is still present in New Zealand and Australia.

“That was a huge shock… it was a huge change in our life… I was at the hospital 24/7 with Nathanial and my husband took on the role of full-time carer at home,” said Natasha Harland, his mother.

Nathanial, now 12, has to undergo regular, painful injections and has just also been diagnosed with lung disease. He gets heart palpitations and has had bouts of falling unconscious, Natasha said.

“He has a high pain threshold, so when he says he isn’t feeling well, that is the time for us to call an ambulance because he goes downhill quite quickly.”

Rheumatic fever can be a deadly autoimmune disease triggered by untreated step-throat or, as New Zealand researchers have recently discovered, untreated skin infections. It can be painful, cause neurological effects, and can develop into irreversible rheumatic heart disease, requiring long-term drug treatment and, on occasion, heart valve surgery.

It is a disease divided down racial lines in New Zealand – 93% of cases present in Pasifika and Māori children. Pasifika children are admitted to hospital for rheumatic fever 140 times more often than children of “European or other” ethnicities, while Māori children were admitted 50 times more often. On average 140 people die from rheumatic heart disease each year. Roughly 160 new cases are diagnosed a year but many cases go unreported.

There is no cure, but a government-funded project is under way in New Zealand to assess whether a vaccine is possible.

Like many children diagnosed with rheumatic fever, Nathanial is Māori (Ngāti Maniapoto). Less typically, his family did not face the socioeconomic and housing pressures of many of those who contract the disease; overwhelmingly, rheumatic fever is a disease of poverty.

New research published in the journal The Lancet has uncovered the strongest evidence yet that those who live in overcrowded housing develop skin infections and those who lack access to primary healthcare are more likely to develop acute rheumatic fever.

Lead author Prof Michael Baker, from the University of Otago, said it was the first time researchers had investigated risk factors for group Astreptococcal infections of the throat (strep throat) and skin (strep skin) that can cause rheumatic fever.

“It is now the most iniquitous disease probably in New Zealand,” Baker said.

“It has alarmed pediatricians and epidemiologists for decades that we still have this disease in these populations – and when you look at the literature to figure out what’s driving the risk factors, there is literally nothing there.”

Baker was also involved in a 2021 study that, for the first time, showed a link between skin infections and the disease. “[The studies] are all pointing in one direction and that is: skin infections … are likely to be the major driver of rheumatic fever and therefore need to be a major focus for preventing this disease.”

It was a major step forward to have identified a key pathway driving the risk of rheumatic fever, he said.

“That’s the real evidence we need to convince clinicians they should go all out on treating skin infections.”

More than 10% of New Zealand’s population lives in overcrowded housing. The reasons are many, but a runaway housing market, high rents, stagnant wages, a lack of social housing and increasing costs of living are the most significant factors. Meanwhile, the country has widespread problems with damp, moldy housing.

The study found that supplying suitable housing and minimizing household crowding could reduce the incidence of acute rheumatic fever.

Creating better living conditions must be the long-term priority, said Distinguished Prof Philippa Howden-Chapman, from the University of Otago, who sits on the board of Kainga Ora, the country’s public housing agency.

“We are undergoing the largest public housing build since the war really, certainly since the 1970s – the government is putting a lot of money in there and it seems to be starting to create a bit of equilibrium.

“But the lag always has tragic consequences, with people getting these infectious diseases.”

‘A national embarrassment’

The rates of hospital admissions for children with acute rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease have remained high over the past 20 years in New Zealand, despite efforts to reduce them, according to a report released in June by Cure Kids, the country’s largest charitable funder of medical and scientific research for children’s health.

“On many measures, New Zealand is currently one of the worst places in the developed world to be a child,” said judge Frances Eivers, the children’s commissioner, who provided commentary for the report.

“It’s a national embarrassment,” said Dr Ruth Gorinski, the chief executive of Heart Kids NZ, the only charity dedicated to supporting and advocating for children with heart problems, including those who have acquired rheumatic heart disease.

One of the key election promises of the prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, before being elected was reducing child poverty, and on entering government she made herself the minister for child poverty reduction. She has made good on some of those promises, but not all.

“It’s not going to be an effective investment of any amount of money that Jacinda pours into it until she looks at a collective approach,” Gorinski said. “It needs to be equity focused, family and whānau-centred, developmentally and culturally appropriate and have the voice of young people.”

Harland wants to see a national register established, so strep infections can be tracked, schools can be informed and communities at risk can be supported.

“Este [problem] has been around for years and years – and what has been done about it? Nothing that I can see.”

Categories
Sports

Tia-Clair Toomey wins sixth consecutive CrossFit Games as Ricky Garard claims third in men’s competition

Australian athlete Tia-Clair Toomey has become the most decorated athlete in CrossFit history, claiming the “Fittest On Earth” title for a sixth consecutive time.

The Queenslander won after five intensive days of competition in Madison, Wisconsin, which included endurance events, highly skilled gymnastics, and lifting implements weighing more than 200 kilograms — three times her own body weight.

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“I dedicate so much of my time to this sport,” she said.

“[It’s great] to be able to showcase the hard work, what my team and I have been able to do all season long, even years before.”

Claiming the 2022 title makes Toomey the most decorated CrossFit Games athlete in history — and she was also a runner-up in 2016 and 2017.

Toomey’s family from Central Queensland traveled to the United States to watch what is believed to be her swan song.

“If you’re wondering why Tia Toomey took her time and soaked it in, this is it,” commentator Sean Woodland said.

“She’s planning to retire after the CrossFit Games.”

In the men’s competition, Australian Ricky Garard finished third to complete his redemption story, having been banned from CrossFit in 2017 for testing positive for performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs).

“It’s taken a lot of hard work to get back here, to be at this level,” he told ABC Sport.

“[I’m] super stoked with my resilience and patience to stick it out.”

The former NRL U20s player from Mittagong in New South Wales tested positive for PEDs after finishing third at the 2017 CrossFit Games, denying another athlete the privilege of standing on the podium.

“It’s a redemption story for me to prove to myself that what happened last time didn’t mean anything and was never going to change the outcome,” Garard said.

After serving out the ban issued by CrossFit, Garard returned to the competition this year and CrossFit fans welcomed him with open arms.

A man carries a heavy looking bag in front of him.
Ricky Garard competing during the 2022 CrossFit Games. Garard came third after being banned from the sport in 2017. (Enrique Villasenor)

“The fans have been great out there, a lot more than I thought, to be honest. It’s awesome,” he said.

“And I’m really having a great time out there, and five years’ worth of energy is coming out in every event.

“I’ve waited a long time for this and it’s finally nice to do a workout that actually means something, not just in the gym.”

Many athletes that competed alongside Garard in 2017 have also been his competitors this year in Madison.

He said they had been supportive of his return.

“We’re all competitors and there is going to be a lot of tensions between us,” he said.

“We’re all sharks, we smell blood in the water and we’re going to take our opportunities, so it’s always pretty intense before the workout, but after I feel like we all relax and have a bit of laughter and banter and chat .”

What are the CrossFit Games?

The CrossFit Games are a grueling test of strength, skill and stamina where even qualifying to compete is a milestone.

A total of 293,805 athletes registered to compete in the worldwide open, with the top 10 per cent worldwide competing in the quarterfinals stage, before semifinals events around the world helped narrow the field to just 40 elite men and women.

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Categories
Australia

Police search for two men on the run after breaking out of Malmsbury Youth Justice Center

Two young men are on the run after breaking out of the Malmsbury Youth Justice Centre, north-west of Melbourne.

Police are asking the public for assistance in finding 22-year-old Shamus Touhy and 19-year-old Matthew Piscopo.

They broke out of the Mollison Street youth justice facility at around 11:44pm on Saturday.

Malmsbury staff told the ABC the men escaped through the roof and workers did not realize they were missing until Sunday morning.

Police said the men were known to frequent the Ballarat area.

Detective Inspector Juliann Goldrick said police were searching for the men and residents should not approach them.

“These men are not believed to be violent, however members of the public are advised not to approach either,” Ms Goldrick said.

Touhy has red hair and Piscopo has a long tattoo of a rose on his left hand.

Police are urging anyone with information to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

The breakout comes after a string of violent attacks and ongoing concerns about safety in the troubled youth justice centre.

Head counts may have been missed

A daily briefing report seen by the ABC confirmed staff did not discover the escape until the following morning.

“Matthew Piscopo and Shamus Touhy breached the roof space from their bedrooms in the admissions unit and exited via a plant room door,” it stated.

“The young men exited the precinct and this was discovered during the morning unlock.”

Sign outside the Malmsbury Youth Justice Center in central Victoria.
The prison sent an email to staff reminding them to properly conduct head counts.(abcnews)

Following the breakout, the executive director of youth justice operations sent out an email to staff about the importance of nightly headcounts.

“During the night, checks need to be visual and ensure the young person is present in their room,” the email said.

“Please note that strict adherence to the client accounts and observations is expected by all staff.

“If circumstances arise that disrupt staff ability to adhere to these requirements … the unit supervisor, unit manager/night manager must work with staff to address the issue in the most immediate and safest way possible.”

Some staff who received this email said the nightly headcount was likely not conducted properly.

They said the admissions unit where this occurred had since been closed.

A spokesperson for the Department of Justice and Community Safety said how the men escaped from the facility was being reviewed.

“Any escape is taken very seriously, and the safety of the community is of paramount concern,” they said.

“The young people are not considered dangerous.”

Staff levels ‘extremely dangerous’

The ABC has confirmed that youth justice staff have repeatedly told center management in recent weeks that staffing levels were “extremely dangerous.”

The ABC understands staff were left alone in secure units with young people out of their cells, despite recent mandated supervision ratios requiring one staff member to three young people.

In the past six weeks, staff have reported being assaulted, threatened, spat on, and having suspected urine thrown at them. One young man threw hot water and honey at another inmate which landed on the side of a staff member’s face.

Another staff member witnessed a young person being seriously assaulted by two young men who stomped on him and kicked him in the head while he was on the ground.

Youth justice sources told the ABC staff morale was low, and workers felt their safety concerns were going unheard.

There was a mass breakout from Malmsbury in 2017, but police captured all 15 young people.

Michele Berry, who worked at the Malmsbury Youth Justice Center for 25 years, witnessed the 2017 riots and escapes.

Michele Berry sits on a chair and leans on the back while looking away from the camera.
Michele Berry said she was unsurprised people were breaking out of Malmsbury again.(ABC News: Michael Barnet)

She was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and was paid out hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Department of Justice because she was declared unfit to work.

She said she was unsurprised by the latest escape.

“It was like… not again,” she told ABC Radio Melbourne.

“The admissions unit is a pretty secure unit, except for the ceiling. They’re able to get through the plaster and then through the roof.

“They make up their beds to make out that they’re asleep and then the officers tick that they’re present inside the unit.”

She said when she worked there, the number of staff supervising young people at night was too low.

“We’re not staffing it correctly,” she said.

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Categories
US

More Residents Ordered to Evacuate Due to Six Rivers Lightning Complex Surrounding Willow Creek; Fire Remains Uncontained | Lost Coast Outpost

The Six Rivers Lightning Complex. | US Forest Service

Two additional areas have been ordered to evacuate in response to the Six Rivers Lightning Complex — a grouping of eight wildfires surrounding the Willow Creek area.

Zones added to the mandatory evacuation list:

HUM-E056

  • North Bigfoot Scenic Byway, River Bend Road, Peach Tree Lane, Patterson Road
  • South of Bigfoot Scenic Byway, Horse Linto Creek Road
  • East of Orchard Lane
  • West of Horse Linto Creek Road

HUM-E057

  • North of Seeley Mc Intosh Road
  • South of Patterson Road
  • East of River Bend Road, Patterson Road
  • West of Moonset Lane


The Six Rivers Lightning Complex fires surrounding Willow Creek. | US Forest Service

An evacuation center has been set up in Willow Creek at Trinity Valley Elementary School at 730 Highway 96.

As of this morning, the size of the complex was reported to be 1,101 acres in size and 0 percent contained.

“Warm temperatures today could contribute to more extreme fire behavior,” the fire’s incident management team stated. “Firefighters will continue to provide protection for structures, infrastructure, and wildlife habitat.”

There is concern that the Six Rivers Lightning Complex could affect water quality in Humboldt County’s rivers, potentially causing a fish kill in the South Fork of the Trinity River. The McKinney Fire burning in Siskiyou County recently caused a large die-off in the Klamath River, impacting upcoming tribal ceremonies.

All areas under mandatory evacuation:

HUM-E077-C

  • North of Forest Route 5n32
  • South of Friday Ridge Road
  • South Fork Road
  • East of Forest Route 5n37
  • West of South Fork Road, Carpenter Road

HUM-E061

  • North of Forest Route 7n15
  • South of Seeley McIntosh Road
  • East of Seeley McIntosh Road, Campbell Ridge Road
  • West of Forest Route 7n15

HUM-E058

  • North of Forest Route 7n15
  • South of Horse Linto Creek Road
  • East of Peach Tree Lane WEST OF Coon Creek Rd, Forest Route 7n15


Areas under evacuation warning:

HUM-E063

  • North of Forest Route 6n39, Friday Ridge Road
  • South of Forest Rt 6n33
  • East of Friday Ridge Road
  • West of Friday Ridge Road, Riteway Lane
    HUM-E064
  • North of Trinity Highway, Wood Lane, Friday Ridge Road
  • South of Campbell Ridge Road, Triple R Lane, Butterfly Creek Road, Kimberly Drive, Trinity Highway
  • East of Trinity Highway
  • West of Wood Lane, Campbell Ridge Road

HUM-E077-B

  • North of Friday Ridge Road, Forest Route 5n01
  • South of Friday Ridge Road
  • East of 5n10, 5n09, 5n27
  • West of South Fork Road, Forest Route 5n42

“If you are under an evacuation warning, be ready and don’t wait until the last minute to leave,” the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office has stated.

Evacuation orders have also been issued in Trinity County for Salyer Heights, Salyer Loop to the bridge at Highway 299, and Campbell Ridge Road.

Additional ground and air firefighting teams have been ordered, and are currently traveling to the fire’s location for deployment.

Categories
Technology

Intel loses first AIB, won’t make Arc GPUs over ‘quality concerns’

We’ve been hearing all sorts of bad news about Intel’s new Arc GPUs where I’ve been reporting on news that Intel would outright cancel their Arc GPUs altogether over how bad it has gotten, and now Intel has reportedly lost their first AIB.

Intel loses first AIB, won't make Arc GPUs over 'quality concerns' 01 |  TweakTown.com

The first AIB to stop production of custom Intel Arc GPUs has reportedly made history, becoming the first AIB to pull out of Intel’s new Arc GPUs before they even really began. The news is coming from Igor Wallossek at Igor’s Lab, who reports that the first of the big board partners have “stopped the production of Intel cards completely” which his sources say are “due to quality concerns”.

Igor reports: “At least one of the big board partners has even stopped the production of Intel cards completely (“due to quality concerns”), as I could find out yesterday and today. […] Other board partners have at least already completely capped their marketing activities, and it does not currently look as if there will be any real launch offensives from the board partners in the time window I mentioned between August 5, 2022 and September 29, 2022. What will really arrive on the market (as retail) will be seen in the next few weeks. From the customer’s point of view, I can only hope for the best, I alone lack faith“.

So all that “negativity” that I’ve been accused of, which is me just doing my job: reporting the news, the rumours, and everything in between… seems to be true. Intel has been a mess for a while now, with miscommunication about its Arc GPUs reportedly happening both inside, and outside of the company. Intel is telling some of its departments one thing while having a different external message.

We might see this particular AIB partner spool up the production of Intel Arc GPUs in the future, but I’m sure they’ll be wanting to wait to see how Intel’s new Arc GPUs go in the coming 6-18 months. Game compatibility, driver issues, hardware and software issues, and a million other things that I’m sure AIBs are scared of… warranties and returns will happen.

AIBs will take a huge hit when that happens, and I’m sure Intel isn’t worried about its brand (it’s big enough, they’ll survive… but the image of their GPU marketing will be almost beyond destroyed, all credibility gone) but it’ll cost them in the end in terms of consumer confidence, market confidence, and I’m sure many more ways that the company will experience throughout the end of this year and into 2023.

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Categories
Entertainment

Moon Knight Season 2 Receives Discouraging Update From Producer

Moon Knight had a stellar first season on Disney+. The Oscar Isaac-led MCU series crafted a unique standalone story that tackled mental health while also introducing another powerful hero. After the show’s incredible run, fans were curious if Moon Knight would receive a sophomore run, similar to Tom Hiddleston’s Loki series.

While promoting the show’s finale, eagle-eyed fans noticed that Marvel Studios’ official Twitter account noted the sixth episode as the “season finale” rather than a “series finale,” teasing fans that Season 2 could be in the works. In addition, the official Twitter account of Disney+ Hotstar India also posted a tweet that could hint at the possibility of seeing the show’s second season by saying:

“Can’t decide what’s harder. Dealing with heat or waiting for the 2nd season of #MoonKnight”

Now, an important update about Season 2 has emerged straight from the show’s director.

Will Moon Knight Season 2 Happen?

Moon Knight Season 2
Marvel

In a previously-released TikTok video, Moon Knight director and executive producer Mohamed Diab and Oscar Isaac teased a potential Season 2 announcement for the MCU series.

However, when responding to a fan on Twitter, Diab clarified that there are currently no discussions about the MCU future of the titular hero, indicating that no movement has been made on a second season:

“There is no talk about a future for the character yet but this is soo valid.”

The user’s tweet also mentioned that Moon Knight‘s creatives should reach out to Jewish creators to improve the Jewish representation in the show’s future, which Diab fully agreed with in his “this is soo valid” response.

Where Will Moon Knight Show Up Next?

Mohamed Diab’s latest comment could suggest that the team has yet to go back to the drawing board to address where Moon Knight is headed. Still, Marvel Studios could be keeping the plans for the character under wraps before revealing them to those heavily involved with the first season.

Given the show’s success combined with the cliffhanger ending of Season 1, there’s a strong chance that Moon Knight will return to continue telling the story of Oscar Isaac’s intriguing MCU hero. This is on top of the growing interest from the show’s cast and crew.

Marvel Studios creative and Moon Knight executive producer Grant Curtis previously emphasized his hopes to have the full “amazing cast” join him in a potential Season 2 or any other future related projects.

The show’s head writer Jeremy Slater already teased that the potential of answering the question of whether Jake Lockley is an ally or an enemy to Marc Spector and Steven Grant in Season 2 could be exciting to explore, meaning that a storyline is already in place if Marvel you decide to greenlight a sophomore run.

If Moon Knight is not renewed, there are still more ways for the character to return in other projects, such as Blade and Marvel Studios’ Halloween special. The character could also make the jump to the big screen in his own solo movie. Considering the character’s interesting backstory and skill set, Moon Knight could be utilized in many different projects down the line.

Moon Knight is streaming on Disney+.

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Categories
Sports

Nick Kyrgios wins Citi Open title in Washington, beats Yoshihito Nishioka in tennis final

Nick Kyrgios has won his first singles title since 2019, beating Yoshihito Nishioka in the final of the Citi Open in Washington.

Kyrgios was clinical as he charged to a 6-4 6-3 victory on Monday morning (AEST). It’s his seventh career title and first singles triumph since he held the trophy aloft at this same tournament three years ago.

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The Australian star appeared overcome with emotion as he slumped to his back on the baseline after sealing victory.

He also needed another moment as he sunk to his haunches to soak up his victory.

Speaking after the match, Kyrgios said the emotion came out of the “dark places” he’s had to go through in his tennis career.

“It was emotional for me to see where I was last year to now, it’s an incredible transformation,” Kyrgios said. “I just came out with great energy because I knew I had the experience on my side today.

“I love this court, I played so many good matches here. I’m just really happy with myself.

“I’ve been in some really dark places and just to be able to turn it around…

“There’s so many people who have helped me get there but myself, I’ve shown some serious strength to just continue and just persevere and get through those really tough times and still be able to perform in tournaments like this one.”

Last year, Kyrgios was dumped out in the first round of the Citi Open by Mackenzie McDonald and the Aussie said he had lost his competitive edge.

“I know that I’m going to be dealing with a lot of s**t now on social media. Like, my head’s in the shed, to be honest,” he said. “I don’t know, I didn’t play great.”

Kyrgios has battled depression in the past, admitting after his Australian Open doubles triumph with Thanasi Kokkinakis that he had self-harmed.

The Canberran revealed he had battled “suicidal thoughts” as well as feeling “lonely, depressed, negative, abusing alcohol, drugs, pushed away family & friends”.

A year on from his 2021 Citi Open admission, Kyrgios is playing some of the best tennis of his career and is fresh off his first grand slam final at Wimbledon

He’s also shared marriage and family plans with his partner Costen Hatzi.

Kyrgios now has a 4-0 record against Nishioka and had nothing but compliments for his vanquished rival.

“He’s a tricky opponent and he deserves every minute of celebrating getting into his first 500 final,” Kyrgios said.

“That was insane, the players he beat to get there were not easy at all, so I have to give him high praise.”

Later, Kyrgios joked: “We’ve known each other since 14 and you’ve grown into being a hell of a player so I hope you continue to play and achieve many more finals — and let’s keep the record the same.”

Read related topics:Nick Kyrgios

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Categories
Australia

former deputy premier to appear as investigation continues

When he appears before the upper house inquiry for the first time today, former deputy premier John Barilaro will be questioned on a lot of the evidence that the parliament has heard so far.

There’s a lot of material to go through – we have heard testimony from eight witnesses during five days of hearings spread over several weeks.

If you need a refresher on the evidence to date, this is what we’ve learned:

Investment NSW boss Amy Brown (first appearance, June 29)
Brown said former Investment NSW deputy secretary Jenny West was “verbally offered the role” on August 12 last year. Then-NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian signed a briefing note on that date noting “a successful candidate … has been identified” for the New York posting. That candidate was West. However, Brown was directed by the government to cease the recruitment due to a change in policy. That instruction was received on about September 27 and Brown said it “would have come through” the office of the responsible minister, which was John Barilaro. Brown said she officially told West on October 1 that her appointment would not proceed.

Former bureaucrat Jenny West (July 11)
West said that Brown told her on October 14 that the role would in fact “be a present for someone.” (Brown later denied this.) West was advised in November that her role as deputy secretary at Investment NSW had been terminated. She received 38 weeks’ pay as a redundancy entitlement.

Former public servant Jenny West at the hearing last month.

Former public servant Jenny West at the hearing last month.Credit:Nick Moir

Investment NSW’s former senior lawyer Chris Carr (July 18)
Carr rejected claims Jenny West was ever formally offered a US trade role as he insisted he only played a “limited” role in giving advice. Carr said Amy Brown or her de ella chief of staff asked him last September to prepare advice on whether the appointment of commissioners could be converted from public service to ministerial decisions-a request of John Barilaro.

John Barilaro’s former senior adviser Joseph Brayford (July 18, transcript only)
Brayford’s evidence indicated that the cabinet proposal to give government ministers the power to appoint trade commissioner roles instead of the public service was fast-tracked in the weeks before Barilaro resigned from parliament. Brayford said the then-deputy premier requested the change by sending him a rare text message that asked for a cabinet minute to be prepared “ASAP” in September last year. Barilaro’s proposal went through to cabinet within about 10 days – whereas it usually takes weeks – and arrived a week before his resignation from parliament.

John Barilaro’s former chief of staff, Mark Connell (written statement only)
Connell claimed Barilaro told him in April 2019 that he would create a position in New York to ensure he had a job to go after he left politics. His statement from him said:
“I have [Barilaro] said, ‘I’ve just come from a meeting with Dom and Stuart regarding trade and we’re going to bring back the Agent General in London as well as a bunch of other postings around the world … He then stated, ‘This is it; this is the job for when I get the f— out of this place’. I responded to Mr Barilaro and stated, ‘but John, the Agent General role will be filled well before you retire from this place’.” Connell claimed Barilaro then told him: “I don’t want to go to London, f— that, I’m off to New York … I’ll get them to put one in New York, that’s where I’ m off too [sic].“
Barilaro has rejected the claims and called them “fictitious”.

Investment NSW boss Amy Brown (second appearance, August 3)
Brown said she feared controversy would follow John Barilaro’s appointment and said that Trade Minister Stuart Ayres did not keep himself at arm’s length from the process. She defended the withdrawal of an earlier offer made to bureaucrat Jenny West, saying it was related to West’s performance of her. In the second recruitment round, Brown said a hiring firm sent her a panel report that compared Barilaro and a top-ranked female candidate, Kimberley Cole. Brown said she believed the report was full of errors and sought to change the report and elevate Barilaro’s ranking of him.

Department secretary Amy Brown said she was nervous about the appointment of John Barilaro to the trade role given his history with the government.

Department secretary Amy Brown said she was nervous about the appointment of John Barilaro to the trade role given his history with the government.Credit:Kate Geraghty

Barilaro’s former chief of staff Siobhan Hamblin (August 5)
Hamblin said Barilaro never raised a personal interest in the trade roles but first asked her about the appointment process, and whether it could be changed, in June last year. She also said she urged the former deputy premier not to resign amid the COVID crisis last October, but he proceeded to step down days after then-Premier Gladys Berejiklian. She could not explain why he was seeking an urgent cabinet minute around changing the trade appointments.

Investment NSW managing director Kylie Bell (August 5)
Bell told Barilaro he got the job via text on May 23. She felt the recruitment firm held “a bit of unconscious bias” against him in the recruitment process and said he would have been able to “get things happening” in New York. While Bell received a glowing reference for the other candidate, Kimberley Cole, she said Cole did not have enough experience in the US market or in NSW and was not best-suited for the New York role.

Public Service Commissioner Kathrina It (August 5)
Lo said both herself and independent panel member Warwick Smith would not have endorsed the final panel selection report that endorsed John Barilaro if they knew the information they knew now. Lo said she was concerned by “the degree of ministerial involvement, including input into shortlisting and provision of an informal reference”, as well as the treatment of the third-ranked candidate. She said she felt she may have been used as political cover by the hiring firm or department secretary Amy Brown.

Public Sector Commissioner Kathrina Lo.

Public Sector Commissioner Kathrina Lo.Credit:Kate Geraghty