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FIFA to start Men’s World Cup early to give host nation Qatar a prime-time kick-off

FIFA has made a controversial decision to start the Men’s World Cup a day earlier than planned to give the host nation, Qatar, a prime-time kick-off.

Qatar will now play Ecuador on November 20, 24 hours earlier than initially planned.

While the host nation has played the first match of the World Cup since 2006, it’s still unclear why Qatar’s first game was not originally scheduled as the tournament opener.

From Qatar’s successful 2010 bid to hold the World Cup to the month-long tournament, there was already plenty of controversy around this year’s event.

What changes have been made?

  • Qatar will play Ecuador on November 20, at 7pm local time (2am AEST, 3am AEDT)
  • The Netherlands and Senegal had been scheduled to play the first game, on Monday, November 21. This match now moves to the 7pm Monday slot vacated by Qatar vs Ecuador.

‘A huge problem’

Sponsors could have their plans disrupted, according to Ricardo Fort, a former marketing executive with World Cup top-tier backers Coca-Cola and Visa, who described the late date change as “a huge problem”.

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“[The sponsors] invited and confirmed hospitality guests, booked flights and hotels, and contracted with all the necessary logistics. Imagine changing it all? “Fort wrote on his Twitter account of him.

Qatar’s controversial winning bid

The Persian Gulf nation was plagued by corruption and bribery allegations when it won the right to host the event in 2010.

In the decade since, Qatar has spent billions building seven stadiums and vast infrastructure to host the event.

Human rights groups have highlighted the slum living conditions and even deaths of migrant workers during the construction of stadiums.

Last year, it was reported that more than 6,500 migrant workers had died in Qatar since it won the rights to host the World Cup.

Homosexuality is illegal in Qatar. A report by Norwegian Broadcaster showed three of the 69 hotels on FIFA’s official list of recommended accommodations would deny entry to same-sex couples, despite FIFA promises of delivering an inclusive experience that is welcoming and safe to all.

Isn’t the world cup in June-July?

yeah. Qatar committed to stay on soccer’s normal calendar and promised innovative stadium-cooling technology when it bid for hosting rights.

Temperatures routinely hit 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) in the June-July period in Qatar.

However, in 2015, FIFA eventually concluded that a June World Cup in scorching temperatures might not wise for players or fans.

This meant the league games had to change too

So, to escape the desert heat, the tournament was moved into the cooler months of November and December, ultimately screwing up the global football calendar for leagues everywhere.

When FIFA accepted the inevitable need to delay until Qatar’s cooler months, a tough negotiation with European leagues and clubs led to an agreement for a shorter, 28-day program to minimize disruption for domestic soccer.

European leagues — such as England’s Premier League, Germany’s Bundesliga and Italy’s Serie A — will play until the weekend of November 12-13, just seven days before the new opening game date.

However, it’s not just European competitions that are pausing. The A-Leagues in Australia will also be on hiatus during the World Cup

World Cup stadium stands could be alcohol-free

Qatar’s World Cup stadium stands are set to be alcohol-free, with beer sales outside arenas only allowed before and after some matches.

An estimated 1.2 million soccer fans — many of whom are used to drinking beer without limits on match day — are expected to attend the November tournament.

While public drinking is illegal in Qatar, World Cup organizers plan to create specific “zones” and curfews for traveling fans.

When will Australia play in the World Cup?

The Socceroos’ first match will be against France on Wednesday, November 23.

The Men’s World Cup opening game on Sunday evening should play well with viewers in Asia and Europe time zones.

While the final Men’s World Cup game is scheduled on Sunday December 18.

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CyclingTips bids farewell to founder Wade Wallace

You might have heard the news already. Almost 14 years after he first created CyclingTips, our founder, Wade Wallace, is leaving.

While Wade is playing down the significance of his departure and what it will mean for CyclingTips, this is a seismic occasion for the site and for all of us that work here. We hope you’ll indulge us for a few moments as we reflect on Wade’s legacy of him.

For those that aren’t familiar with CyclingTips’s origin story here’s the abridged version. After moving from Canada to Australia for an engineering job back in the 2000s, Wade created a blog as a way of sharing all the riding knowledge he’d picked up over the years. He ran that CyclingTips blog from his kitchen table from September 2008 through to early 2013, writing almost all of the content himself, while also working to build the business.

For those of us who have been fans of CyclingTips since the beginning, those early days are some of the most memorable in the site’s history. Every day we hung out for Wade’s short but insightful riding tips (here’s the very first post he wrote), or to follow along with his latest cycling adventure, or to be educated or inspired by the guest authors he pulled into the fold (one such post played a formative role in the creation of Everesting).

In early 2013, Wade took the plunge and moved CyclingTips from his kitchen table to a small one-room office in inner-eastern Melbourne. He started hiring his first employees from him, and before too long that small office was too small for the whole team.

As CyclingTips continued to grow and started bringing in staff from around the world, Wade continued to forge an ambitious path forward for the site, helping us to adapt to the changing media landscape along the way. He invested heavily in greater coverage of women’s cycling (first through Ella CyclingTips, which then morphed into increased coverage of women’s cycling under the CyclingTips banner), and guided us through several periods of change as we were acquired by BikeExchange, and then Pinkbike, and more recently, Outside.

In concert with Andy van Bergen, Wade built the membership program we now know and love as VeloClub, which has helped the site pivot away from an exclusively advertiser-funded model, to a membership-backed site, ensuring the longevity of everything we do.

It’s been years now since Wade wrote for CyclingTips on a regular basis. And while Caley Fretz leads our editorial efforts today (and Neal Rogers did before him), Wade’s always been there in the background, making little tweaks here and there to ensure we’re always on the right path. To ensure CyclingTips is being the best it can be.

CyclingTips has clearly evolved a lot since 2008. We don’t write nearly as many tips as Wade once did, we focus a lot more on professional racing than Wade ever did, and these days CyclingTips is much more than a one-person blog. But those early articles from Wade, written for a primarily Melbourne-based audience, set the tone for what CyclingTips would become.

At the heart of it all, underpinning everything, is a love and passion for our great sport. It was there when Wade first started blogging back in 2008, and it’s still here today, guiding everything we do. There’s a reason our tagline is “The Beauty of Cycling”.

In the end, it’s pretty simple: CyclingTips wouldn’t exist were it not for Wade. But it’s also hard to overstate the impact he’s had since, both on the site itself and for all of us that have worked with and for him. In truth, the words here do little to convey the magnitude of the role he’s played and what his departure from him will mean to us all.

We’ll miss his positive energy, his vision for a better future, and his ever-supportive and encouraging nature.

So, Wade, thank you for everything you’ve done for the CyclingTips family, for the site, and for everyone that’s read CyclingTips at one time or another. All the time, energy, and care you’ve put in are appreciated more than you know.

We can’t wait to see what you get up to next.

The CyclingTips team

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South Sydney Rabbitohs, Latrell Mitchell, Matty Johns, premiership race, rugby league, New South Wales, Parramatta Eels, top four race

Matty Johns believes that South Sydney can “come from nowhere” to win the NRL premiership this season, but only if they address a potentially decisive part of their game.

South Sydney can move up to fifth on the ladder if they beat Parramatta in a crunch clash at CommBank Stadium on Friday night.

Both teams will be looking to keep their top four hopes alive with a win in the blockbuster, while the loser could risk dropping down the ladder.

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The Rabbitohs began their impressive run of form against Parramatta early last month, recording the first of four consecutive wins.

After wins over the struggling Newcastle Knights and Bulldogs, Souths made a statement with a 12-point win over the Melbourne Storm.

While they lost in golden point the week after against the Sharks, they bounced back with an emphatic win over the Warriors on the Sunshine Coast.

But not everyone is sold on their recent successes, with Matty Johns comparing the team to a “nice Sunday drive.”

“South Sydney, their recent performances remind me of someone taking a nice Sunday drive, and I mean that both in praise and criticism,” Johns said on SEN’s Morning Glory.

“Watching South Sydney, and I think it’s a bad practice, it’s something they’ve got to be really careful of, they’re lifting the intensity only when they think they need to.

“That’s a concern because intensity and focus and poise under pressure is not something you just reach for out of the kit bag and say ‘alright we’re gonna do it now’.

“Last week I was expecting a real statement game against the Warriors, and they delivered in the first-half. Their intent and their blueprint (on) how they played their best football was the evidence.

Rabbitohs star Latrell Mitchell has been in some sensational form for the Rabbitohs since returning from injury. (Photo by Ashley Feder/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

“But the second-half there was just no intensity in the contest… and I’m probably knit-picking a little bit because I do like to see coaches showing a range of emotions, but in that second-half when they were really wiping the floor with the Warriors, whenever they cut up to the coaches box the whole coaching staff were really pissing themselves laughing.

“That’s almost a little bit symbolic of where Souths are. It’s got to start tonight, they’ve got to start to lift and they’ve got to start to play with finals intensity football.”

Latrell Mitchell has been in sensational form for the Rabbitohs, after returning from an almost three month absence against the Eels.

Mitchell has had nine try assists since returning just over one month ago, as well as 33 tackle breaks and four tries.

While the Rabbitohs have largely reaped the rewards since he returned, although Johns issued the team with a warning.

“Latrell plays his best football when he’s relaxed. He’s come back from the States really relaxed, and his touch from him, the way he’s playing is just superb, but it does n’t mean that the rest of the side play their best relaxed, ”he added.

“At the moment there’s a reliance on ‘Trell will get it done’. When you’ve got players like Latrell Mitchell in your football side, they are the icing on the cake. They’re the one who can actually get it done for you.

“But you can’t rely on them. Even with Andrew Johns in our side, our forwards were tearing heads off, hitting the line that hard… If suddenly we went out there and say ‘Joey will get us home’, it just doesn’t happen.”

Storm sizzle poor Panthers | 02:01

Despite a tough run home, in which they play the Eels, Panthers, Cowboys and Roosters, Johns believes they can go all the way.

“The way they’re playing, that relaxed style, and the fact they’re playing within themselves and winning, well done to you boys. But they’re in a position, in my opinion, they can win this competition.

“They can come from nowhere and win this competition but they will not win it with the way they’re playing at the moment.

“It’s nothing about talent or anything like that, they’ve just got to develop, in the next few weeks, a really hard edge, and tonight’s a perfect opportunity.”

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Oscar Piastri contract, latest, news, Alpine boss Otmar Szafnauer, Fernando Alonso leaves Alpine, McLaren, Flavio Briatore, Mark Webber

An infamous F1 villain has been called out over possible collusion in the ongoing Oscar Piastri contract saga at Alpine.

Piastri’s future is up in the air after Fernando Alonso declared he would be leaving Alpine for Aston Martin next season. Alpine quickly announced that their long-time junior prospect Piastri would replace Alonso for 2023 – only for Piastri to reject their statement about him in a public bombshell.

Alpine believe their contract with Piastri will force him to race for them next year, though the young Aussie has also signed a deal to replace Daniel Ricciardo McLaren next season.

F1’s Contract Recognition Board this week reportedly found both Piastri’s Alpine and McLaren contracts are valid, according to Auto Hebdo of France.

Alpine is now threatening to take Piastri and McLaren to court to seek compensation for their huge investment in Piastri’s years of training – and Alpine team boss Otmar Szafnauer’s bold claims didn’t stop there.

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‘Expected more loyalty… it’s about integrity’: Alpine boss shreds Piastri in brutal spray

Fernando Alonso (l) and Nelson Piquet Jr (r) with team boss Flavio Briatore (c) ahead of the 2008 F1 season… a year that would end in dramatic controversy.
Fernando Alonso (l) and Nelson Piquet Jr (r) with team boss Flavio Briatore (c) ahead of the 2008 F1 season… a year that would end in dramatic controversy.Source: News Limited

“Going to the High Court is over 90 per cent certain that’s what we’ll do,” Szafnauer told Reuters.

“If the CRB (Contract Recognition Board) says ‘Your license is only valid at Alpine’, and then he (Piastri) says ‘That’s great, but I’m never driving for them, I’ll just sit out a year’, then you’ve got to go to the High Court for compensation.”

The Alpine boss also hinted at potential collusion between Piastri’s manager Mark Webber, Alonso and his manager Flavio Briatore.

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Daniel Ricciardo seeking eye-watering payout as ugly McLaren exit nears

Briatore is one of the most controversial figures in F1, due to his renegade management of the Enstone squad now known as Alpine, having spent years overseeing the team in its former guises as Benetton and Renault. He also managed Mark Webber at one point and remains close to his former charge from him, while he continues to manage Alonso.

“Look, I have no record of it, but this is Formula 1 and maybe in a couple of years someone says that they have evidence of shared information, I would not be surprised,” Szafnauer said.

“I always tell everyone that in Formula 1 you have to act as if everyone knows everything. That there are no secrets in these things. When you ask someone not to say anything, they act like everyone knows.

“That’s how I’ve run my business in Formula 1 for 25 years. And if this (information sharing) has happened, you should not be surprised.”

Mark Webber and his then-manager Flavio Briatore at the Australian GP in 2007.Source: News Corp Australia

Christian Danner, a German F1 driver from the late-1980s who is now a pundit in his native country, also declared Piastri’s actions bear Briatore’s trademark.

“It’s classic Flavio. There was certainly a (Alpine) contract for Piastri that Flavio has skimmed over … there was definitely a clause,” Danner told Motorsport Magazine.

“When he believes in someone, he has the foresight to plan in a positive sense – and not just ruthlessly, which is logically the case in this business.

“I could imagine Piastri (using Briatore) to free himself from Alpine’s grip, so that he can hopefully drive for McLaren for the next two years and then be free for a big deal.

“That definitely has Briatore’s signature.

“It can all go wrong, of course, but if it works out, then he (Briatore) has done everything right.”

Ricciardo set to be replaced by Piastri | 00:32

72-year-old Briatore’s Renault team was charged with race fixing in 2008 at the Singapore Grand Prix, after their driver Nelson Piquet Jr. claimed he had been ordered to deliberately crash his car. Teammate Fernando Alonso had just pitted, and the resulting safety car helped him go on to win the race.

Briatore and Renault engineering chief Pat Symonds were both indefinitely banned from all elite motorsport categories before a French court later overruled the ruling.

It wasn’t the only Briatore scandal, with his Benetton team in 1991 remarkably sacking driver Roberto Moreno in order to sign Michael Schumacher after his debut race.

Moreno successfully appealed to a court – which found his contract was valid – but was paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to leave the team and allow Schumacher to join.

The young Schumacher would subsequently win his maiden title at the Benetton franchise.

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Deputy shared graphic photos of dead NBA star at bar

The Angels: A Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department deputy betrayed the public trust when he shared pictures of the remains of Kobe Bryant with a bartender, a witness told a jury at a trial over the leaking of photos of the basketball star.

Rafael Mendez jnr was a customer in the Norwalk, California, bar two days after the helicopter crash that killed Bryant, his daughter and seven others. He told the jury he was disgusted when the bartender described the photos the deputy had shown him a few moments earlier, and said he filed a complaint to the Sheriff’s Department from the driveway of his home.

Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna were among nine people who died in the crash.

Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna were among nine people who died in the crash.Credit:Getty Images

“I felt I needed to do the right thing and let the Sheriff’s Department know what happened,” Mendez testified. “I was in disbelief of everything that I heard and I was angry.”

Bryant’s widow Vanessa and Orange County financial adviser Christopher Chester, whose wife and daughter were among those killed in the crash, are suing Los Angeles County for negligence and invasion of privacy. They’re seeking unspecified damages.

“Sheriff’s Department personnel abused their access to the crash site by taking and sharing gratuitous photos of the dead children, parents, and coaches,” Bryant said in her amended complaint, filed in March last year, in the Los Angeles federal court.

Vanessa Bryant posted this family portrait to Instagram to thank “the millions of people who've shown support and love during this horrific time” after the death of her husband, Kobe Bryant and their 13-year-old daughter Gianna.

Vanessa Bryant posted this family portrait to Instagram to thank “the millions of people who’ve shown support and love during this horrific time” after the death of her husband, Kobe Bryant and their 13-year-old daughter Gianna. Credit:Instagram

The bartender, Victor Gutierrez, testified he didn’t recall much of the incident. He denied laughing with the deputy over the photos of the dismembered bodies, although the jury was shown a silent video from the bar in which the two men were gesticulating and laughing.

“Only a psycho would laugh” at such pictures, Gutierrez said.

In the middle of the bartender’s testimony, Vanessa Bryant broke down crying and was escorted out of the courtroom by her lawyer. She didn’t return.

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AFLNews2022 | Callum Ah Chee cops racist online abuse, Brisbane Lions complaint

Lions star Callum Ah Chee has made an embattled plea after copping racist abuse online following Patrick Cripps’ acquittal for their clash on Sunday afternoon.

Ah Chee was convicted in the violent hit from the Carlton skipper in the second quarter of the Lions’ win over the Blues. The AFL’s concussion protocols had already ruled him out of Friday’s clash against St Kilda.

On Thursday night, Cripps was cleared in a marathon appeals hearing of a two-game rough conduct charge for the hit – a decision Kangaroos great David King labeled “staggering”.

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In posting the screenshots of the abuse to his account on Friday morning, Ah Chee said the comments were “not something you want to wake up to in the morning.”

“How can this still keep happening? Why can’t my brothers and I just play the game we love without having to worry about shit like this,” he said.

“If my son grows up playing the game, I hope he doesn’t have to deal with this hate.

“It hurts and I’m sick to death of seeing it.”

The Lions have also reported the abuse to the AFL’s integrity unit. In their own statement, the Lions said they “strongly condemned” the comments.

“It’s disgusting behavior and we must, and we will, continue to call it out. There is no place for racism in sport, or in society full stop,” the statement read.

“The Brisbane Lions celebrate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture and the incredible contribution Indigenous players have made to our club and to our great game.

“It’s disappointing to have to do so, but in moments like this we take the approach as a footy club to urge people to educate themselves about the harmful impacts of racially motivated comments and online abuse.”

With two rounds to play, the Lions are currently locked in a tight battle for a spot in the top-four with Collingwood, Melbourne, Sydney and Fremantle.

They take on St Kilda on Friday, and then Melbourne in a blockbuster at the MCG next Friday night.

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Tennis news 2022: Casper Ruud fined for not going to the toilet, Montreal Masters, code violation, reaction

Casper Ruud is the biggest name left in the Montreal Masters but the world No. 7 has landed in hot water after a bizarre code violation in his 6-7 7-6 6-4 win over Roberto Bautista Agut.

The thrilling clash took more than three hours to finish but at the end of the first set, which Ruud lost in a tie-breaker, he took a bathroom break.

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Rather than needing to use the amenities however, the Norwegian just wanted a change of clothes.

When he returned however, umpire Fergus Murphy told Ruud he was in violation of the rules because he didn’t go to the bathroom.

While it was just a warning, it was a bizarre scene as Ruud tried to get his head around the umpire’s instructions.

Ruud: “What, but I used it to change my clothes?”

Murphy: “You have to go to the bathroom as well. That’s the rule,”

Ruud: “But if I need to change my underwear, what do I do? Do it on the court?

Murphy: “No, no, you can do both. It’s called a bathroom break.”

Ruud: “But if I need a change of clothes, what do I do?”

Murphy: “Yeah, I know that man but the rule is covered by the bathroom break rule. You can change your clothes but you have to go to the bathroom when you say you’re going to the bathroom.

Ruud: “But I didn’t say I was going to the bathroom, I said I was going to change my clothes.”

Murphy: “No I heard that.”

Ruud: “My socks, my underwear, my shorts, my t-shirt.”

Murphy: “That is covered by the bathroom break rule.”

Ruud: “Ok, well next time I take it, I’m going to go to the bathroom I just go into the toilet.”

Murphy: :You have to go to the bathroom, that’s your business. But when you don’t go I have to give you a warning for not going, that’s why I’m explaining it.”

Ruud: “So what is it, like a $3000 fine or something?”

Murphy: “I have no idea about that.”

Murphy then gave Ruud an official unsportsmanlike conduct warning.

The ATP’s rule book states “Unsportsmanlike conduct is defined as any misconduct by a player that is clearly abusive or detrimental to the success of a tournament, ATP and/or the Sport.”

Fines generally go along with the code violations and the unsportsmanlike conduct violation “shall subject a player to a fine up to $20,000 for each violation” — although it’s unlikely to be a full $20k.

The commentators were laughing at the situation.

“It’s seems a little ridiculous that you almost have to fake going to the bathroom,” one said.

The bizarre scenes were not lost on fans who were stunned by what they had seen.

However, others pointed to it being a 10-minute break when players are allowed “a maximum of three minutes once they have entered the toilet” and “two minutes for a change of attire in addition to the three-minute toilet break”.

In Ruud’s defence, the court was some way from the locker room.

Ruud, who has won three titles so far this season, is the highest seed still remaining in the tournament.

After the break and the warning, Ruud bounced back to take out the second set in another tense tie-break.

But in the deciding set, both meant had to head to the locker rooms after a 69-minute interruption as thunderstorms passed over the area at 1-0 to Bautista Agut in the third.

He said time in the locker room was the perfect antidote for a game which had gone slightly stale as he battled the Spaniard.

“Thanks to the weather gods,” he said. “It was a tough battle, the first two sets, two hours 20 minutes of good intensity.

“But I was feeling it a bit in the legs, it was tough to find my intensity. The rain gave me time to breathe and regain some energy.”

Ruud wrapped up a long afternoon on his fourth match point, ending with 54 winners and 39 unforced errors.

“I’m still surviving, there will be another match tomorrow and I’ll try to survive it,” added the seventh-ranked Ruud, who is the top target remaining after the second-round exits of Medvedev, Carlos Alcaraz and Stefanos Tsitsipas .

He’ll play Canadian sixth seed Felix Auger-Aliassime, who dispatched Britain’s Cameron Norrie 6-3, 6-4.

With AFP

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‘Terrible at goodbyes’: Serena Williams begins farewell tour with Canadian Open defeat | Serena Williams

The first stop on Serena Williams’s farewell tour came to a quick end as she fell 6-2, 6-4 to Belinda Bencic in the second round of the Canadian Open, a day after announcing her forthcoming retirement from tennis.

Williams arrived on the court to a standing ovation and had the full support of the capacity crowd throughout the 77-minute match but was unable to conjure up the old magic that helped her lift three titles in Canada.

“It’s been a pretty interesting 24 hours… I’m terrible at goodbyes. But, goodbye Toronto,” an emotional Williams told the crowd. “I always had amazing times here both on and off the court. I’ll be coming back just as a visitor to the city but otherwise it’s been remarkable.”

After the match, Williams was presented with team jerseys of Toronto’s NBA and NHL teams for her and her daughter, who was in attendance, as well as a bouquet of flowers that she carried off the court while wiping back tears.

Prior to the match, a tribute video was played featuring comments from tennis pioneer Billie Jean King, current players like Coco Gauff and Emma Raducanu as well as ice hockey great Wayne Gretzky and highlights of Williams’s Canadian triumphs.

The highly-anticipated match was played a day after 23-time grand slam champion Williams revealed in a Vogue article that she was “evolving away from tennis” and planned to retire from the sport she has dominated for over two decades.

Olympic champion Bencic saved the lone break point she faced in the opening set and broke Williams twice to jump ahead 5-2 but the Swiss 12th seed then needed five set points to clinch the opening frame.

In the second set, Bencic got the one break she needed to go ahead 4-3 when Williams struck a double-fault and the Swiss never looked back as she sealed the match on her serve when Williams sent a return long.

“It was a lot of emotions obviously,” Williams said about how it felt to take the court. “I love playing here, I’ve always loved playing here. I wish I could’ve played better but Belinda played so well today.”

Up next for Bencic will be Spanish eighth seed Garbine Muguruza, who was a 6-4, 6-4 winner over Estonia’s Kaia Kanepi.

Among the others reaching the last 16 of the tune-up event for the US Open were world No 1 Iga Swiatek, defending champion Camila Giorgi, Coco Gauff, Simona Halep, Karolina Pliskova, Jessica Pegula and Aryna Sabalenka.

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Quade traits JOC must replicate, proof ref had a shocker and Cane’s brutal reality check

Once again, I’ve culled some of the pressing issues, and many a pithy comment, from forums to articles on The Roar earlier in the week.

There was lots of anger and frustration among New Zealand supporters about the loss to South Africa in Mbombela. And their outrage seemed to be amplified rather than defused by Ian Foster’s post-match comments. Here is a precise:

“It was our most improved game of the year. We really shifted forward in some areas… We’re pretty excited about going to Ellis Park and playing for a trophy…. We nullified a large part of their driving game and defensively we’ve made some shifts…

Sit back and absorb the lessons, trust a little bit and relax… At the end of the day, you don’t get the change you want by making dramatic changes and putting too much pressure on players.”

This sense that the All Blacks are steadily evolving, and the dutiful taking of positives from such an emphatic defeat has struck the wrong chord. Absolutely nobody was sitting back and feeling relaxed about it:

loosey said, “After the game Cane genuinely sounded at a loss to explain it, I mirrored Hooper in his sentiments after many a defeat. Foster sounded delusional.” Saders added, “Cane is not Able and Foster’s lost his Fizz!”

It has become clear over the three-match series against Ireland and the first round in South Africa, that New Zealand’s best player (Ardie Savea) and the returning version of Sam Cane do not gel well in the back-row, and this in turn creates a problem in the selection of a number 6 who can cover all the bases. It is both poles of the command structure (captain and coach) not just the head coach.

Savea is uncertain of his role. Is he winning turnovers, making hard carries, or a defensive grinder? This surely is a coaching and selection issue because it relates to back-row mix.

Lucas

The backrow, and positions 10-13, are out of balance for a game-plan that covers defense, kicking, and effective ruck control. We have the cattle to select better to achieve more complete rugby.

pinetree

Unfortunately, Sam Cane has only been a shadow of the eleven-great number 7 he was before his traumatic neck injury. He was overwhelmed by Josh van der Flier’s work-rate in the Ireland series – the Irish open-side had 26 carries to Cane’s 14, and made 62 tackles to Slammin’ Sam’s 41, with more attacking breaks and defensive turnovers to boot.

At the post-match presser, the All Blacks’ skipper pointed to the two main problematic areas against the Boks, saying: “We’re bitterly disappointed, it really hurts. We must get better at the breakdown and the contestable [kicks in the air]. I can’t ask any more of the team in terms of the belief and the effort.”

In his prime, Cane was one the most powerful and dynamic number 7s around. If I tackled you, you stayed hit. If he cleaned you out, it felt like being churned out of a combine harvester. The energy and physicality which generated those hits is no longer there.

On defense, Cane only had eight on-ball attempts in the match with no steals. On the other side of the ball, three of Springbok hooker Malcolm Marx’s breakdown turnovers were made in direct opposition to Sam Cane on the cleanout:

In all three examples, Cane is either the first or second man up but cannot move Marx away from the ball, and the final example – with the New Zealand captain bouncing off the big Bokke rake – is especially brutal.

If Ardie Savea stays at number 8, he would benefit from a bigger and more physical man alongside him at 7, like Ethan Blackadder or Dalton Papali’i. Add in Cullen Grace or Shannon Frizell to the mix at number 6 and you have a back-row. A decision needs to be made now.

The second issue highlighted by Sam Cane (contestable kicks) was also a refereeing issue which New Zealand will want resolved:

South Africa’s game plan seems to be to take the man out in the air all the time. They deliberately aim for a meter beyond the landing point every time.

Jacko

As to do with [Kurt-Lee] Arendse, well, it was only a matter of time, wasn’t it? SA have been attacking this area of ​​the game recklessly for quite a few years now.

myrt

I suspect that the New Zealand coaching staff will have been eager to bring the activities of the Springbok chasers to the attention of Luke Pearce, the official in next Saturday’s game at Ellis Park. The writing was on the wall for Kurt-Lee Arendse well before his red card in the 75th minute:

The diminutive South African right wing is giving away over six inches in height and 30 kilos in weight to Jordie Barrett in the first instance. Instead of trying to compete for the ball in the air he runs straight through the space occupied by the Barrett brothers.

Does Ian Foster have the decision-making determination to bite the bullet over his captain, and will he be insistent enough to get what he wants from Luke Pearce in the second round of matches? He needs to be far more pro-active, and less ‘relaxed’ on both accounts.

A second cache of questions surrounded the impact of the big Australian ball-carriers versus Argentina. As Will Genia commented in his Roar article on Monday: “Bobby Valetini was incredible. With Samu Kerevi being out we lose a little bit of punch in midfield. It puts pressure on guys around that space to be able to deliver that and Bobby seems to have shouldered more responsibility in that space.”

Both number 8 Valetini (10 runs for 51 meters with two busts) and number 12 Hunter Paisami (8 for 42 meters with five busts) were excellent on the carry in the first game against the Pumas. That was due to the presence of the best prompter and coaxer of ball-carriers in Australia, Quade Cooper, at the pivotal number 10 spot. Reece Hodge did a more than passable impersonation after Cooper left the field too.

With Quade’s long-term leg injury standing to keep him out for the rest of the year, attention turned to his likely replacement:

There is only one specialist 10 that should be picked and that is [Noah] Lolesio. Any other selection is for training purposes [Ben Donaldson] or for versatility [Reece Hodge/JOC] reasons.

Scott D.

The reality is, with [Quade] Cooper out, we do not have a test quality 10 in Australia. This exposes our Achilles heel, which is lack of depth.

gooch

Some posters highlighted the difficulty in ‘converting’ Noah Lolesio to the hard-running, hard-cleaning style that Dave Rennie prefers:

Why is Lolesio the only option? He plays behind a strong Brumbies pack… I’m glad he’s building experience but surely, we can give [Tane] Edmed or Donaldson a go?

Chufortah

He probably needs non-Brumbies at 9 and 10, because their (very successful) style could not be much more different to the Rennie approach.

Sinclair Whitbourne

If they want to play a running game with a bit more width, then they can’t go with Lolesio. They need to bring Donaldson in and give him time to connect with the team.

Lucky Phil

Noah Lolesio is mostly a kicker for the Brumbies, and has not yet had the time in the provincial saddle to develop the finesse on the ad-line that Quade Cooper possesses in spades:

Cooper is the young Sexton of the Wallabies and is a class above our young 10’s… I wish him a speedy recovery.

Rugby Try Lover

Like it or not QC is “yesterday’s man”. It happens to all whether by age, injury or non-performance. Time to put Quade in the history books for now. Rennie has a big decision re: the 10 spot.

Bobby

The first comment is right, and the second is way off (apologies Bobby). If Quade can make it to the World Cup, he must be picked. What is particularly impressive in his reborn persona is the way he recovers from difficult moments:

Quade is smashed by Marcos Kremer as he goes to run out of his own 22 at the beginning of the game, but he makes amends on the very next play, ripping the ball out of Pablo Matera’s grasp as he surges from the back of a scrum .

He might not have had the mental starch to get his head back in the game so quickly in previous incarnations. He was solid at the back:

That is mental consistency for you. At the line on attack, Quade is imperious, and it is this kind of aggressive positioning and touch on the pass that his replacement of him – James O’Connor in the next match at least – needs to emulate:

In the first example it is the delay on the pass before releasing Jordie Petaia at the optimal moment, in the second it is the willingness to step up close behind the forward pod in the ‘diamond’ shape of which Johnny Sexton is so fond:

There were also a batch of queries about Scottish referee Mike Adamson, who gave 32 penalties or free kicks in total in Mendoza. Australian supporters will not remember him with any fondness after last year’s match in Cardiff against Wales, when he allowed Nick Tompkins to run away with a knock-on to score the game-deciding try.

In Mendoza he made a habit of getting in the way of Australian players, and it happened on four occasions in the game:

Adamson may also be the most recondite referee going about. I think a star of the show like him should play solo and not be distracted by having 30 unruly musicians on the stage with him.

Sinclair Whitbourne

Add to that his positioning in and around general play where he was constantly in the player’s way… has led me to ask this question; why do we have to suffer such mediocre officiating for such a significant game in what’s a major annual competition?

Machooka

There were two important instances with the Wallabies looking to make either a score or a break:

In both cases, Adamson allowed play to continue, and that outcome did not favor Australia. Calling a Wallaby scrum would have been a far more natural response, given that the referee’s presence makes a tangible impact on the outcome of the two plays.

Thanks to all who posted comments, and contributed to the writing of the article!

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Sports

Storm’s warning that has Nelson Asofa-Solomona on the straight and narrow

Storm wrecking ball Nelson Asofa-Solomona says all the chat about him being a dirty player is just “white noise” but admits teammates have told him he needs to be careful with the finals just a few weeks away.

The man mountain is one of the most misunderstood players in the NRL.

Off the field, he’s a gentle giant, but when he crosses the white line, he becomes the most destructive enforcer in all of rugby league.

For the most part, that aggression is perfectly controlled. But when you’re 200cm and 115kg, things can go wrong, and it’s why he’s flirted with suspension several times this year.

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Nelson Asofa-Solomona collected Makahesi Makatoa high earlier this year.Source: Supplied

Asofa-Solomona was fined for a high shot on Parramatta’s Makahesi Makatoa that the NRL later granted should’ve earnedt a suspension, and he received another fine for collecting Jordan Rapana high last month.

But an incident across the ditch caused the most outrage when Asofa-Solomona wasn’t charged for a stray elbow that cracked some of Wayde Egan’s teeth.

It led some people to say the Storm players were a protected species from the match review committee and their star forward was a dirty player.

“It’s all white noise,” Asofa-Solomona told the NCA NewsWire.

“I just focus on my job. It’s not up to me to hand out the consequences. I just focus on my job. I’m a simple man and I control what I can control.”

The 26-year-old says any foul play this year has been purely accidental, but he knows he walks a fine line, which has prompted some of his teammates to tell him to curb his enthusiasm in defense.

“They told me to be careful because I’m such a large person,” he said.

“Sometimes it’s hard because things happen so quickly and accidents happen all the time, particularly with how fast the game is.

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Asofa-Solomona says he isn’t a dirty player. Picture: NRL PhotosSource: Supplied

“It’s inevitable that there will be some sloppy contact, and I think we see that more and more as the game has gotten faster over the past couple of years.

“I’ve had a few charges so I have been told to bring it back a little bit.

“It sucks because you want to bring that physical presence every game, but when you get told to hold it back a bit, that’s what you’ve got to do. I want to play every week with the lads.”

Storm skipper Jesse Bromwich knows how important it is to have his New Zealand teammate on the field in the finals, especially given Melbourne’s unprecedented run of injuries in 2022.

“The message was just that we need him on the field. We’ve got too many guys out, so we can’t afford to have him missing,” Bromwich said of their chats.

“We love his aggression and the way he approaches the game, but it’s just about being smarter. He’s such a big man, so it’s hard to miss players, but the main message is we need him out there as often as possible.

“It was really good to see the big man out there for long periods of time. We need him out on the field as long as possible because of his size and his power, so it was really good to see him do so well.

The man they call “Big Nasty” lived up to that moniker on Thursday night when he was moved to the back row before kick-off to nullify Penrith’s Viliame Kikau and to run riot a bit wider without having to do so much work in the middle .

The extra space out wide makes Nelson Asofa-Solomona a nightmare for opponents. Picture: Ashley Feder/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

It was the first time he’d started an NRL game in the back row, but coach Craig Bellamy will have to consider doing it more often given how well he played.

Asofa-Solomona revealed it was the first time he’d played in the second row since 2014 when he scored 13 tries in 18 games to make the Holden Cup Team of the Year.

“I thought he did a really good job,” Bellamy said after the 16-0 win over the defending premieres.

“The other benefit is he doesn’t have to do all the tackling in the middle, so he got to play bigger minutes.”

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