Categories
Sports

NRL 2022, Canberra Raiders v Penrith Panthers round 21 match report, match highlights, media conference, injuries

Panthers fullback Dylan Edwards produced a five-star display in his 100th NRL game as the premiers downed Canberra 26-6 at GIO Stadium on Saturday night.

Edwards looked to be in pain with a shoulder injury for much of the match but he continually turned up in defense and grabbed a try as the Panthers racked up their 18th win of the season.

The Raiders drew first blood in the ninth minute when their inspirational forward leader Josh Papalii powered over from close range for his third try of the season. Jamal Fogarty’s conversion made it 6-0.

It took Penrith just three minutes to hit back after a Raiders error handed them their first attacking opportunity and hooker Api Koroisau burrowed over.

A penalty against Hudson Young for a push on Chris Smith when the Panther was chasing a bomb handed Stephen Crichton an easy shot to make it 8-6 to the premiers after 22 minutes.

Three minutes later the Panthers extended their lead to eight when stand-in halfback Sean O’Sullivan laid on a try for Crichton with a well weighted left foot grubber.



Too easy for Koroisau

A huge blow for the home side late in the first half when prop Joseph Tapine left the field with a rib injury before Penrith went down a man for 10 minutes with James Fisher-Harris without binned for a high shot.

The Raiders then had a number of consecutive sets attacking Penrith’s line but superb clean-up work by Edwards and some last-ditch defense kept the Green Machine at bay.

The home side went down a man in the first minute of the second half when Nick Cotric hit Edwards high and was sent to the bin.



Big Papa fires up the home side

Penrith then produced a special try from long range featuring O’Sullivan handling twice before Edwards scooted away to make it 20-6 to the defending champs.

The Raiders continued to squander their chances and Penrith’s defense refused to yield, with Koroisau, Isaah Yeo and Liam Martin getting through a mountain of work.

Panthers five-eighth Jaeman Salmon put the result beyond doubt in the 66th minute when he scored from close range to make it 26-6.

Having suffered just their second loss of the season in Round 20, the Panthers hit back superbly, overcoming the absence of playmakers Nathan Cleary and Jarome Luai and star back-rower Viliame Kikau to all but wrap up the minor premiership.

Match Snapshot

  • Raiders prop Joseph Tapine was placed on report in the 24th minute for a crusher tackle on James Fisher-Harris.
  • Panthers prop James Fisher-Harris was put on report and sinned eight minutes before half-time for a high shot on Ryan Sutton, who failed his HIA. Canberra’s 18th Man Ata Mariota activated in the 52nd minute as Sutton had been ruled out as a result of a reportable offense.
  • Raiders winger Nick Cotric was sin binned in the opening minute of the second half for a high shot on Dylan Edwards.
  • Panthers halves Sean O’Sullivan and Jaeman Salmon handled everything Canberra threw at them, racking up 45 tackles between them on the edges.
  • The Panthers have won eight of their past 10 games against the Raiders.


Cotric sent to the bin

  • Josh Papali’s early try was the 59th of his 258-game career.
  • Dylan Edwards ran for 162 meters and had nine tackle breaks for the Panthers.
  • Panthers five-eighth Jaeman Salmon was placed on report in the 60th minute after he kicked out and his boot made contact with Tom Starling.
  • Sunia Turuva came on in the 69th minute for his NRL debut for Penrith.
  • Albert Hopoate did a fine job at fullback for Canberra with 18 runs for 166 metres.
  • The Raiders have not defeated the Panthers in Canberra since week two of the 2016 finals series.


Crichton gets a Try

Play of the Game

Playing his 100th NRL game Dylan Edwards celebrated in style in the 46th minute when he finished off a magnificent team try to stretch Penrith’s lead to 14 points. Hooker Api Koroisau started the move on his own side of halfway before finding Isaah Yeo who sent the ball on to James Fisher-Harris. The playmakers carried on the move with Sean O’Sullivan handling twice and Scott Sorensen also involved before Edwards raced away to notch his seventh try of the season.



Edwards marks game 100 with a Try

What They Said

“Very proud of the boys tonight. Canberra had a lot to play for and they definitely had the better of the start of the game so to be able to bounce back straight away and score that helped, and I think when we went down to 12 men that was the turning point. the way we responded to that. That galvanized the team and gave us a lot of confidence. Just a good win for our club all things considered.”
– Panthers coach Ivan Cleary



Panthers: Round 21

“I’m not walking away from that downhearted because there was so much effort the boys put in, but we just let ourselves down by… the tries they scored, they’re tries we stop every week. And just some one- on-one tackles, not making their shot. That doesn’t scare me because we’re better than that defensively. We started the game so well and I knew we would, we’ve been in really good form and that’s not going to stem what we’ve got going. We’re in survival mode and that’s how we’re going to play and we’re not going to let that result tonight stem the way we’ve been preparing and getting around each other so we’ I’ll bounce off that and we’ll go again.” – Raiders coach Ricky Stuart



Raiders: Round 21

what’s next

The Raiders are at home to the Dragons in Round 22 before heading to Newcastle to tackle the Knights the following week. They finish the regular season with games against Manly (h) and Wests Tigers (a).

The Panthers open Round 22 with a bumper game against the Storm at Bluebet Stadium before tackling the Rabbitohs at Accor Stadium in Round 23. The premiers’ final two games are against the Warriors (h) and Cowboys (a).

Categories
Australia

Minister slams proposal to build 130 homes on north shore sports fields

Despite opposition from Dominello and the council, the spokesman said the project was backed by members of the RSL and rugby clubs. “There exists significant support in the Ryde [local government area] for what is proposed and for the delivery of a new one-hectare public park.”

The spokesman also said the amount of open space per resident in Marsfield exceeded the rest of the Ryde council area and NSW government guidelines.

The rugby fields no longer served the Marsfield community, especially new residents from China, India, Korea and the Philippines “where rugby is not popular”, he said.

The viability of keeping the rugby fields had also been affected by previous council decisions rejecting lighting upgrades and imposing parking restrictions, he said.

“Despite the best efforts over many years of Eastwood Rugby and North Ryde RSL to keep TG Millner Field alive, the fields are unused and not relevant to the local community.”

The row over the future of the TG Millner Field follows a controversial deal by Lane Cove Council to allow the construction of senior housing on sporting fields in Lane Cove.

Dominello said public open space in Sydney was precious “and once it’s gone it’s gone forever”.

“That’s why we must fight to save TG Millner Field for future generations,” he said. “If proponents of the plan don’t think rugby is popular any more, then we should work together to accommodate other sports.”

loading

The TG Millner Field is the home ground for the Ryde-Eastwood Hawks rugby league club – although it only uses the ground on Sundays.

Football operations manager Michael Frain said the club could use the facility six days a week for 10 months a year if permitted.

Frain also said the club will not have a ground to play in the area if the project goes ahead. “There is not one rugby league field in Ryde [local government area] at present for training or playing, so there is an obvious need to keep green space.”

The planning proposal is currently being assessed by council officers, but 12 out of 13 Ryde councilors in June voted to oppose any plans to reduce green space in Ryde.

The councilors also voted in favor of a motion to secure the TG Millner Field, described as an “iconic local landmark”, as open space in perpetuity.

Ryde’s Major Liberal Jordan Lane said the Ryde area needed grounds for all sporting codes. “TG Millner is a premier field, worthy of preservation.”

Lane said there was “no doubt traffic and other social pressures will be exacerbated by the concurrent eroding of open space, and development of new dwellings”.

loading

The Ryde area needed 13 additional sports ovals by 2036 to keep up with demand and population growth, he said. “Decimating one of our largest existing open spaces will set this cause back significantly.”

Lane said it was “absurd” to suggest any part of Ryde had sufficient open space.

“Were the fields to be made available to the public, council could also help address the oversubscription of requests for its current sporting fields,” he said.

Categories
US

Former military officers urge Supreme Court to uphold affirmative action in colleges

A group of retired military heavyweights has urged the Supreme Court to uphold affirmative action in higher education when the justices review a legal challenge to race-conscious admissions policies at the University of North Carolina (UNC) and Harvard University.

The former officers argued in court papers that allowing colleges and service academies to consider race as a factor in admissions decisions helps the US military achieve its goal of cultivating a diverse officer corps, which they said accrues benefits both within the ranks and in overseas operations.

Prohibiting race-conscious admissions, on the other hand, would threaten to undermine national security, the group argued in an amicus brief signed by 35 former top military leaders, including the highest-ranking military officers under former Presidents Trump, Obama, George W. Bush and Clinton.

“History has shown that placing a diverse Armed Forces under the command of homogenous leadership is a recipe for internal resentment, discord, and violence,” the group wrote. “By contrast, units that are diverse across all levels are more cohesive, collaborative, and effective.”

When the Supreme Court hears arguments in the case in October, the focus will likely remain fixed on the interplay between diversity goals, higher education and limits that the Constitution places on the use of racial classifications to benefit minorities.

But as suggested by the former officers’ brief, as well as scholarship connecting diversity and improved military performance, the potential implications of the case could reach well beyond academia — perhaps as far as the battlefield.

“Historically, diverse and inclusive armies outperform their more exclusionary rivals in battlefield,” Jason Lyall, a professor of government at Dartmouth College and author of the book “Divided Armies: Inequality and Battlefield Performance in Modern War,” told The Hill.

“They typically record better casualty rates as well as lower desertion and defection even when outnumbered,” he added. “Because of their problem-solving skills, they are capable of more complex battlefield maneuvers, and so are more lethal and resilient, than less inclusive enemies.”

The legal dispute at issue arose after a conservative-backed group, Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA), sued UNC and Harvard over their use of affirmative action in admissions decisions. The group accused the schools of failing to pursue diversity goals through available race-neutral alternatives, as required under Supreme Court precedent.

SFFA suffered defeat in the lower courts, where judges rejected its arguments based on the landmark 2003 Grutter v. Bollinger decision and related cases. In Grutter, the court ruled 5-4 that colleges may use race as one factor in admissions decisions as a way to diversify student populations.

In court papers, SFFA urged the justices to overturn Grutter. That decision, it argued, defies the constitutional guarantee of equal protection under the law and has led college admissions officers to engage in “crude stereotyping” based on race.

SFFA, in its suit against Harvard, alleged that the school’s admissions policy discriminates against Asian Americans. The group argued that Harvard’s subjective “personal ratings” scores, which tended to reflect cultural stereotypes, had made it harder for Asian Americans to be admitted, compared to applicants of other races.

“Applicants who check the box for African American at Harvard and UNC, for example, receive a preference because of their race whether they grew up in poverty and went to failing schools, have parents who were multimillionaire executives, spent their formative years in Europe, are the direct descendants of slaves, or are second-generation immigrants from Africa,” SFFA wrote, urging the justices to upend nearly two decades of affirmative action precedent.

But the former military officers behind this week’s amicus brief cautioned the justices against such a move. Overruling Grutter and related Supreme Court precedent, they said, would make achieving the military’s diversity goals more difficult and impair military cohesion and effectiveness.

An attorney for SFFA did not respond when asked to comment on the potential national security implications of invalidating race-conscious admissions policies in higher education.

The retired officers in their brief argued that diversity in military leadership flows directly from diversity in higher education, with the bulk of military officers hailing from service academies such as the Army’s US Military Academy in West Point, NY, or Reserve Officer Training Corps programs housed at civilian universities.

“Diversity in the halls of academia directly affects performance in the theaters of war,” they wrote.

They added that the demands of recent US humanitarian missions — which included deployments to Haiti, Somalia and Latin America — underscore the need for diversity in the officer corps. That aim is no less critical in elite special forces units such as the Navy SEALs, which currently face a severe shortage of minority officers, they wrote.

“Life and death missions conducted by these units require diverse skills, including foreign language competence and knowledge of other cultures, along with the ability to collaborate and culturally empathize with vastly different individuals,” they wrote.

Among the signatories to the brief were former Joint Chiefs Chairmen Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, Navy Adm. Michael Mullen, Air Force Gen. Richard Myers and Army Gen. Henry Shelton.

Categories
Business

Aldi makes big adjustment that could change how you shop

Aldi has revealed a major change after an eagle-eyed shopper noticed a whole section missing from its website.

The retailer says it has ditched its online shopping page that allowed customers to purchase Special Buys on its site.

Aldi website page, with smiling staff members

Aldi says it has halted the trial of its online Special Buys program, to the dismay of some of its customers. Credit: Getty

“We have recently concluded the trial of our online Special Buys program. While we have gained valuable insights and appreciate that some customers enjoyed the ability to buy selected Special Buys online, it is not the right time to expand this trial,” an Aldi spokesperson said.

“Supply chain pressures and inflation means that our top focus is to deliver the best priced groceries to Australians. We believe that this focus, while it might come at the cost of other projects, delivers the best value to our customers,” she added, saying Aldi has been clear that delivering groceries at the best prices is its ongoing goal, especially as Australians feel the pressure of inflation.

“Our unique business model is built on efficiency, and while we don’t want to see customers disappointed we believe this is the best decision to continue maintaining our price gap of over 15 per cent compared to our competitors,” she further stated.

While the discount supermarket says it will not rule out bringing the Special Buys back to its website, there are no immediate plans to sell Special Buys or groceries online. “Customers can still enjoy our Special Buys offering in store on Wednesdays and Saturdays,” the spokesperson said.

Social media reacts

The missing section on Aldi’s website was first noticed by a member on the Aldi Fans Australia Facebook group.

“So did Aldi just quietly remove their online range instead of the promised expansion of eventually offering all their products online? I can’t see any mention of online products anymore anywhere on their app or website ever since they had their online clearance last week, “The woman asked other members of the group.

Aldi first trialled online sales in May 2021, offering the service to customers around New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland.

Do you have a story tip? E-mail: [email protected].

You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and Twitter and download the Yahoo News app from the app store or google play.

Categories
Australia

Lismore residents call for flood inquiry report release

“When you’re talking about the size and scale of Lismore LGA alone, no council anywhere can afford to even partially fund that,” Krieg said.

Blocks of privately owned land had been identified on the outskirts of Lismore that could be used to permanently rehome flood-affected residents, Krieg said.

Steve Krieg on the streets of Lismore in the days after the flood.

Steve Krieg on the streets of Lismore in the days after the flood.Credit:elise derwin

“There are people who have been sitting on some suitable land for a long time, saying that now is an opportunity to open that up,” Krieg said.

The council said in May that about 1,000 homes would need to be rebuilt off the floodplain, at a cost of $400 million.

The challenge with any buyback or land-swap scheme would be meeting demand, according to Resilient Lismore, a grassroots group helping with recovery.

“Lots of people are ready to go,” co-ordinator and Lismore city councilor Elly Bird said. “They’re just waiting to see what the government will deliver before they decide what they’ll do.

“We know Queensland moved very quickly with a program around buybacks and land swaps, and here we are, still waiting.

“We’d like to see that [independent inquiry] report. That’s our report, our submissions that we put in, and we want to see the results.”

Krieg also called on the government to release the report in its entirety, saying his community needed certainty after five months in limbo.

“People have been holding off making big decisions about their homes and their businesses, waiting for this report.”

loading

Labor state MP Janelle Saffin said purchase prices in a buyback scheme had to be based on pre-flood property valuations, a sentiment echoed by residents.

Schofield said many of the flood-affected parts of Lismore were low-socioeconomic areas and any buyback or land swap scheme had to ensure people had enough money to pay off their debts and start again.

”If you still have to pay your bank [exit] clause in the mortgage, buy a piece of land and build, that will be out of reach for I’d say 90 per cent of people in North and South Lismore.”

She is back living in two rooms of her home, but without any walls, and said she and her neighbors were frustrated waiting for details on what help would be coming their way.

loading

“A week when you’re living like this is a very long time. It’s incredibly stressful. A lot of people are really anxious about their futures.”

She would ideally like to take part in a land swap and move her house with her.

“A lot of us have beautiful old houses built 120 years ago and some of them are still in very good nick. And the community doesn’t necessarily want to separate from each other.

“If we had a magic wand, I think there’s a large percentage who would stay fairly close to where we are now, just out of the flood.”

The Morning Edition newsletter is our guide to the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up here.

Categories
US

DC lightning strike by White House: Third deceased victim identified

Comment

DC police have identified the third person killed by a Thursday lightning strike near the White House as Brooks A. Lambertson, 29, a Los Angeles bank employee who was in the nation’s capital on business.

A husband and wife from Wisconsin, who were visiting the District to celebrate their 56th wedding anniversary, were also killed, police previously said. A fourth person was critically injured when the strike hit just before 7 pm Thursday, in a grove of trees in Lafayette Square, about 100 feet from a statue of President Andrew Jackson.

Lambertson died Friday, according to police.

Four critically injured after lightning strike near the White House

Lambertson’s father, who requested his name not be used as the family grieves because “it’s not about us,” said in an interview with The Washington Post on Saturday night that his son was “probably the best human being that I know.”

His son’s kindness, generosity and humility “showed up in everything he did, in all his interactions with people,” he said.

Lambertson’s family and his employer, City National Bank, said in a statement Saturday that he was in DC for his job as a vice president managing sponsorships for the company. Lambertson, who lived in downtown LA, previously worked in marketing for the NBA’s Los Angeles Clippers, according to the release.

Police offered few other details about Lambertson or additional information about the incident Saturday.

In a phone call, Lambertson’s father expressed gratitude to all the first responders and others who tried to help his son. They did everything that could be done, he said, and his son’s death de el “was not for lack of everybody doing their jobs.”

How lightning works — and how to stay safe when it’s in the area

“His sudden loss is devastating to all who knew him, and his family, friends and colleagues appreciate the thoughts and prayers that poured in from around the country,” the statement from Lambertson’s family and employer said.

A DC police spokeswoman said late Saturday that the department did not have an update on the condition of the fourth victim, who had been hospitalized after the strike.

This breaking story will be updated.

Categories
Business

Property expert warns supply is not meeting demand as data reveals an uncertain market

Australia’s property market has proven to be unpredictable over the past 24 months.

And now research by PRD shows how supply is not meeting demand as the property market’s pace continues to slow.

PRD’s Australian Economic and Property Report for 2022 reveals that as a whole, the capital cities have seen a “slower pace of median house price growth in the 12 months to the 1st half of 2022, rising by an average of 6.3 per cent”.

This is in comparison to the 15.5 per cent average median house price growth from “the 12 months to the second half of 2021”.

READMORE: Neighborhoods where house prices have fallen by six figures as interest rates rise

Domain June 2022 Quarterly House Price Report
The latest PRD data reveals how Australia’s economic and property conditions continue to be uncertain. (Domain)
PRD data reveals the property market's pace is slowing
Sydney and Melbourne have seen a drop in median house price growth in comparison to Brisbane and Darwin. (PRD 2022)

speaking on Today ExtraDomain’s national managing editor, Alice Stolz, reiterated the fact that it’s down to supply and demand – something we don’t have much of.

“Interest rates are really hitting prices hard. We’ve been seeing downturns and upturns in the market, and Melbourne and Sydney are certainly leading that charge,” she said.

However, not all capital cities are the same, with Sydney and Melbourne seeing a drop in median house price growth.

On the other side of the spectrum, Brisbane and Darwin saw a double digit median house price growth.

As outlined in the report, uncertain economic and property conditions is at the forefront.

READMORE: Why this interest rate rise will make it harder to borrow money

Aussie Commonwealth Gold medalist Ariarne Titmus has bought a $1.65 million apartment in Brisbane's Tenerife
Supply is not meeting demand as the property market’s pace continues to slow. (Sixty Four Property)

“The share of disposable income that has flown to scheduled principal payment and mortgage offset accounts has spiked since mid-2020,” the research reveals.

“Technically, a cash rate hike can be absorbed through a higher mortgage offset account (as a buffer), and the share in which income flows to either principal payment, interest, or mortgage offset changes.

“However, we are currently facing increasing costs in various aspects of life, which makes it more difficult.”

Domain houses street row for sale
Domain’s national managing editor, Alice Stolz, said on Today Extra that Melbourne and Sydney are ‘leading the charge’ with higher interest rates. (Domain)
Categories
Entertainment

Baker Boy, King Stingray win big at National Indigenous Music Awards 2022

Live and back on Larrakia Country, this year’s National Indigenous Music Awards (NIMAs) was a powerful celebration of First Nations talent past and present.

Playing out under the stars at Darwin Amphitheatre, Baker Boy was the biggest winner of the ceremony, walking up to the podium twice Saturday night.

The rapping-dancing Yolŋu sensation won Album of the Year for his inspiring debut album Gela and was named Artist Of The Year. It’s the third time the Fresh Prince of Arnhem Land has won in that latter category, bringing his total NIMAs tally to nine trophies since he first gracing the ceremony as an Unearthed competition winner back in 2017.

Fresh from the release of their self-titled debut album, King Stingray claimed the coveted Song Of The Year for scorching bush-disco belter ‘Milkumana’ (voted #56 in triple j’s Hottest 100 of 2021). The Yolŋu rock band also proved why they’re one of Australia’s deadliest live acts with an electrifying performance to close out the ceremony.

loading

Gumbaynggirr and Bundjalung woman Jem Cassar-Daley, aka the indie pop offspring of country legend Troy Cassar-Daley, was named Best New Talent following the release of her 2021 debut EP I Don’t Know Who To Call.

‘King Brown’ by powerful Malyangapa and Barkindji rapper Barkaa was recognized as Film Clip Of The Year, while Indigenous Outreach Projects earned Community Clip of the Year for ‘Loud & Proud’.

loading

Dobby, the Murrawarri/Filipino multi-instrumentalist rapper and producer behind some of the best First Nations raps going ’round, took home the Archie Roach Foundation Award, recognizing his achievements and supporting his growth as an artist.

Moving tributes to Archie Roach and Gurrumul

Powerhouse vocalist Emma Donovan and Butchulla songman Fred Leone led an emotional homage to the late Archie Roach, pairing up for an emotional performance of the important and influential songwriter and storyteller’s ‘We Won’t Cry’.

Joined on stage by a chorus of First Nations talent, it was a teary celebration of the life of the important and influential Uncle Archie, just days after the Gunditjmara (Kirrae Whurrong/Djab Wurrung), Bundjalung Senior Elder died at age 66.

The ceremony also commemorated the musical legacy and life of Gurrumul, who was officially inducted into the NIMAs Hall Of Fame and honored with a performance by his brother and Saltwater Band co-founder Manuel Dhurrkay.

The acclaimed, otherworldly Yolŋu singer-songwriter died due to liver and kidney damage in 2017 but left behind a stunning catalog of solo records that won multiple ARIAs, NIMAs, APRA and AIR Awards, and was named Double J Australian Artist of the Year in 2018 .

He joins NIMAs Hall Of Fame inductees Warumpi Band, Archie Roach, Roger Knox, Kev Carmody and the band he started out in, Yothu Yindi.

The NIMAs also hosted a live line-up of performances from Thelma Plum, hip hop power couple Birdz and Fred Leone, the soulful Emma Donovan & The Putbacks, traditional dance from Red Flag Dancers, and the elegant pipes of Noongar woman and triple j Unearthed. winner Bumpy.

loading

The NIMAs have been Australia’s most important celebration of Indigenous music for 16 years but 2022 marked a glorious return to Larrakia Country in Darwin after a two-year hiatus. The ceremony was forced to innovate around the COVID pandemic, going virtual in 2020 and presented as a two-hour special on triple j’s Blak Out last year.

View the full list of winners below and tune into Blak Out this Sunday from 5pm for a highlights wrap of winners, performances, and backstage antics simulcast across triple j, Double J and triple j Unearthed.

National Indigenous Music Awards 2022 Winners

Artist of the Year
baker boy

Album of the Year
Bakerboy- Gela

New Talent of the Year
Jem Cassar-Daley

Song of the Year
King Stingray – ‘Milkumana’ (songwriters: Roy Kellaway / Gotjirringu Jerome Yunipingu)

Film Clip of the Year
Barkaa – ‘King Brown’ (Directed & Produced by Sonder Films, Executive Producer: Vyva Entertainment)

Community Clip of the Year
Numulwar, NT – Loud & Proud (Directors & Producers: Indigenous Outreach Projects/Matthew Mastratisi/Franceska Fusha/Lesley Phillips/Jordan O’Davis/Numbulwar Community & School)

Hall of Fame
Gurrumul

Archie Roach Foundation Award
dobby

posted , updated

.

Categories
Sports

Eleanor Patterson high jump, medal, result, video, reaction, Lamara Distin wins gold for Jamaica

Eleanor Patterson admitted it was a “bittersweet” feeling after she ended up setting for silver in the women’s high jump final at the Commonwealth Games.

The term ‘setting’ is not usually the right one when it comes to silver medals but even Patterson herself conceded it was a disappointing result when speaking with Channel 7 post race.

MEDAL TALLY: Aussies’ gold rush after Poms turn up heat in Comm Games race

COMM GAMES LIVE: Aussie breaks record, beats TWO world champs

Australia's Eleanor Patterson reacts after the women's high jump final athletics event.  (Photo by Ben Stansall / AFP)
Australia’s Eleanor Patterson reacts after the women’s high jump final athletics event. (Photo by Ben Stansall / AFP)Source: AFP

“It’s bittersweet. I didn’t perform,” she said.

“Lamara (Distin) was the best athlete on the day. I’m really impressed by her and proud of her.

“But I am just quite frustrated with myself. I did not come here today and perform how I know I can and how I usually do.”

Patterson was the raging favorite after stunning the world by becoming the first Australian to win the women’s high jump gold at the World Athletics Championship.

Her chances of taking home gold in Birmingham only received another boost when fellow Australian and Tokyo Olympics silver medalist Nicola Olyslagers pulled out with a calf injury.

Browning FALLS, relay goes begging! | 00:28

Jamaican Lamara Distin had other ideas though, setting the tone with a first-round clearance at 1.95m that Patterson could not match with three attempts.

That mark was seven centimeters less than Patterson’s stunning effort at the World Athletics Championship, which made it harder to take for the Australian.

“I’ve had a bit of a sore ankle but that’s no excuse,” she added.

“I was struggling to get my rhythm a little bit and wasn’t switched on enough, I don’t know. It’s frustrating.

“I’m just angry at my own performance.”

.

Categories
Australia

Wildlife does use highway underpasses, Southern Cross University study reveals

Have you ever driven past special road crossings for wildlife and wondered if they actually work?

There’s new evidence to suggest they are effective, based on the first long-term study of road underpasses in Australia.

The research from Southern Cross University (SCU) was published in the journal Ecology and Evolution and based on a two-year study of underpasses located on the Mid North Coast of New South Wales.

During that time wildlife cameras detected close to 5,000 medium-to-large mammals and goannas using highway underpasses at Port Macquarie and Grafton.

The researchers studied 12 underpasses in those two areas– five under the Oxley Highway at Port Macquarie and seven under the Pacific Highway south of Grafton – comparing camera trap detections of animals at underpasses with those at nearby forest sites.

A koala at night walking through a highway underpass
A koala is captured on camera using a highway underpass on the Mid North Coast.(Supplied: Southern Cross University)

The lead researcher, SCU Associate Professor Ross Goldingay, said the results were encouraging.

“More than 4,800 detections were made; that number was quite astounding,” he said.

“These crossing rates suggest animals used the underpasses to forage on both side of the freeways.”

Associate Professor Goldingay said certain species, including eastern gray kangaroos, swamp wallabies, red-necked wallabies, red-necked pademelons, and lace monitors crossed some underpasses more than once per week.

A road underpass with trees in the background.
A dedicated wildlife underpass at Port Macquarie where there have been regular animal sightings.(Supplied: Southern Cross University)

“We actually got quite a bit of traffic of animals passing through those underpasses, particularly in Port Macquarie … it’s a wetter forest type there so it seems there’s a greater abundance of animals,” he said.

“We were getting eastern gray kangaroos and swamp wallabies moving through two to four times per week and other species, including the red-necked pademelon was going through once every two weeks, so quite frequently.

“At Grafton we’ve got a very high use of a couple of underpasses by echidnas and another small wallaby called the rufous bettong, which is actually a NSW-listed threatened species.”

‘Prey-trap’ concerns dismissed

The study also dispelled concerns that underpasses could become a “prey-trap” used by introduced feral pests and that animals could become caught in the relatively confined area.

A cute rufous bettong, a small grey, furry animals that looks like a cross between a wallaby and a rat.
The rufous bettong is a small, nocturnal marsupial species that has been seen using the underpasses.(Supplied: Mt Rothwell)

“We looked at that in detail as there have been a couple of other short-term studies where they have had frequent occurrences of foxes in a few underpasses, and in one case in Western Australia that coincided in a decline in the bandicoots using that particular underpass,” Professor Goldingay.

“Because we had more underpasses and a longer period for this study, we were able to look at this in more detail than anyone has before.”

Professor Goldingay said predators which were detected at the underpasses included the introduced red fox, feral cat, and dingo.

“What we found was feral cats were very rare at both sites. We did have dingoes at both sites, but they weren’t very frequent in the underpasses,” he said.

“The red fox is the main concern, particularly in Port Macquarie. Of the five underpasses there, there were three that were used relatively frequently.

“However, the fox activity coincided less than expected with the activity of the mammals most at risk and it seemed potential prey were possibly avoiding using the underpasses when foxes were about.”

Caution still needed

A concrete highway underpass tunnel.
A combined wildlife and drainage underpass at Grafton.(Supplied: Southern Cross University)

Despite the positive study results, Professor Goldingay said any expansion of road networks in Australia still needed to be done with caution.

“Australia’s wildlife species are increasingly threatened with extinction by habitat clearing and fragmentation,” he said.

“One leading cause of this is the expansion of our road network, particularly the upgrade and duplication of major highways.

“Underpasses are a useful generic tool to enable wildlife to move across landscapes with roads. But not all ground-dwelling species of wildlife will find underpasses to their liking but so far, many do.”

.