Categories
Sports

AFL 2022: Fans erupt over Chris Rock sighting, Sydney Swans vs Collingwood score, Brian Taylor commentary

Chris Rock is a Sydney Swans fan, who knew?

The Hollywood star was spotted in the crowd at the SCG on Sunday afternoon for the Round 22 contest between Sydney and Collingwood.

Watch every blockbuster AFL match this weekend Live & Ad-Break Free In-Play on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Rock was wearing a red Swans cap and was enjoying the action on his visit to Sydney.

The Swans posted a photo of the actor and comedian holding a jersey signed by the whole Sydney team.

Channel 7 commentator Brian Taylor couldn’t help himself, making a not-so-subtle reference to when Rock was famously slapped by Will Smith at the Academy Awards earlier this year.

“Famous face here Chris Rock, of course of Grow Ups fame and he just accepts a slap really well these days doesn’t he, Chris Rock,” Taylor said tongue-in-cheek.

Alister Nicholson valiantly tried to get the commentary back on track, adding: “I reckon in terms of A-listers he’s just behind Buddy Franklin in terms of No. 1 at the SCG today BT.”

AFL fans couldn’t believe Taylor had made ice cold remark on live TV.

The Swans controlled the first half and led 5.7 (37) to 3.5 (22) at the main break.

The Magpies are still in touching distance and the match appears set to go down to the wire in typical Collingwood fashion.

Read related topics:sydney

.

Categories
Australia

Red panda escapes Adelaide Zoo, found in tree at Botanic Park two days later

A red panda has escaped from the Adelaide Zoo, sparking a two-day search.

The seven-year-old red panda named Ravi escaped from its enclosure at the zoo, in the city’s CBD, on Friday.

He was found up a tree at the nearby Botanic Park on Sunday, however, keepers have spent the day trying to put him down using food, but without success.

A tranquilliser was used this afternoon, and keepers surrounded the tree with blankets to catch him.

Adelaide Zoo director Dr Phil Ainsley said keepers tried to entice Ravi down using bamboo and sweet corn, but were unsuccessful.

“Based on the advice from our vets we made the decision that we’d look at darting him … [we] finally got a dart into him and then just had to wait about 15 minutes just for the drug to take effect.

“Our amazing vet team and animal keepers were underneath with some blankets and managed to capture him as he dropped.”

Dr Ainsley said the zoo would conduct a review into Ravi’s enclosure to identify how he escaped before he is returned to his new home.

A red panda sitting in a black climbing tunnel looking at the camera
A red panda in the Adelaide Zoo’s climbing tunnel.(ABC News: Ethan Rix)

He said the Department of Primary Industries and Regions SA (PIRSA) was alerted when Ravi went missing on Friday but the public was not notified as Ravi was deemed a “low risk” to the environment and humans.

Dr Ainsley said Ravi’s adventure was the first mammal escape from the zoo in recent years.

The focus now, he said, was on Ravi’s wellbeing, after he had only arrived at the zoo last week.

“He’s now just being transferred back into the zoo where he’ll spend the next couple of days in our animal health department just getting a check-up and making sure he’s OK,” he said.

“Obviously, being in Botanic Park, there’s a lot of fig trees, so probably he has had a bit of a munch on some figs that were in the trees but [he] will be a hungry panda.”

.

Categories
Sports

Ryan Sessegnon: ‘Nobody is superhuman but you can try to be as close as possible to it’ | Tottenham Hotspur

The most exacting element of Antonio Conte’s notorious pre-season programme, in the face of stern competition, was put into place during a spell of 30C heat in Seoul. Tottenham had trained for two hours and then, cajoled by the fitness coach, Gian Piero Ventrone, were told to run 42 lengths of the World Cup Stadium pitch. Anyone whose June had been eaten into by international duty was let off with a mere 30; Ryan Sessegnon was not among those blessed with such fortune.

“I knew it was going to be tough but it was worse than I thought,” he says in reference to the blistering intensity demanded during Spurs’ preparations. “Those 42 runs in Korea, the amount of running, it was crazy. I wasn’t being sick like a few of the players were, but I was on my knees.”

Perhaps it worked because Sessegnon has begun the season standing tall. His first Premier League goal for Tottenham also opened the club’s account for 2022-23 and offset what had been a sticky start against Southampton. They won at a canter from there and their left wing-back was relentless: Sessegnon looked every inch a wide all-rounder from Conte’s model and could feel the summer regimen paying off.

“Definitely [fitness] makes a difference,” he says. “When I’m on the pitch and feel like I’m in my stride and have the energy to go up and down, you almost feel unstoppable. You feel like you can go past anyone, do anything on the pitch, you really feel yourself.”

There is, famously, no hiding place for a wing-back under Conte. “It’s probably one of the hardest positions in the team at the moment,” Sessegnon says. “He wants you to contribute going forward but defensively as well, so you have to have that engine to go up and down. That’s one of my strong suits but it can always be improved.”

Perhaps the moment when Sessegnon ran off Kyle Walker-Peters and planted a stooping far-post header past Gavin Bazunu will go down as an arrival. It would not be before time: he was limited to 21 top-flight outings in his first three seasons after joining from Fulham, albeit one of those campaigns was largely spent on loan at Hoffenheim, and his roar on to the scene as a 16- year-old was in danger of becoming a receding memory.

A year after that, in 2017-18, he was scoring 15 goals in the Championship. But it was only in May that he turned 22 and, after a succession of minor injuries stalled him last time around, there is the sense a corner may have been turned.

“It helps,” he says of breaking his duck. “At the back end of last season I had a little run in the team and I felt part of the team. To start the first game of the season was very good for me and to add my goal to help the team win was great.”

Ryan Sessegnon, pictured at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, with some of the youngsters who attended Summer of Spurs, a free activity program being delivered by the Club throughout August to keep local young people engaged during the school holidays.
Ryan Sessegnon, pictured at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, with some of the youngsters who are attending “Summer of Spurs”, a free activity program being delivered by the club throughout August to keep local young people engaged during the school holidays. Photograph: Tottenham Hotspur FC/Getty Images

Sessegnon has always had the right tools: speed, trickery, an end product, a turbo-powered engine. They have not always been enough to give him a chance and perhaps he felt a sense of deja vu when Ivan Perisic, a Champions League winner and World Cup finalist, arrived from Internazionale in June. Perisic can play in several positions but he would surely have started in Sessegnon’s place had his pre-season activity not been limited by a calf injury.

“I had a different attitude,” Sessegnon says, rejecting the idea that such high-level competition for his place was disspiriting. “I never saw the situation like that. I saw it as a chance for me to improve and get help from him.”

That is what happened last Saturday when Perisic, who replaced Sessegnon in the 66th minute, advised his younger teammate to exploit Walker-Peters’s lack of height and make the run that brought his goal. “That feeling of arriving in the box at just the right time is a priceless feeling,” he says.

More of the same would help reduce the burden on Harry Kane and Spurs’ other forwards and there is little doubt he has it in him. Sessegnon was a striker before the coaches at Fulham realized his running power from him was too good to waste and those instincts have never quite been blunted.

“If you saw the goals I scored at Fulham a lot of them were in and around the box, rebounds, little short finishes. So it helped from when I was younger. I want to get back to doing those kinds of things, following things in, so I can help the team.”

Ryan Sessegnon challenges Kyle Walker-Peters
Sessegnon knows he needs to have the engine to compete both in an attacking and defensive role for Spurs. Photograph: Harriet Lander/Getty Images

Perhaps Chelsea will be next to observe Sessegnon’s refined nose for goal. A meeting of London rivals has already added spice – “Coming through at Fulham it’s in your brain to dislike Chelsea so this game is extra-special for me” – when thoughts turn to the likely identity of his direct opponent.

Reece James is five months older than Sessegnon and the pair are friends, first pitched against one another at age-group levels from under-nine upwards and becoming colleagues in the England squad that won the Uefa Under-19 Championship in 2017.

“You have to say he’s come out on top,” he says of those academy meetings, when Chelsea’s youngsters would often run riot. “I think I know his weaknesses as well but I wo n’t say too much now. He’s a great player, what he’s done for Chelsea and England has been very good, so you can always look at that and it inspires you.”

A meeting as equals at Stamford Bridge could constitute a minor career landmark; further evidence, perhaps, that Sessegnon can make up ground lost on his old rival in the long-term. The battle to keep his place will be formidable: there was a reason for the acquisition of Perisic and, besides, rotation will be necessary even if he manages to see the veteran off. For now, Sessegnon hopes those yards in the legs keep making the difference.

“There are always going to be times when you’re a bit tired, especially early in the season,” he says. “But it’s about the timing of when to arrive and when to get back in. Nobody is superhuman but you can try to be as close as possible to it.”

Whether in the heat of Asia or a sweltering English summer that has little precedent, Conte would expect nothing less.

Ryan Sessegnon was speaking at the Summer of Spurs – a free activity program by the club to keep local young people engaged during the school holidays, promoting health and wellbeing and reducing levels of crime and antisocial behaviour.

Categories
Technology

Samsung Brings Next-level Audio Experience to India; Expands Galaxy Ecosystem with Galaxy Buds2 Pro – Samsung Newsroom India

Samsung, India’s largest consumer electronics brand, today announced top-of-the-line earbuds Galaxy Buds2 Pro. The new premium Galaxy Buds2 Pro comes with 24bit hi-fi sound quality, enhanced 360 immersive audio and intelligent Audio Noise Cancellation (ANC).

The quality of sound gets compromised when played from a source device on a Bluetooth TWS. With the new Samsung Seamless Codec (SSC), Galaxy Buds2 Pro minimizes the perceptual sound loss and processes steady and high quality sound. Users can now listen to clearer and richer sound than ever before.

Galaxy Buds2 Pro also comes with immersive 360 ​​Audio capability powered by Dolby Atmos. Enjoy ‘Best in Class’ cinematic experience with Direct Multi Channel [5.1, 7.1, Dolby Atmos] and enjoy immersive hi-fi sound experience. Samsung has also improved ‘Head Tracking Response’ in the new Buds2 Pro and users will be able to feel the sound following their head movements.

Three high SNR mics and increased wind shield area (almost twice) in Galaxy Buds2 Pro filters out 40% more unwanted noise, making an ‘already’ quiet environment quieter.

Apart from delivering the best quality sound, the ergonomic design of Galaxy Buds2 Pro comfortably fits any ear size. 15% smaller in size, Galaxy buds2 Pro fits securely even during dynamic movements. The increased airflow between the vent hole and nozzle grill decreases muffing sound and the 3-mic system under an aero dynamic design maximizes voice clarity during calls.

Galaxy Buds2 Pro can seamlessly connective with other Galaxy devices including Samsung televisions as well. With Auto Switch feature, you can effortlessly transition from watching your favorite show to answering a call, with just the touch of a finger. SmartThings Find integration helps you locate your Galaxy Buds2 Pro faster, just in case you happen to misplace them, whether they are inside their cradle or not.

Price, Offer and Availability

Consumers can pre-book Galaxy Buds2 Pro on Samsung.com and across leading online and offline retail stores starting August 16, 2022.

Galaxy Buds2 Pro is priced at INR 17999. Additionally, consumers can avail INR 3000 cashback from all leading banks bringing the effective price to INR 14999. Galaxy Buds2 Pro will be available in Graphite, White and Bora Purple colors.

Additionally, on pre-booking Galaxy Buds2 Pro, customers can purchase Samsung Wireless Charger Pad worth INR 2999 at a discounted price of just INR 499. Customers will be eligible for easy finance options and get up to INR 3000 when exchanging their old device.

Model Price Pre-Book Offers
Galaxy Buds2 Pro INR 17999 Samsung Wireless Charger Pad worth INR 2999 for INR 499

Multibank Cashback*: INR3000

Exchange Bonuses*: INR3000

Easy Finance Options

* Customers can either claim cashback or exchange bonus.

Categories
Sports

8/14/2022 Horse Racing Tips and Best Bets – Coleraine, Great Western Steeplechase day

A seven race program has been set down for Coleraine on Sunday. The weather forecast is for showers, the track is soft (5) and the rail is in the true position for the entire circuit.

*Existing customers only. 2nd Racing bet. Excl SA & WA. T’s & C’s apply. Gamble responsibly.

WATCH THESE RACES LIVE AT tab

RaceOne: 9 Stan The Caddy

RaceTwo: 2 Heir To The Throne

RaceThree: 6Bedford

RaceFour: 4 Under The Bridge

RaceFive: 2 Rebellious Lord

Race Six: 6 RealThinker

Race Seven: 3 Weightman

*Existing customers only. 2nd Racing bet. Excl SA & WA. T’s & C’s apply. Gamble responsibly.

BEST BET: Race Two Number 2 Heir To The Throne

NEXT BEST: Race Three Number 6 Bedford

BEST VALUE: Race Six Number 6 Real Thinker

Quaddie Tips (Races Four Through To Seven):

LegOne: 4

LegTwo: 2, 4, 5, 7

Leg Three: 1, 2, 3, 6, 7

Leg Four: 3

$50 Investment = 250% of the dividend if successful

*Existing customers only. 2nd Racing bet. Excl SA & WA. T’s & C’s apply. Gamble responsibly.

Melbourne Cup winner Rogan Josh dies

Melbourne Cup winner Rogan Josh has died following colic-related complications. Rogan Josh was Bart Cummings’ 11th Melbourne Cup winner and had…

Australian Bookmaker Reviews

Which bookmaker should you bet with? We Review each of the leading online Australian Bookmakers and rate them in order…

Categories
Technology

SpaceX: Elon Musk hopes for a self-sustaining city on Mars in 20 years

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk on Sunday said that he hopes for a self-sustaining city on the Red Planet in 20 years’ time, as his space company prepares Starship to take people and cargo to the moon, Mars and beyond.

Musk said in a tweet: ‘I hope there is a self-sustaining city on Mars in 20 years!’

Last month, the world’s richest man said he was optimistic that ‘humanity will reach Mars in your lifetime’.

‘Without a common goal, humanity will fight itself. The Moon brought us together in 1969, Mars can do that in the future,’ Musk had said.

The Tesla CEO had stated that making multiplanetary life will help back up the ecosystems on Earth and added that apart from humans no other species can transport life to Mars.

Referring to Biblical patriarch Noah who built an Ark that survived the great flood on Earth, Musk said his Starship models will be ‘modern Noah’s Arks’, that can save ‘life from a calamity on Earth’.

SpaceX’s Starship consists of a giant first-stage booster called Super Heavy and a 165-foot-tall (50 meters) upper-stage spacecraft known as Starship. Both elements are designed to be fully reusable, and both will be powered by SpaceX’s next-generation Raptor engines, 33 for Super Heavy and six for Starship.

Last week, it was reported that the much-awaited first orbital test flight of the Starship vehicle will not lift off this month as it has not yet received the necessary launch clearance.

Earlier, the launch was scheduled for July and was shifted to August later.

On August 2, Musk said that a successful orbital flight is probably ‘between 1 and 12 months from now.’

According to a radio-spectrum license application that the company filed with the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC), SpaceX is targeting a six-month window that opens on September 1 for the highly anticipated mission.

.

Categories
Sports

Live stream details, video result, blog

A top-two spot and home qualifying final could be up for grabs on Sunday afternoon as Sydney and Collingwood — two of the AFL’s most in-form teams — meet at the SCG.

The Swans (14-6, 127.5%) are in a strong position to host a qualifying final, especially after Brisbane’s inability to thrash Carlton after threatening to increase their percentage in a massive way. They’ve won six of their past seven games.

But the Magpies (15-6, 106.3%) can put themselves in Position A to finish in the top two with a 12th straight win and skip ahead of Brisbane on the AFL ladder.

Watch every blockbuster AFL match this weekend Live & Ad-Break Free In-Play on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

The Magpies were dealt a major blow just hours before the first bounce, with star midfielder Jordan De Goey a late withdrawal due to a hip flexor issue. De Goey has been in excellent touch since returning to the Pies side two weeks ago with 23 and 25 disposals respectively in wins over Port and Melbourne.

De Goey was replaced by Trent Bianco, with Callum Brown named the medical sub. There were no late changes for the Swans, who named Braeden Campbell as their sub.

This match gets underground at 3.20pm AEST from the SCG.

Watch it live on Fox Footy (channel 503) from 3pm AEST.

Follow Sydney v Collingwood in our live blog below!

QUARTER BY QUARTER MATCH REPORT

Collingwood had the run early against the Swans but couldn’t put it on the scoreboard before a rare Scott Pendlebury error gifted Sydney the first of the match.

With the corridor kick coming unstuck, the Swans pounced before Lance Franklin unselfishly opted for the pass to teammate Isaac Heeney who nailed the first.

Dane Rampe had Sydney’s second later – his first goal since 2016 – as the home crowd really got going.

But when Jack Ginnivan pounced on a midfield turnover and went the barrel forward, Beau McCreery chased the footy down and got the hand pass over to Brody Mihocek who snapped truly from the square.

“Gee it was hard work for the Pies!” Commentator Brian Taylor said.

“Not sure why (Ginnivan) went the barrel… but they got the goal in the end.”

Mihocek appeared to cop a cork in the process of kicking the goal in worrying early signs for the Pies.

Tom Papley broke a tackle and got the crowd back to their feet with the Swans’ third goal of the day.

In more worrying signs, Brayden Maynard appeared to nurse his right shoulder after the Papley goal. He made his way to the bench only to be sent back into the action.

He then laid a big tackle and was slow to his feet when brought to ground by James Rowbottom.

The Pies dodged a bullet when Ryan Clarke’s goal was denied as the goal review showed the footy shaving the post.

While his brother Nick struggled to get into the action, Josh Daicos narrowed Sydney’s lead to eight points with a goal on the run from stoppage.

“You have to be accountable because if he give him that much room, he’ll kick the goal,” commentator Shaun Burgoyne said.

Young Ash Johnson beat two Swans to take a big grab 25m on the angle, but he couldn’t convert.

Down the other end, Franklin showed why he is the Swans’ marquee man as he roved and goaled on a tight angle.

“He’s the man they all come to see,” Taylor said.

The goal brought Franklin just one shy of the great Tony Lockett on 462 goals for the Swans.

Sam Reid had the chance to extend Sydney’s lead but pushed his set shot out on the full as the quarter time siren sounded.

Papley may have burned his teammate Franklin early in the second term, but Chad Warner made sure he lowered the eyes minutes later after breaking two tackles.

Franklin couldn’t pull in the mark on the arc, but Warner roved brilliantly and got the ball to Will Haywood who goaled from the square.

The Pies just couldn’t win the footy in their front half as Taylor said they were “getting a bit of a bath from the Sydney defenders”.

When Jack Crisp slipped over in the center square, the Swans gathered the turnover and found Logan McDonald.

But the youngster leaned back on it and missed to the near side.

Franklin couldn’t get the bounce when he snapped from the pocket as Collingwood just couldn’t get into the contest in the second.

It took a Jack Ginnivan goal from a high tackle free kick to give the Pies a sniff.

Paddy McCartin was penalized for the tackle and the controversial Collingwood forward slotted it to the boos of the crowd to narrow Sydney’s lead to 15 points.

“It’s immediately high from McCartin,” commentator Jude Bolton said.

“I believe the first one was around the throat. He’s got to go lower.”

But Ginnivan left the field moments later and headed straight to the rooms, leaving the Pies down to just two on the bench while medical staff struggled to stem Will Hoskin-Elliott’s nose bleed from earlier in the quarter.

Ginnivan was subbed out at half time and later spotted on the bench with ice on his left hamstring.

Franklin got the Swans off to the best possible start in the third term when he snapped his 462nd goal for Sydney – drawing him level with Tony Lockett.

Johnson couldn’t bridge the gap after some Daicos brother brilliance in the center of the ground.

“He just didn’t get back in his run up,” Burgoyne lamented.

“I’ve got under it.”

If you can’t see the blog, tap here.

.

Categories
Business

Why is the Reserve Bank of Australia exploring digital currency options? | australian economy

Last week the Reserve Bank of Australia announced a year-long research project with the Digital Finance Cooperative Research Center to explore “use cases” for a central bank digital currency (CBDC). Here is what’s going on.

What is a CBDC and how is it different from cryptocurrency?

Banknotes are a physical form of money we exchange for goods and services. And we’re increasingly making digital transactions, whether tapping credit cards or smartphones. ATM use is down about a third in three years, the RBA says.

Now, the RBA and counterparts around the world are studying new digital forms of money that central banks themselves might issue. Research will examine uses of CBDC for commercial banks – the wholesale market – and a retail version the public may one day use.

Cryptocurrencies, by contrast, are decentralized, unlike “fiat currencies” produced and regulated by governments. Bitcoin and ethereum are among prominent digital currencies relying on cryptography to secure transactions.

To curb price volatility of cryptos, stablecoins have been created to mimic “fiat currencies” by anchoring value to assets such as the US dollar. The failure of TerraUSD and other stablecoins reflects the sector’s infancy. CBDCs might fill the gap.

“A fully realized central bank digital currency has the promise to bring the regulatory certainty and power of digital assets to a place that’s coupled with the trust and faith that we have in money that’s issued by the Reserve Bank today,” said Michael Bacina, a partner at Piper Alderman and a fintech specialist.

Why is the RBA getting involved?

Partly exploratory. “I don’t think it’s inevitable” that the bank will issue CBDCs, says the RBA deputy governor, Michele Bullock.

“In terms of day-to-day payments that touch you and [me] and our friends and family, it’s not clear to us what the case for it is,” she says. “We have banknotes. We have lots and lots of digital money alternatives [including] fast payment now.

“I think we just need to keep our toes in it, and not be at the bleeding forefront.”

Australia weekend signup

The focus will be less on the technology itself but rather settling on design principles of how decentralized such currencies might be, while maintaining standards of protecting privacy that the public can accept.

“Do you put limits on the amount of money people can have in this? Does the central bank issue it directly, or [as] we do with banknotes issue CBDCs via existing banks,” Bullock says. “I don’t think anyone’s come to a complete consensus.”

Is there an appetite?

If an Australian Securities and Investments Commission report on investor behavior released on Thursday is any guide, the market for digital currencies is growing rapidly.

Its survey of 1,053 investors found that cryptocurrencies were second only to Australian shares in terms of most common asset held, at 73% and 44%.

In terms of the value of the holdings, cryptos were also on a par with residential investment properties.

An ASIC survey of 1053 retail investors found their holdings of cryptocurrencies were on a par with resident housing investments, with only their holdings of Australian shares larger. pic.twitter.com/uF7e4iJtgk

— Peter Hannam (@p_hannam) August 11, 2022

What do researchers say?

Andreas Furche, the chief executive of the Digital Finance Cooperative Research Centre, notes the RBA’s ongoing caution.

“It’s not something that’s a done deal,” Furche says. “It’s not clear yet whether from the RBA perspective this is going to fit or be useful or not.”

The trial will be “ring-fenced” with only registered parties taking part. It will, though, be open in another sense: “We don’t have a preconceived outcome.

“Those of us who build or discuss or provide infrastructure aren’t necessarily the innovators that build new kinds of market infrastructure, business models or whatever on that infrastructure,” Furche says. “If we just make that assessment based on what we can think of ourselves, we’re not going to get anywhere.”

QuickGuide

How to get the latest news from Guardian Australia

Show

Photograph: Tim Robberts/Stone RF

Thank you for your feedback.

He says the rise of stablecoins indicates there’s an opportunity to meet people’s interest in digital currencies without the exposure to as much volatility.

“Despite the name, [stablecoins] are often still fraught with risk because they’re not necessarily backed 100%,” he says. CBDCs, based on a national currency, are an “ultimate stablecoin”.

What do market participants say?

Chloe White, an independent consultant and formerly Treasury’s representative on the Council of Financial Regulators examining cryptos, says blockchain and the ecosystems that are building around it will continue to function and grow whether governments issue CBDCs or not.

“What we see happening in cryptocurrency markets at the moment very much mirrors what we see in the traditional system,” White says. “You have a so-called real economy where people are transacting goods … and then you have a financial layer wrapped around” with derivatives, insurance and so on.

There may even be national security reasons for having CBDCs and not missing out on emerging technologies and new ways of doing business.

“China, in particular, seems quite determined to want to leverage this technology in some way,” she says. “And there’s barely a corner of the world that you can point at that has influence and economic power that’s not looking at these issues in some way.”

Bacina says the fintech world is evolving faster than the internet at its genesis. “It’s the same as we could not predict Netflix and we could not predict Amazon’s next-day delivery when the internet was being invented and rolled out.

“There are no wires to be put down, and that physical infrastructure to be connected – it’s already there.

“We’re talking about the ability to automate things like bank guarantees, and other slow, manual processes which currently drive up compliance costs.”

As for who might benefit from the RBA and Digital Finance Cooperative Research Center study, Bacina says participants may learn as much as the institutions.

“It’s a six- or seven-way street,” he says. Interest will focus on “deep analysis of systems contracts, regulatory interfaces – that kind of analysis doesn’t occur very often”.

Categories
Sports

Rennie savages Wallabies after dominant Argentina defeat | Latest Rugby News

Wallabies coach Dave Rennie has expressed his frustration after a record defeat to Argentina in San Juan.

The visitors were dominated from siren to siren as Los Pumas cruised to a 48-17 win, looking like a side properly dealing with life without Michael Hooper and a near full XV of players.

Purchase your tickets for the O’Reilly Cup and the Rugby Championship

It caps off a fortnight that has seen multiple late changes and season-ending injuries to the likes of Quade Cooper and Samu Kerevi as Rennie lambasted their inability to shut down the high ball.

“Massive disappointment. That’s not good enough,” coach Dave Rennie said after the match.

“We conceded four tries with kicks in-between us and got dominated in the collision area. We created plenty of opportunities but we have to be patient and our rucks not a disaster.

“We just weren’t clinical enough…we definitely lacked cohesion with a few changes. We’ll look at the footage but we’re better than that.

“It’s a massive disappointment. We want to earn the respect of the country but you don’t do it with performances like that.”

Captain James Slipper echoed these thoughts, giving credit to an Argentina side that were clinical with ball in hand as dominant in every facet of the game.

“Off the back of a good performance last week, we really wanted to back it up and we fell short of standards today,” captain James Slipper added.

“I thought the Argentineans were good today and got the momentum behind them from the crowd, they were a tough team to play catch-up footy against so full credit to them.

“We’re excited to get home, it’s been a really tough tour for us so we have the South Africans twice at home now which we’re really looking forward to and being back in front of our home fans.”

Rennie refused to use the growing injury list as an excuse as they were outclassed.

“We would (like to have a consistent team list) but we had a good enough side to do the job,” he believes.

“We gave them a few soft points early on and fought our way back into it. We have to better and we’ll get a few players back. Whoever puts the jersey on has to front but we weren’t good enough.”

.

Categories
Business

Why it’s not bananas to put your eggs in the freezer: Experts say it can help families save money

Why it’s not bananas to put your eggs in the freezer: Experts say it can help families save money

  • Apples will last up to 77 days longer if they are put in the fridge instead of bowl
  • Mushrooms should be refrigerated, but they should first be placed in paper bag
  • Cucumbers last longer put in a cupboard or placed in a bowl on a countertop

Keeping apples in the fridge and eggs in the freezer might sound bananas, but experts say it can help families save money during the cost-of-living crisis.

With grocery prices rising a record 10 per cent compared with last year and supermarket staples doubling in price, many shoppers are searching for ways to keep costs down.

And experts at consumer champions Which? say families can save money and reduce waste simply by storing their food correctly.

Their tips include putting eggs in the freezer, but only after cracking and beating them before storing them in a container. Bread should also go in the freezer.

With grocery prices rising a record 10 per cent compared with last year and supermarket staples doubling in price, many shoppers are searching for ways to keep costs down

With grocery prices rising a record 10 per cent compared with last year and supermarket staples doubling in price, many shoppers are searching for ways to keep costs down

Apples will last up to 77 days longer if they are stored in the fridge. Mushrooms should also be refrigerated, but they should first be placed in a paper bag.

Cucumbers last longer if they are stored in a cupboard or placed in a bowl on a countertop.

Stoned fruits such as peaches, plums and cherries ripen better outside of the fridge, allowing the flavors to fully develop.

Overly ripe fruit that shows no sign of mold can still be used as a topping for porridge or in a crumble.

Once opened, peanut butter is fine to store in a cupboard as long as it’s tightly sealed.

Which? money expert Reena Sewraz said: ‘This crisis is putting a lot of families under pressure but many people aren’t aware that simply storing your food differently can vastly extend its shelf life, saving you money.’

Make your money work harder – and offset your energy bills: Page 47

advertisement

.