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Paul Hogan steps out for rare outing in Los Angeles | photo

Paul Hogan has been spotted out and about in LA, more than a year after complaining he barely leaves his beachfront mansion.

The 82-year-old Australian movie star was seen running errands in his neighbourhood, where he was photographed filling up his car at a local petrol station.

the Crocodile Dundee actor, who has lived in California since 2003, cut a casual figure during the rate outing, wearing double denim and sunglasses.

It comes after he courted controversy for a Sunrise interview in May last year, in which he revealed he was “homesick” and had barely left his $4.5 million home in Venice Beach amid the pandemic and a rise in homelessness and crime in the area.

The usually upbeat Aussie star appeared out of sorts during his interview with co-host David Koch, who noted that Hogan, a regular guest on the show, was the “most down” he’d ever seen him.

Hogan went on to claim he was unhappy in LA but refused to return to Australia while strict hotel quarantine was in place.

“The crime’s up. I don’t go anywhere. The minute I can come home without being locked in a hotel for two weeks, I’m back,” he said.

That same month, Hogan was seen penning a letter to the homeless that he reportedly put outside his property.

According to the Daily MailHogan’s note read: “THIS IS MY HOUSE NOT YOURS.”

Hogan later denied writing the message, despite being pictured writing it with a red marker.

Months later in November, Hogan told Today he was finally returning to his home country in time for Christmas.

“I’m surviving. I’m homeick, but I’ll be back for Christmas … Looking forward to the end of this stupid disease,” he said at the time.

Hogan, who is now back in LA, has previously said he enjoys the anonymity he gets in the US, which he said kept him in tinseltown despite feeling “like a kangaroo in a Russian zoo”.

“I’m unknown,” he said in 2019, after so many years of scrutiny in his home country.

“I can just put me sunglasses on or a cap or something and no-one recognizes me … And that’s a luxury.”

Hogan – affectionately dubbed ‘Hoges’ – shot to fame as the loveable larrikin on The Paul Hogan Show in the early 70s, before becoming a global superstar – and a one-man arm of Australia’s tourism industry – with the smash hit film Crocodile Dundee in 1986.

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Sports

Horse racing news 2022: Japanese jockey Taiki Yanagida dies following tragic fall in New Zealand

Japanese jockey Taiki Yanagida has died in Waikato Hospital from injuries suffered in a horse racing fall at Cambridge last week.

The 28-year-old had his mother Kayano and one of his two sisters Chiaki by his side when he died, the NZ Herald reports. They had rushed from Japan last Thursday to be with Taiki, who suffered brain and spinal cord damage in the accident.

He was placed in an induced coma straight after the accident and never regained consciousness.

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If he had, the damage to his spinal cord was so severe it was highly unlikely he would have walked again.

Yanagida was riding maiden horse Te Atatu Pash in the last race of the Cambridge synthetic track meeting last Wednesday when his mount was checked and fell.

Yanagida’s riding helmet came off in the fall and he was partially rolled on by his own mount but was also galloped on by a following horse, who in the split-second incident could not have avoided him and struck him heavily in the back.

The accident stunned racing industry participants, particularly the very close-knit ranks of professional jockeys, with Yanagida the first jockey to die in a race fall in New Zealand since Rebecca Black at Gore in December, 2016.

Yanagida, known to almost everyone in the racing industry as Tiger, was born and raised in Japan and didn’t start riding until he was 18, firstly in Australia before moving to New Zealand.

He recently told racing publication race form his mother had initially been against him becoming a jockey.

“I wanted to try and become a jockey but my Mum didn’t agree, she said I must go to university first,” Taiki said in June.

“I completed one year at university before I said I was going to Australia to train to be a jockey.”

Yanagida then spoke of his mother’s fears for him in his chosen career, fears that have so tragically become reality.

“Now my mother is happy for me, she knows I am doing what I always wanted to, but she still worries about me and is always going to the temple to pray for my luck and safety,” he said just two months ago.

Yanagida moved to New Zealand and developed his craft working for top Matamata trainers Andrew Scott and Lance O’Sullivan, the latter one of New Zealand’s all-time champion jockeys.

O’Sullivan said the news was heartbreaking for those who knew Yanagida but will be felt throughout the racing industry not only in New Zealand and Japan but beyond.

“He was a good young man, very dedicated to his career,” O’Sullivan said.

“He had to be because he was quite tall for a jockey so he had to work hard to keep his weight under control but that became his other passion, being a fitness fanatic so he could keep being a jockey.

“He wasn’t a natural jockey when he first came to us but worked so hard he got better and better.

“It is a very sad day for everybody who knew him and the racing industry.”

One of Yanagida’s closest friends was fellow Japanese apprentice jockey Yuto Kumagai, who Yanagida’s had helped mentor since Kumagai arrived in New Zealand.

“He was a very special friend and he told me a few weeks ago he wanted to help me become the leading apprentice this season,” said Kumagai.

“He loved riding and worked so hard to stay fit so he could be better at it. I always wanted to improve.

“It is very, very sad. I am very sad.”

Yanagida was a single man with no children who O’Sullivan says was unfailingly polite.

“These days it is rare for an apprentice to stay with the same trainers right through their apprenticeship because it is so easy once they start riding winners to go somewhere where they don’t have to do the stable work, just ride trackwork and in races .

“But Taiki stayed with us all the way through. He wanted to work hard and do the right thing. That is what sort of young man he was.”

Yanagida’s racing manager Ted McLachlan had been with him and his family at the hospital every day and was devastated by his death.

“He was such a wonderful young man it really is a tragedy and so hard to watch what his mother and sister here have had to go through,” said McLachlan.

“This will really hurt the other people in the industry because Taiki was so popular.”

Yanagida had his personal best season last racing term, riding 42 winners including three black type successes, which are at racing highest levels.

He sacrificed his goal of winning 50 races for the season to fly home to Japan for the first time in four years to see his family for a month in June, only returning to New Zealand mid-July.

Yanagida rode 162 winners in his New Zealand career and while those numbers are testament to his work ethic those who met and worked alongside Yanagida will not remember him for his racetrack victories.

They will remember a polite, happy, dedicated young man who was willing to leave his home country to chase his dream of becoming a jockey.

Taiki achieved his dream and that can never be taken away from him.

This article originally appeared on the NZ Herald and was reproduced with permission

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Categories
Sports

Cameron Smith LIV golf, Hannah Green to play

The Australian Open has added some extra star-power for its return edition this summer with major winner Hannah Green committing to play.

Green, fresh from contending at this month’s Women’s Open, was unveiled in Melbourne on Monday as the event’s latest coup.

The 25-year-old is one of only four Australian women to have won a major, after claiming the 2019 PGA Championship, and returns home after a strong year, albeit with the disappointment of a weekend fadeout at the Women’s Open.

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Green has six top-10 finishes this year, including a top-five at the women’s PGA Championship, while she was also on track for a strong result in at Muirfield until she was derailed by a seven-over final two rounds.

With the major final of the season in the books, the Australian is looking to the months ahead, which will include returning home for a historic edition of the Australian Open.

Green is fresh from contending deep at this month's Women's Open.
Green is fresh from contending deep at this month’s Women’s Open.Source: Getty Images

Having not been held in 2020 or 2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic, the showpiece event returns with the men, women, and all-abilities tournaments being held concurrently.

It is the first national Open worldwide to combine men’s and women’s fields, while the prize money for the two events is the same; $1.7 million AUD each.

“When I heard that the men’s and women’s Opens were coming together for the first time, I knew that I wanted to be there,” said Green, who won the mixed gender TPS Murray River, and the Vic Open, on her last visit.

“We’ve experienced this kind of concept with men and women playing together on the same courses at the same time … and to have it in place for the first time at a national Open is going to be something special.”

High profile Australians committing to return for the summer are increasing by the week after Lucas Herbert and Min Woo Lee recently confirmed they would also be playing.

World No.49 Herbert is down to play both the Australian Open, held at Victoria Golf Club and Kingston Heath on December 1-4, and the Australian PGA Championship at Royal Queensland the week prior.

Lee – now ranked 66th in the world and with top-30 finishes at three of this year’s majors – will play at the latter, which is co-sanctioned by the DP World Tour.

Meanwhile, Aussie golf fans are still waiting to hear if reigning Open Championship winner Cameron Smith will also return, having not played competitively in his home country since December 2019.

Aussie golf fans are still waiting to hear if reigning Open Championship winner Cameron Smith will also return.Source: Getty Images

Smith confirmed last month that he will have an extended stay in Australia this summer to spend time with his family and friends after three years of separation.

But whether that stay will include playing at either the Australian Open, or the Australian PGA Championship – he’s previously won the latter twice – is unclear.

Also unclear is his next career moves after the FedEx Cup playoffs, having been linked to Greg Norman’s Saudi-backed LIV Golf series — claims that he hasn’t denied.

smith told Fox Sports after winning the Claret Jug that his plan is to play in both Australian events, but it is not his priority.

“I think my priority during those weeks is going to be to catch up with family and friends. I’ll probably stay a little bit after into Christmas and just really have a good time,” he told Fox Sports.

“I’m looking forward to that. You really have no idea. It’s been three years since I’ve been at home and just to see some familiar faces will be so nice.”

Meanwhile, another big-name Aussie, Marc Leishman, confirmed to foxsports.com.au last month that he was also eager to return to these shores, although no deal has been confirmed.

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