Monday, January 25, 2010

Former All Black, Leon MacDonald, appointed as assistant coach of Tasman rugby team...


Former All Black, Crusaders and Canterbury fullback Leon MacDonald has been appointed assistant coach of the Tasman rugby team.

MacDonald, who played 56 tests for New Zealand between 2000 and 2008, will also manage the Nelson rugby academy.

Tasman rugby chief executive Peter Barr said the union was delighted to have MacDonald's services.

"Having had 13 years as a professional rugby player including 122 matches for the Crusaders and seven for the Chiefs, his experience and knowledge can only be beneficial to the young up and coming players within our region."

Born and bred in Marlborough, MacDonald first played for Marlborough at age 16. He later moved to Canterbury. He has also had stints in Japan.

Tasman coach Kieran Keane said he was looking forward to working with MacDonald who will take up his roles in April after completing his contract with Japanese club Kintetsu.

Acknowledgements: NZPA

Friday, January 22, 2010

The new Deans Stand opened at AMI Stadium in Christchurch, NZ...


The Deans Stand opened at (Lancaster Park's) AMI Stadium in Christchurch, NZ.

The country's first big-city stadium re-development opened its doors to the public today.

The new Deans Stand at Christchurch's AMI Stadium lifts its permanent capacity to 38,500.

The challenge now is to get paying crowds back through the gates.

Despite the damp weather, thousands of fans turned up to check out the newly-finished stadium today.

“Oh I think it's perfect, really is, it's wonderful,” said one fan.

“I just hope that the people come along and support the boys.”

It was officially reopened this week by John Key and Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker.

It's the first big stadium project completed for the Rugby World Cup.

Work is well underway in Auckland on Eden Park's upgrade, while the new covered stadium in Dunedin is due to be completed just before the world cup.

The major upgrade in Christchurch is the new Deans Stand.

Its 32 metre-long roof aimed at enticing crowds back to the stadium for both music and sporting events.

“The turnout today's a good indication of where everyone's at, so it's good to let everyone on the field and have a look around at what the new facilities are like,” said Crusader’s flanker George Whitelock.

Canterbury rugby needs fans to return, the organisation lost $800,000 for the year, as game attendances and season ticket numbers crashed.

Chief executive Hamish Riach is confident this $60 million upgrade will do the trick.

“We've had a construction site here for two years, so we've been playing rugby in a stadium that hasn't been like this. Now it's done, it's back, and it'll make a difference alright,” he said.

There's a busy schedule ahead for the redeveloped stadium – next weekend it hosts the Phoenix, before a Black Caps; one-dayer and the Crusaders' opening game against the Highlanders in mid-February.

Acknowledgements: TV3 News

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Dan Carter all fired up for new 2010 Super 14 season...


Dan Carter all fired up for new 2010 Super 14 season...

There were plenty of critics of the New Zealand Rugby Union's decision to allow Daniel Carter to miss last year's Super 14, in favour of a six-month stint with French club Perpignan.

They soon had even more to bay about when the star first five-eighth ruptured an Achilles tendon, playing against Stade Francais.

A year on, though, Carter credits that ill-fated sojourn with helping him re-discover his enthusiasm for the game.

"I'm really excited," Carter said after completing his first training session with the Crusaders yesterday.

"2008 was the last time I played in a Crusaders jersey and it was a pretty tough year for myself. The motivation wasn't as high as it should have been and having that break – and now the fact that I'm pretty close to getting back into it – means I'm really pumped up for the season."

Carter is the the first of the Crusaders big-name All Blacks to front for training, with Richie McCaw, Brad Thorn and Kieran Read not expected until February 1 and Andy Ellis and Corey Flynn still a week away.

"I was still feeling pretty fresh [after the All Blacks end of year tour], hence coming back to training today. I'll be in and out for the next couple of weeks because I'm pretty keen to get back into it after missing last year," Carter said.

"I haven't played under Toddy [head coach Todd Blackadder] or Gibbo [backs coach Daryl Gibson] before and I'll be pretty keen to talk to them a bit and see the way that they want to play this season, rather than just come in a week before the first competition game not knowing."

The recently retired Leon MacDonald was also at Rugby Park yesterday. After suffering injury problems with the Japanese team Kintetsu, MacDonald is understood to have come back to Christchurch with an eye toward a future in coaching.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Well the contract has been signed...


Well the contract has been signed for five years, and my 14 year old grandson knows the terms.

There is a sort of grading scale depending on the level he plays at. He will receive free schooling at Brisbane Grammar, a rugby league boarding school, or in Melbourne if he prefers that, and lives with a family there. I won't release the financial details, apart from saying its pretty good for his age.

To me it is like beginning an apprenticeshop that may last five years. If he is in the Melbourne Storm first grade team permanently by the end of this contract, and would be about 19 years old, they could rip up the old contract and offer him one at top rates. He has a great future in the NRL in Australia. In his contract he is asked to state what country he would like to play for eventually. Bit premature, I would have thought?

Its a long journey for a young boy and hopefully he will have the mental maturity to handle it all the way. I could never have done that. I don't think there is another boy of his age in this little country of 4.3 million people who has been given such an opportunity. Pride Petterson-Robati is his name. Good luck Pride!

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Promising racehorse given stemcell surgery after he broke down for the third time...


When Kiwi horse 'Mr Williams' broke down for a third time 12 months ago, trainer Brent Mangos tried to give him away as a hack because he didn't want the horse to become dog tucker.

But no one wanted Mr Williams, who in the previous two years had bowed a tendon, then gone sore twice more in the same foreleg with holes in the tendon.

So when co-owner Scott Plant suggested they try revolutionary stem cell surgery, Mangos had no hesitation.

"We had nothing to lose because he was just sitting in the back paddock doing nothing."

Mangos and his wife Dianne, a co-owner, did have something to lose actually as the surgery cost thousands but they also knew if they could ever get their speedy pacer back on to the track, he had plenty more to offer.

Today, at Wanganui, nearly three years after he last raced, the now eight-year-old is finally back, sharing the back mark of 40 metres in the $10,000 Wanganui Cup.

And the horse trialled so well at the start of the month, Mangos believes even from the tough handicap, he won't be far away with the right trail into the race.

Mangos said the stem cell treatment had without doubt straightened and strengthened Mr Williams' tendon – a considerable surprise given the 16-hand horse was so heavy.

Weighing 600kg, compared with an average horse's 520kg, Mr Williams was hardly a good candidate for staying sound but, touch wood, he was still in one piece, Mangos said.

"The stem cell surgery certainly worked – he'd broken down several times and had been in and out of work for the last three years. Even though his leg is not 100%, it's looking far better."

Mr Williams joins a growing list of talented racehorses who have made comebacks after stem cell treatment where bone marrow is removed from the animal's sternum and stem cells, extracted from the marrow, are cultivated before being injected into the horse's tendon.

Vets believe the stem cells reduce the rate of re-injury by forming a more tendon-like repair tissue, rather than a scar-like tissue which, being weaker, is generally the site of secondary injuries.

While expensive at around $20,000 and time consuming, when racehorses with the talent of Mr Williams are involved the potential rewards are also great.

At his best Mr Williams was "capable of anything", Mangos said. Second to freakish mare Mainland Banner in the 2006 New Zealand Messenger at Alexandra Park, Mr Williams has "heaps of speed," according to Mangos. "He's not a grinder, he's more a speed horse, who's very good coming off another horse's back."

Ad Feedback With an enviable record of 11 wins and nine placings from only 29 starts, and $133,169 in earnings, Mr Williams was sparring with some of the best when he last competed on January 26, 2007.

And, while Mangos said it was expecting a lot of the horse to reach that level immediately, "I expect him to go a good race on Sunday because he trialled very well."

When Mr Williams ran Sires' Stakes Final winner Sir Lincoln to a neck at the Pukekohe workouts on December 1, he beat home horses of the calibre of Tintin In America, Aslan and Lauraella, clocking a slick 2:45.5 for the 2200 metres, home in 56 and 27.7.

While Mr Williams was not a galloper from a stand he had had "a few issues" and was prone to being fidgety and jumpy. "But from 40 metres he should follow them away and if he's not too far off them at the mile and gets a suck into it, he's a chance."

Mangos said Mr Williams took a lot of work – stable foreman Hayden Cullen trucked him to the beach twice a week and he also swam at Mangos' pool to keep the weight off his legs.

Starting his comeback at Wanganui would be easier on the horse because he would get less concussion on the grass and also meet easier opposition. "It's hard in that grade at Auckland at the moment but he's pretty good and hopefully we'll get a few races out of him.

New lease of life for Mr Williams