Showing posts with label Rugby World Cup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rugby World Cup. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Christchurch lose all RWC and Super 15 matches...

Cropped image of England rugby celebrations.Image via Wikipedia
Christchurch loses all Rugby World Cup matches...



Rugby World Cup Minister Murray McCully has announced no Rugby World Cup matches will be played in Christchurch

Christchurch has lost all its Rugby World Cup matches.

The announcement has just come from Rugby World Cup Minister Murray McCully after consultation with IRB officials who are in Christchurch.

The decision was unanimously supported by the International Rugby Board, the New Zealand Government, the New Zealand Rugby Union and Rugby New Zealand.

Vbase, who are responsible for AMI Stadium, advised tournament organisers that it could not provide an absolute assurance that all necessary remedial work could be completed in time for the Rugby World Cup.

Quarter final matches on October 8 and 9 will be played at Eden Park in Auckland, but a decision regarding where the five pool matches will now be played is yet to be made.

Mr McCully says the Government is committed to keeping most of them in the South Island. He says the decision to move all the games has been made with sincere regret.

Ticket purchasers for all Christchurch matches will be offered the option of a refund or the opportunity to secure tickets to the relevant reallocated matches. Rugby New Zealand 2011 has confirmed there will be enough tickets available to rescheduled matches for those wanting to take up that option.

The surface of AMI Stadium (formerly Lancaster Park) has been badly damaged by liquefaction during the last earthquake in Christchurch. Super 15 matches have also been transfered from AMI Stadium to Nelson, most likely Twickenham for the Sharks v Crusaders game, and possibly Timaru.

Acknowledgements:© 2011 NZCity, NewsTalkZB

http://anzacbloggersunite.blog.co.uk

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Thursday, September 23, 2010

SBW pays the price for defensive deficiences and is on the bench against Wellington...

Canterbury Rugby Football UnionImage via Wikipedia Sonny Bill Williams has paid the price for his defensive deficiencies and drops to the bench for Saturday's 'Earthquake Relief' ITM Cup match against Wellington in Christchurch.


Williams, who makes way for a fit-again Ryan Crotty at second five-eighths, is one of five changes to the Canterbury team that was thumped 31-20 by Taranaki last weekend.



The aspiring All Black will get a chance to make an impact off the bench where he will cover the outside backs.



All Blacks Colin Slade (first five) and Corey Flynn (hooker) return to replace Stephen Brett and Steve Fualau respectively, with both no doubt keen to push their claims for a spot on the end-of-year tour.



And two others also return off the injured list, with Nasi Manu (knee) back at No 8 and Tu Umaga-Marshall (shoulder) reclaiming his spot on the wing. Manu repalces Ash Parker who drops to the bench while Umaga-Marshall comes in for Patrick Osborne who isn not required for the 22 this week.



But it's Williams' axing that will no doubt have lips flapping in the earthquake region, even though he is replaced by a quality individual in the form of Crotty who has finally shaken off his foot problems.



Williams has looked a polished performer on attack in his two starts for the Cantabs (against Northland and Taranaki) and his distribution and offloading in particular has been impressive. He also looked to have established a fair combination with blockbusting centre Robbie Fruean.



But the former league star was not the same imposing figure on defence and last week against Taranaki he made two howlers fielding the loose ball on the deck in wet conditions, both of which led to tries for the home side.



Canterbury coach Rob Penney will no doubt play down Williams' demotion, and it could be they are just looking to take a little pressure off the high-profile new signing who remains under massive scrutiny as he looks to play his way on to the All Black tour.



But it's hard to see how Graham Henry will be pleased with Williams' dropping, with the national selectors surely keen to see as much of the newcomer as they can ahead of their tour selection.



Saturday's week-nine match (kickoff 2.35pm) will be played in front of a near capacity crowd at AMI Stadium after the CRFU, along with partners, opted to make it free admission following the recent earthquakes in the region.



Close to 36,000 people are expected at a game with plenty riding on it. Canterbury lie fourth on the standings, just a point ahead of the Lions. Wellington last won in Christchurch in 2007 and would dearly love to repeat that dose on Saturday.



 CANTERBURY: 15 Sean Maitland, 14 Tu Umaga-Marshall, 13 Robbie Fruean, 12 Ryan Crotty, 11 Telusa Veainu, 10 Colin Slade, 9 Andy Ellis; 8 Ash Parker, 7 George Whitelock (capt), 6 Matt Todd, 5 Isaac Ross, 4 Luke Romano, 3 Peter Borlase, 2 Corey Flynn, 1 Wyatt Crockett. Reserves: 16 Steve Fualau, 17 Andrew Olorenshaw, 18 Rob Verbakel, 19 Ash Parker, 20 Willi Heinz, 21 Stephen Brett, 22 Sonny Bill Williams.


Sunday, September 12, 2010

Wallabies now major threat to AB's at next year's Rugby World Cup...

All Blacks v WallabiesImage via Wikipedia

The Wallabies are now the major threat to the All Blacks at next year's Rugby World Cup


The Wallabies have superseded South Africa as New Zealand's closest challenger and major threat at next year's Rugby World Cup, according to All Blacks star Jerome Kaino.



While New Zealand logged their 10th straight win over Australia in the last Tri-Nations match of the season in Sydney on Saturday, the Wallabies' performance gave their supporters more cause for hope following the drought-breaking win at altitude over the Springboks in Bloemfontein the previous week.



Australia led by 13 with 15 minutes to go, but conceded two late converted tries to lose 23-22.



Fatigue caused by a short turnaround following a long flight from South Africa and Tests in successive weeks against the Springboks appeared to take a toll.



Regular starting blindside flanker Kaino, who sparked New Zealand after coming off the bench on Saturday, lavished praise on what he perceived as an improving Australian side.



"The Wallabies have young players, keen players, that are willing to improve and they are improving," Kaino said.



"They have got a lot of enthusiastic players. I've seen them grow from 12 months ago.



"The Springboks, no disrespect, a lot of what they do is quite predictable.



"Seeing these Wallabies out there, it poses a new threat, just thinking on what they are going to present in 12 months time, at World Cup time."



Kaino pointed to New Zealand's dramatic change of fortune over the last year as evidence of how much a team can improve in just 12 months.



Since losing a third straight game to the Springboks, the All Blacks have reeled off 15 successive victories, just two short of the world record streak for top flight nations.



"Twelve months ago, people weren't really thinking much or saying much about this Wallabies team and all the new players that are in there," Kaino said.



"Nowadays a lot of these players are key figures in the Wallabies team and international rugby.



"Just seeing them improve and how much these young players are going to learn, from these tough times, it's going to be huge."



He described Wallabies openside flanker David Pocock as 'a menace', who was filling the gap created by the retirement of George Smith.



While Australian goalkicker Matt Giteau missed four shots on Saturday, All Blacks halfback Piri Weepu landed all five of his attempts.



Weepu revealed he had a disastrous practice session the day before, making only three or four of 15 shots before deciding to stop.



"Before the game I was thinking to myself 'I hope this doesn't come down to goal kicks' and obviously it did come down to that," Weepu told reporters.



"You've got to be able to kick under a whole lot of pressure and 'Gits' is pretty good at kicking under pressure and tonight probably wasn't his night."



Acnowlegements: © 2010 AAP





Monday, September 6, 2010

NZ Black Ferns win womens Rugby World Cup for fourth time...

England v New Zealand, 2nd test match in Hamil...Image via Wikipedia Rugby World Cup  -  New Zealand's fourth straight women's World Cup win this morning, after narrowly beating England 13-10 in the final at London, was built around composure, veteran first five-eighth Anna Richards said.


Richards, 45, was one of three Black Ferns shown the yellow card during the keenly contested match which was not settled until the 66th minute when Kelly Brazier slotted home a penalty.



The Black Ferns' defence then proved impenetrable for the final 14 minutes as England, playing New Zealand in a final for the third consecutive time, launched a series of attacks from deep inside their half in a desperate attempt to snatch victory.



For Richards, it was a fourth World Cup medal in a Black Ferns career that began in 1990.



Today's final marked her 49th test for the Blacks Ferns after having been called up when first choice No 10 Amiria Rule was ruled out of the tournament with a knee injury.



"It feels awesome, it feels kind of surreal," Richards said at a post match interview.



"It was an awesome atmosphere tonight and kind of a strange game with all the sin-binnings. It was a weird game actually, but nice to come out on top.



"It definitely ebbed and flowed. I thought we had the better first 15 or 20 and then England came back when we had a couple of sin-binnings.



"Our composure (helped us win), especially when we were down to 14 and 13 at some stages, and we believed in ourselves."



It felt good to collect her fourth winner's medal.



"I am tired but it is kind of surreal, I will believe it later but I am really happy. This one is exactly the same, it doesn't get any better - it's the best."



Otago winger Carla Hohepa crossed in the 33rd minute to score the opening try of the match while the Black Ferns had 14 players on the field.



Richards had been shown the yellow card for not rolling away in the 22nd minute and was joined in sin bin seven minutes later by prop Mel Bosman.



Otago second five-eighth Kelly Brazier converted Hohepa's try and New Zealand went to the break leading 7-0.



England's Katy McLean narrowed the lead with an early second half penalty but New Zealand came back.



Hohepa nearly added a second try when she pounced on an England turnover but lock Joanna McGilchrist produced the cover tackle of the tournament.



Brazier stretched New Zealand's lead to 10-3 with a penalty but the Black Ferns lost skipper Melissa Ruscoe to yet another yellow card in the 57th minute.



England took advantage of their superior numbers to equalise in the 62nd minute.



They opted to scrummage from the penalty and, after great work from the pack, the ball was popped onto the blindside for Charlotte Barras to score her fourth try of the tournament which McLean superbly converted.



New Zealand's winning points came from a penalty after they drove deep into English territory and Brazier slotted home from just inside the 22m line.



Ad Feedback "I was pretty nervous (with the penalty at 10-10)," Brazier said.



"The crowd were making a lot of noise. I just thought of it as another kick and thankfully it went straight through the posts.



"Obviously there was still a bit of time on the clock so I knew it wasn't over yet."



But New Zealand defence was up to the task as they calmly repelled England.



"We knew if we could just get back down their end, no one has scored on us from their own 22, so we were happy," Brazier said.



Ruscoe said the team's response to the sin-binnings had been "massive and that doesn't come down to fitness".



"It doesn't come down to how much you do down at the gym - that comes down to pride and passion and the jersey that you are wearing. The girls just put their whole heart into it and got us through the game."



Australia finished third, downing France 22-8 in the playoff.



Results:



Final: New Zealand 13 England 10



3rd Place Play-Off: France 8 Australia 22



5th Place Play-Off: USA 23 Canada 20



7th Place Play-Off: Ireland 32 Scotland 8



9th Place Play-Off: Wales 29 South Africa 17



11th Place Play-Off: Sweden 8 Kazakhstan 12




Friday, September 3, 2010

Just 12 months to the Rugby World Cup in New Zealand...

Eden Park viewed from Mount EdenImage via WikipediaJust 12 months to the Rugby World Cup in New Zealand...








Just 12 months to the Rugby World Cup in New Zealand...



Its just 12 months to the Rugby World Cup in New Zealand. It will be the third biggest sporting event after the Olympics and the Soccer (Football to some) World Cup. So its a huge sporting event and undoubtably will be the biggest sporting event in New Zealand's history.



The game draw has just been released(NZ play Tonga in game one,England play Argentina in game five and Australia play Italy in game six). Ticket prices have also been released and applications can be made in NZ from Sept 10 to October 10 2010. Apply RUGBYWORLDCUP.COM/TICKETS Use your Master Card.



While New Zealand won the inaugural event in New Zealand and Australia in 1987, with the final at Eden Park in Auckland, the historically superior rugby nation has not been able to win another since, despite being ranked 'Number One' every year.



I believe the Rugby World Cup has assumed too much prestige at the expense of other rugby competitions and tours to each other's countries.



After pool play where each country plays each other in that particular pool, the games from quarter finals, semi finals and through to the final are knock outs. So if a country's team has a bad game they are eliminated from that World Cup.



Some say New Zealand is peaking too early after being unbeaten in the Southern Hemisphere Tri-Nations competition which they have just won, having beaten South Africa three times and Australia twice, with one match still to go.



But in fact New Zealand is actually building up depth in their squad to ensure there are specialist replacements in the event of injuries during the Rugby World Cup tournament in 2011. It has been injuries to key players in previous tournaments that prevented NZ from having a winning chance.



It is unlikely that NZ will have a home tournament again for decades, even if ever, if the costs of holding such a tournament sky-rocket like the Olympics and the Soccer World Cup, making it prohibitive for such a small country like NZ being able to afford another tournament. Therefore it is important that NZ wins its home tournament next year!



RUGBYWORLDCUP.COM/TICKETS


http://huttriver.blog.co.uk/



http://blogevolve.com/blog/huttriver12


Sunday, August 29, 2010

Aussie love affair with coach Kiwi Robbie Deans dying...

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 22:  Wallabies coac...Image by Getty Images via @daylife



Aussie love affair with coach Kiwi Robbie  Deans  dying...




The pressure is on Australian coach Robbie Deans after Sunday's Tri-Nations loss to South Africa.Mark it down as the time in history when Australian rugby's love affair with Robbie Deans finally died.



The fall-out from the latest defeat of Deans' Wallabies in this season's Tri-Nations, began to get serious yesterday. Media men dipped pens into their pots of acid and began furiously to scrawl their invective.



But none matched the words of former Australian coach Bob Dwyer, who condemned Deans as "pig-headed, blinkered and bloody minded". All of which represented a decent serve, in anyone's language ...



Dwyer, writing on his website www.bobdwyerrugby.com, savaged the New Zealander who is now under fierce pressure as Wallaby coach. He wrote "Selection plays a vital role in the fortunes of a team. The Springboks have belatedly begun to understand that simple fact but not so the Wallabies.



"Can someone please tell me, in what part of the game is [hooker] Saia Faainga considered superior to Stephen Moore? Moore is a much better scrummager and line-out thrower, surely the two fundamental roles of the hooker.


Then Moore is an excellent ball carrier, compared to Faainga's modest talent in this facet of play.



"Moore is vastly more experienced than his younger teammate and surely this is a vital commodity in such a crunch match."



Dwyer went on to spotlight Faainga's performance in Pretoria. He concluded "In the first half, he managed to give away three penalties and had two poor throws. In the second half, his performance deteriorated still further with even his tackling less sure.



"My total was four penalties (conceded), three poor throws, one missed tackle and two turnovers. When you add his inability at the scrum, this was a terrible performance. Yet Moore remained on the bench.



"This is nothing short of bloody-mindedness on the part of Robbie Deans."



Dwyer said that full-back Kurtley Beale was "outstanding" and went on "Even our blinkered selection panel seems finally to understand this - although he was only given his chance because of injuries."

But Deans' poor use of his substitutes on Saturday further angered Dwyer. "Deans frequently leaves us puzzled with his handling of the bench but Saturday's effort reached new heights.



"His pig-headedness and/or lack of selection ability made a significant contribution to this Wallaby loss. This was a game the Wallabies could have won. Yet despite the fact that they did not score a point in the last 30 minutes and were clearly tiring, Deans left four players unused on the bench.



"The Wallabies were dusted at the scrum, dusted at the line-out and ran out of puff. We had at hand the answer to most, if not all, of these problems and we stubbornly refused to use it. How much longer are we Wallabies' supporters going to be forced to tolerate this treatment?



"Even the Jaapies are less pig-headed than us."



And from a technical point of view, Dwyer was equally scathing of Deans' team. "Every single pass - yes EVERY - from the Wallabies is a 'reload and sling', making it absolutely impossible for any player to change or adjust his line onto the pass. This is not good enough."


Footnote:


Lets face it - Faainga wouldn't make a Kiwi Super 14 team. How can Robbie make silk purses out of this Aussie pig's ear of a team? A few brilliant players and a bunch of useless tyros! Australia does not have a team capable of putting up a creditable performance at next year's Rugby World Cup. Sure they can attack at times, but their defence is full of gigantic holes! Oh for a champion Crusaders team, eh Robbie?


Acknowledgements: Peter Bills

Thursday, July 1, 2010

All Blacks will get tens of thousands of $$ for a win in Rugby World Cup in 2010...

the Rugby World Cup TrophyImage via Wikipedia






All Blacks will get tens of thousands of $$ for a win in Rugby World Cup in 2010...





Players selected for Rugby World Cup will receive $35,000 if All Blacks make final and $65,000 for a win under new employment deal





A new collective employment agreement has been signed by the NZRU and the Players Association.



The deal takes the sport through to the end of 2012 and ratifies a number of the initiatives agreed to at the end of last year.



Amongst the major changes, Super Rugby franchises will be able to directly contract players and Super Rugby squads will be expanded and allowed to pick two overseas players.



Under the future competition structure, players selected for next year's Rugby World Cup will receive $35,000 each if the All Blacks makes the final and a further $65,000 each if the team wins the tournament.








Acknowledgements: © 2010 NZCity, NewsTalkZB




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Monday, May 31, 2010

Andy Haden again challenged to prove his claims about Crusaders Polynesian cap...

Opposition poster for the 1866 election. Geary...Image via Wikipedia






Andy Haden again challenged to prove his claims about Crusaders Polynesian cap...




Maori Party's Te Ururoa Flavell says if Andy Haden cannot prove his claim of Crusaders' Polynesian cap his integrity must be questioned



Rugby World Cup ambassador Andy Haden is again being challenged to provide evidence to his claim the Crusaders have a cap on selecting Polynesian players.



Maori Party MP Te Ururoa Flavell has joined the chorus of critics who question whether Mr Haden should keep his job. He says if the former All Black is really concerned about the future of rugby then he should name the writers of the policy, or even show a written copy of it. He says if Mr Haden cannot substantiate his claims then his integrity needs to be questioned.



"By refusing to disclose the identity of the people who Andy says wrote this so-called policy, he has turned a blind eye to what could potentially be institutionalised racism in that franchise.



"If Andy is really concerned about the future of rugby in this country, and it being a safe sport for all peoples to play, then he must name the policy writers or even better, show us the policy on paper.



Mr Flavell says Mr Haden's role as a Rugby World Cup ambassador should also be called into question if he cannot prove his claims.



It actually gets down to Andy Haden's credibility - or the lack of it.








Acknowledgements: © 2010 NZCity, NewsTalkZB




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