New Zealand Rugby

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008


Phil Waugh: 'Ey we can get even bigger with super size...'

New Zealand and Australia's Rugby Unions seem intent on clocking up the miles as the current TriNations top two aim to increase their marketability overseas.

Hong Kong will stage the first Bledisloe Cup fixture to be held overseas in 2008 and reports coming out of the southern hemisphere are suggesting that the land of the corn dog and baseball, the USA, is hoping to host the biggest annual rugby fixture on the antipodean calendar in Denver next year.

Thursday, August 21, 2008


Tom Ashley: 'This one's for you Richie....'

All-Blacks 1-1 France. Well sort of, if you care about the Olympic sailing? New Zealand boardsailor Tom Ashley dedicated his win to the All-Blacks after pipping Frenchman Julien Bontemps by one point to the gold medal.

Asked if it salvaged some compensation for New Zealand's World Cup quarter-final exit, Ashley said: "For sure that's the case."

Not even some mind games from French coach cum sports minister, Bernard Laporte, who had spoken to Ashley on the eve of the final, could prevent an extraction of revenge over silver medalist Bontemps, who is a known mad-keen rugby fan from Nantes.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008


Nice try hiding from all the helicopters Sonny...

Where do you find friends like this eh?

Andrew Mundine, the former Brisbane and St George rugby league star turned boxer, has bought out his chum, Sonny Bill Williams' Bulldogs contract, worth a reported NZ$900,000.

It prohibits the star from playing in the NRL until 2012 and allows Williams to kick-off his rugby union career against Saracens this week.

The All-Blacks could be the one's to largely benefit with Williams becoming available for the 2011 Super 14 season if he chooses to take up a second year in France.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

JP Pietersen: 'Kaaahuuuuiiii'

South Africa 0
New Zealand 19:
Tries: C Smith, D Carter, K Mealamu Cons: D Carter (2)

The All-Blacks are back in business. You are forgiven if you were glued to the 100m final rather than the Herculean efforts of the New Zealand forwards in Cape Town.

Whatever panic button was pushed after two successive defeats earlier in the competition, it has been gently put back on hold - for now at least - as the champions-elect took a firm grip of the TriNations with a gritty 19-0 defeat of the Springboks.

South Africa were poor. World cup hangovers are ghastly things - just ask England - and their unruffled heads and Olympian standards, which they set in France last year were clearly left behind at the bottom of the empty bottle of Châteaux Margeaux.

Tactically inept - sometimes it was like watching a dog aimlessly chasing his ball around a park - this mutt lacked teeth and coach Pieter de Villiers is being dragged around like a blind man.

De Villiers’ appointment was a political choice but a disregard for conservatism and bloody-mindedness shows that policy and scheduling was part of the old rule.

New Zealand hardly hit world record pace themselves. Mr. Perfect Dan Carter was offbeat, coughing up five chances at goal, and despite the odd moment of genius, Carter must be getting weekly updates of the cracking surf in the Languedoc-Roussillon.

If the black attack stuttered along with a hop-skip and a jump, their mulish defence and scholarly stratagem was marathon-like.

Richie McCaw was a warrior and found able allies in the ever-improving Jerome Kaino and Rodney So’oialo’s hustle and bustle.

Three tries to nil, a shed load of errors and an infection of attacking nous giving critics plenty of ammunition to lament the Experimental Law Variations - at least the 9.69 seconds of Usain Bolt got us on their edge of our seats.

Tuesday, August 05, 2008


Sione Lauaki: 'You're pulling my ear aren't you'

We thought the Heineken Cup wasn’t as good as the Super 14?

However it turns out the southern hemisphere is fed up with the current Super rugby competition and is ready to ditch the existing model in favour of a European-style structure.

Rumours have been circulating that a new 14-team-Tasman competition with a European Cup style international format built into the provincial window is being discussed.

Representatives from some of New Zealand’s provincial unions have been secretly meeting behind closed doors for a number of weeks while it is understood that the proposal has also been put to Australian Rugby Union chief John O’Neill.

Like the Super 14, the Air NZ Cup has run its cause and the nine New Zealand provinces are strongly pushing for a refreshed competition that would reignite the competitiveness of the club structure in New Zealand.

The NZRU are reluctant to forge ahead with the plans without South Africa’s inclusion.

A trans-Tasman tournament wouldn’t involve the Rainbow Nation and a break up of SANZAR is off the New Zealand Rugby Union’s record.

SANZAR is still very much committed to the transformation and expansion of the Super rugby competition.

What could happen...

The Group of Nine's template: One professional window from March to October: 14-team trans-Tasman trophy home and away (Nine from New Zealand, five from Australia): Heineken Cup style tournament (to run alongside trans-Tasman trophy): Matches every four weeks with 24 teams in four pools of six made up of teams from New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, Japan, Pacific Islands and America.

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