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Kookaburras suffer woeful end to Pro League defence

Kookaburras suffer woeful end to Pro League defence

The Advertiser6 hours ago

The Kookaburras have suffered an end-of-campaign let-down in Berlin as their German hosts crushed them 5-0 to ensure Australia's defending champions can't even finish as runners-up in the International Hockey Pro League.
In their final match on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), evidently feeling flat after their title hopes were extinguished at the weekend by the loss to England in London, Australia were unable to give Tom Craig a 150th cap to remember.
Instead, it was home hero Martin Zwicker who was left celebrating his record-breaking 336th appearance as the most capped German men's player of all time.
The five-goal trouncing lifted Germany into second place in the standings on 27 points, the same as the Kookaburras and still with two matches to play. Netherlands took the title with 35 points from 16 matches, having lost just twice all tournament.
Benedikt Schwarzhaupt put Germany ahead with a fifth-minute drag flick, Malte Hellwig made it two with his 13th-minute tap-in, and Moritz Ludwig's penalty-corner deflection six minutes later effectively sealed the deal.
Australia's best spell was then thwarted by German keeper Jean-Paul Danneberg, who made an inspired double save and dived to keep out a penalty corner, only for Hellwig to grab his second and put Germany 4-0 up by halftime.
Joel Rintala got a yellow card and Connar Otterbach a green as the Kookaburras' woes multiplied, with Raphael Hartkopf scoring a deflected fifth in the 36th minute.
It meant Australia ended their campaign with eight wins, three draws and five losses. They are currently third in the table, but Belgium (fourth) and Spain (fifth) could yet overhaul them.
"Germany were super clinical tonight, as they typically are, and it was a tricky way to finish a long tour," Craig said.
"This trip was about development, and we gave ourselves the opportunity to go pretty deep into the tournament as well. Unfortunately, we came a little bit unstuck in the last few games, but I think we've made a lot of big steps, and we've got a lot of footage as a team now to review with next year's World Cup in mind.
"It's definitely been a long journey, and maybe tonight I'll sit down and reflect on, maybe not this game, but the 149 before it, and feel a bit of pride."
The Kookaburras have suffered an end-of-campaign let-down in Berlin as their German hosts crushed them 5-0 to ensure Australia's defending champions can't even finish as runners-up in the International Hockey Pro League.
In their final match on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), evidently feeling flat after their title hopes were extinguished at the weekend by the loss to England in London, Australia were unable to give Tom Craig a 150th cap to remember.
Instead, it was home hero Martin Zwicker who was left celebrating his record-breaking 336th appearance as the most capped German men's player of all time.
The five-goal trouncing lifted Germany into second place in the standings on 27 points, the same as the Kookaburras and still with two matches to play. Netherlands took the title with 35 points from 16 matches, having lost just twice all tournament.
Benedikt Schwarzhaupt put Germany ahead with a fifth-minute drag flick, Malte Hellwig made it two with his 13th-minute tap-in, and Moritz Ludwig's penalty-corner deflection six minutes later effectively sealed the deal.
Australia's best spell was then thwarted by German keeper Jean-Paul Danneberg, who made an inspired double save and dived to keep out a penalty corner, only for Hellwig to grab his second and put Germany 4-0 up by halftime.
Joel Rintala got a yellow card and Connar Otterbach a green as the Kookaburras' woes multiplied, with Raphael Hartkopf scoring a deflected fifth in the 36th minute.
It meant Australia ended their campaign with eight wins, three draws and five losses. They are currently third in the table, but Belgium (fourth) and Spain (fifth) could yet overhaul them.
"Germany were super clinical tonight, as they typically are, and it was a tricky way to finish a long tour," Craig said.
"This trip was about development, and we gave ourselves the opportunity to go pretty deep into the tournament as well. Unfortunately, we came a little bit unstuck in the last few games, but I think we've made a lot of big steps, and we've got a lot of footage as a team now to review with next year's World Cup in mind.
"It's definitely been a long journey, and maybe tonight I'll sit down and reflect on, maybe not this game, but the 149 before it, and feel a bit of pride."
The Kookaburras have suffered an end-of-campaign let-down in Berlin as their German hosts crushed them 5-0 to ensure Australia's defending champions can't even finish as runners-up in the International Hockey Pro League.
In their final match on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), evidently feeling flat after their title hopes were extinguished at the weekend by the loss to England in London, Australia were unable to give Tom Craig a 150th cap to remember.
Instead, it was home hero Martin Zwicker who was left celebrating his record-breaking 336th appearance as the most capped German men's player of all time.
The five-goal trouncing lifted Germany into second place in the standings on 27 points, the same as the Kookaburras and still with two matches to play. Netherlands took the title with 35 points from 16 matches, having lost just twice all tournament.
Benedikt Schwarzhaupt put Germany ahead with a fifth-minute drag flick, Malte Hellwig made it two with his 13th-minute tap-in, and Moritz Ludwig's penalty-corner deflection six minutes later effectively sealed the deal.
Australia's best spell was then thwarted by German keeper Jean-Paul Danneberg, who made an inspired double save and dived to keep out a penalty corner, only for Hellwig to grab his second and put Germany 4-0 up by halftime.
Joel Rintala got a yellow card and Connar Otterbach a green as the Kookaburras' woes multiplied, with Raphael Hartkopf scoring a deflected fifth in the 36th minute.
It meant Australia ended their campaign with eight wins, three draws and five losses. They are currently third in the table, but Belgium (fourth) and Spain (fifth) could yet overhaul them.
"Germany were super clinical tonight, as they typically are, and it was a tricky way to finish a long tour," Craig said.
"This trip was about development, and we gave ourselves the opportunity to go pretty deep into the tournament as well. Unfortunately, we came a little bit unstuck in the last few games, but I think we've made a lot of big steps, and we've got a lot of footage as a team now to review with next year's World Cup in mind.
"It's definitely been a long journey, and maybe tonight I'll sit down and reflect on, maybe not this game, but the 149 before it, and feel a bit of pride."

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Wimbledon: England's garden Grand Slam
Wimbledon: England's garden Grand Slam

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Wimbledon: England's garden Grand Slam

Wimbledon head gardener Martyn Falconer is the only man at the All England Club who welcomes a drop of rain. While wet weather wreaks havoc with the tournament schedule, he is not disappointed with the occasional cloudburst to keep his spectacular flower displays in perfect condition. Falconer oversees the delivery of 27,000 plants for the Championships in leafy southwest London to add to thousands already in place in the immaculate grounds. Hydrangeas and petunias in blues, purples and whites tumble over the sides of hanging baskets and window boxes, filling herbaceous borders and floral installations. Roses are scattered throughout the grounds and Boston ivy creeps over the outside walls of Centre Court to create the picture-perfect Grand Slam event. Falconer, who has worked at the All England Club for 25 years, spending 11 years in his current role, says Wimbledon's ethos is "tennis in an English garden". He manages a team of 10 permanent gardeners and two apprentices, which expands by around 10 in the lead-up to the tournament, which this year starts on June 30. Falconer's team was this week applying the final tweaks as the club prepares to throw open its doors to thousands of tennis fans from Monday. "We're making sure it looks lovely and presentable for everyone," he said. "It's never-ending. And then from the Monday, once the public are in, we kind of take a little bit of a breath. "But then every morning it's watering and maintaining and deadheading and just making sure everything looks good for everyone coming on each day." The horticulture team keeps a stock of spare plants in reserve to replenish those that are damaged by the crowds that swarm the All England Club. "We've got a nice selection of bits and pieces just in case of an accident," said Falconer. "We do get a lot of bums sat on the planters. Where there's somewhere to park a bum, they will. "We've got what we call a Wimbledon twist, so we can get a couple of days out of a hydrangea or a few plants. And then when it gets to the point of no more twisting, we'll do a little swap around." Falconer's aim is to have the grounds looking as pristine on the final day of the Championships as they do on day one. - 'There's nothing like it' - Tradition plays a big role in the planting colour schemes but there is some room for innovation. "Obviously we've got our greens and purples and whites, which are very Wimbledon," he said. "For us it's more actually about the feel of being in an English garden. So that gives us a greater palette to work with, nothing too garish -- we won't go super bright oranges everywhere. But it allows us to bring in all those pastel colours, pinks, yellows." Wimbledon's planting plans are months in the making. "We can't get them in too late because they grow too much," said Falconer. "So we need to do most of that growing here. So the nursery will pot them on, get them started, and then they come to us." The team is continuously assessing the performances of specific plant varieties but plans are carefully calibrated to make sure the grounds are always saturated with colour. "We have enough variation that there's always something doing something," said Falconer. "And hopefully most of it's doing what we want it to do at the right time." Wimbledon's head gardener said one of the challenges is adapting to a changing climate. There have been weeks of warm, dry weather in the build-up to this year's tournament. "It's challenging," said Falconer. "I'm the only one walking around looking for a little bit of rain I think at Wimbledon." He and his team might breathe a sigh of relief when the last fan leaves after the two-week tournament, but managing the 42-acre site at the All England Club is a year-round task. "It's a big site, so there's a lot to do," he said. "Pruning, hedge-cutting, mulching, making sure it's good and ready for the springtime." Despite the pressure, Falconer still gets a buzz from his work even after so many years. "There's nothing like it," he said. "You work to get it delivered and that first day when the public walk through the gate there's a sigh of relief that it's done but then you almost start again."

Kookaburras suffer woeful end to Pro League defence
Kookaburras suffer woeful end to Pro League defence

The Advertiser

time6 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Kookaburras suffer woeful end to Pro League defence

The Kookaburras have suffered an end-of-campaign let-down in Berlin as their German hosts crushed them 5-0 to ensure Australia's defending champions can't even finish as runners-up in the International Hockey Pro League. In their final match on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), evidently feeling flat after their title hopes were extinguished at the weekend by the loss to England in London, Australia were unable to give Tom Craig a 150th cap to remember. Instead, it was home hero Martin Zwicker who was left celebrating his record-breaking 336th appearance as the most capped German men's player of all time. The five-goal trouncing lifted Germany into second place in the standings on 27 points, the same as the Kookaburras and still with two matches to play. Netherlands took the title with 35 points from 16 matches, having lost just twice all tournament. Benedikt Schwarzhaupt put Germany ahead with a fifth-minute drag flick, Malte Hellwig made it two with his 13th-minute tap-in, and Moritz Ludwig's penalty-corner deflection six minutes later effectively sealed the deal. Australia's best spell was then thwarted by German keeper Jean-Paul Danneberg, who made an inspired double save and dived to keep out a penalty corner, only for Hellwig to grab his second and put Germany 4-0 up by halftime. Joel Rintala got a yellow card and Connar Otterbach a green as the Kookaburras' woes multiplied, with Raphael Hartkopf scoring a deflected fifth in the 36th minute. It meant Australia ended their campaign with eight wins, three draws and five losses. They are currently third in the table, but Belgium (fourth) and Spain (fifth) could yet overhaul them. "Germany were super clinical tonight, as they typically are, and it was a tricky way to finish a long tour," Craig said. "This trip was about development, and we gave ourselves the opportunity to go pretty deep into the tournament as well. Unfortunately, we came a little bit unstuck in the last few games, but I think we've made a lot of big steps, and we've got a lot of footage as a team now to review with next year's World Cup in mind. "It's definitely been a long journey, and maybe tonight I'll sit down and reflect on, maybe not this game, but the 149 before it, and feel a bit of pride." The Kookaburras have suffered an end-of-campaign let-down in Berlin as their German hosts crushed them 5-0 to ensure Australia's defending champions can't even finish as runners-up in the International Hockey Pro League. In their final match on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), evidently feeling flat after their title hopes were extinguished at the weekend by the loss to England in London, Australia were unable to give Tom Craig a 150th cap to remember. Instead, it was home hero Martin Zwicker who was left celebrating his record-breaking 336th appearance as the most capped German men's player of all time. The five-goal trouncing lifted Germany into second place in the standings on 27 points, the same as the Kookaburras and still with two matches to play. Netherlands took the title with 35 points from 16 matches, having lost just twice all tournament. Benedikt Schwarzhaupt put Germany ahead with a fifth-minute drag flick, Malte Hellwig made it two with his 13th-minute tap-in, and Moritz Ludwig's penalty-corner deflection six minutes later effectively sealed the deal. Australia's best spell was then thwarted by German keeper Jean-Paul Danneberg, who made an inspired double save and dived to keep out a penalty corner, only for Hellwig to grab his second and put Germany 4-0 up by halftime. Joel Rintala got a yellow card and Connar Otterbach a green as the Kookaburras' woes multiplied, with Raphael Hartkopf scoring a deflected fifth in the 36th minute. It meant Australia ended their campaign with eight wins, three draws and five losses. They are currently third in the table, but Belgium (fourth) and Spain (fifth) could yet overhaul them. "Germany were super clinical tonight, as they typically are, and it was a tricky way to finish a long tour," Craig said. "This trip was about development, and we gave ourselves the opportunity to go pretty deep into the tournament as well. Unfortunately, we came a little bit unstuck in the last few games, but I think we've made a lot of big steps, and we've got a lot of footage as a team now to review with next year's World Cup in mind. "It's definitely been a long journey, and maybe tonight I'll sit down and reflect on, maybe not this game, but the 149 before it, and feel a bit of pride." The Kookaburras have suffered an end-of-campaign let-down in Berlin as their German hosts crushed them 5-0 to ensure Australia's defending champions can't even finish as runners-up in the International Hockey Pro League. In their final match on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), evidently feeling flat after their title hopes were extinguished at the weekend by the loss to England in London, Australia were unable to give Tom Craig a 150th cap to remember. Instead, it was home hero Martin Zwicker who was left celebrating his record-breaking 336th appearance as the most capped German men's player of all time. The five-goal trouncing lifted Germany into second place in the standings on 27 points, the same as the Kookaburras and still with two matches to play. Netherlands took the title with 35 points from 16 matches, having lost just twice all tournament. Benedikt Schwarzhaupt put Germany ahead with a fifth-minute drag flick, Malte Hellwig made it two with his 13th-minute tap-in, and Moritz Ludwig's penalty-corner deflection six minutes later effectively sealed the deal. Australia's best spell was then thwarted by German keeper Jean-Paul Danneberg, who made an inspired double save and dived to keep out a penalty corner, only for Hellwig to grab his second and put Germany 4-0 up by halftime. Joel Rintala got a yellow card and Connar Otterbach a green as the Kookaburras' woes multiplied, with Raphael Hartkopf scoring a deflected fifth in the 36th minute. It meant Australia ended their campaign with eight wins, three draws and five losses. They are currently third in the table, but Belgium (fourth) and Spain (fifth) could yet overhaul them. "Germany were super clinical tonight, as they typically are, and it was a tricky way to finish a long tour," Craig said. "This trip was about development, and we gave ourselves the opportunity to go pretty deep into the tournament as well. Unfortunately, we came a little bit unstuck in the last few games, but I think we've made a lot of big steps, and we've got a lot of footage as a team now to review with next year's World Cup in mind. "It's definitely been a long journey, and maybe tonight I'll sit down and reflect on, maybe not this game, but the 149 before it, and feel a bit of pride."

Dortmund on top and looking to deliver knockout blow
Dortmund on top and looking to deliver knockout blow

The Advertiser

time6 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Dortmund on top and looking to deliver knockout blow

A first-half goal from Daniel Svensson was enough to secure Borussia Dortmund's place in the Club World Cup round of 16, as they claimed a 1-0 victory over South Korea's Ulsan HD. The German side dominated from the outset at Cincinnati's sun-drenched TQL Stadium on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), with the attacking trio of Jobe Bellingham, Felix Nmecha and Karim Adeyemi putting the Ulsan goal under siege in the opening exchanges. The breakthrough finally came in the 36th minute when Bellingham provided a precise pass to Svensson and the Swede scored with a straightforward finish. Ulsan goalkeeper Jo Hyeon-woo prevented Dortmund from increasing their lead in the first half, producing a fine save to stop Serhou Guirassy's powerful header. Pascal Gross thought he had doubled Dortmund's advantage with a well-struck left-footed shot, but Jo was equal to the task once again. Ulsan improved after the break, finding space as they looked for an equaliser, with Lee Jin-hyun's shot from a difficult angle on the left saved by Dortmund keeper Gregor Kobel on the hour mark. Despite continued pressure, Dortmund failed to find the net, with Julien Duranville shooting wide and Jo stopping a Yan Couto attempt in the dying minutes. Dortmund finished top of Group F with seven points, two points clear of Brazilian side Fluminense in second after they drew 0-0 with Mamelodi Sundowns. The South African champions finished third in the group with four points, while Ulsan were bottom after losing all three of their games. Dortmund next face the runner-up from Group E, either River Plate, Inter Milan or Monterrey. In Miami, Fluminense completed a full Brazilian contingent in the round of 16 after their goalless draw with Mamelodi Sundowns secured their progress. Despite being on the back foot for much of the match at Miami's Hard Rock Stadium, Fluminense advanced after finishing second in their group. Fluminense join fellow Brazilian clubs Flamengo, Palmeiras and Botafogo in the business end of the 32-club tournament. A first-half goal from Daniel Svensson was enough to secure Borussia Dortmund's place in the Club World Cup round of 16, as they claimed a 1-0 victory over South Korea's Ulsan HD. The German side dominated from the outset at Cincinnati's sun-drenched TQL Stadium on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), with the attacking trio of Jobe Bellingham, Felix Nmecha and Karim Adeyemi putting the Ulsan goal under siege in the opening exchanges. The breakthrough finally came in the 36th minute when Bellingham provided a precise pass to Svensson and the Swede scored with a straightforward finish. Ulsan goalkeeper Jo Hyeon-woo prevented Dortmund from increasing their lead in the first half, producing a fine save to stop Serhou Guirassy's powerful header. Pascal Gross thought he had doubled Dortmund's advantage with a well-struck left-footed shot, but Jo was equal to the task once again. Ulsan improved after the break, finding space as they looked for an equaliser, with Lee Jin-hyun's shot from a difficult angle on the left saved by Dortmund keeper Gregor Kobel on the hour mark. Despite continued pressure, Dortmund failed to find the net, with Julien Duranville shooting wide and Jo stopping a Yan Couto attempt in the dying minutes. Dortmund finished top of Group F with seven points, two points clear of Brazilian side Fluminense in second after they drew 0-0 with Mamelodi Sundowns. The South African champions finished third in the group with four points, while Ulsan were bottom after losing all three of their games. Dortmund next face the runner-up from Group E, either River Plate, Inter Milan or Monterrey. In Miami, Fluminense completed a full Brazilian contingent in the round of 16 after their goalless draw with Mamelodi Sundowns secured their progress. Despite being on the back foot for much of the match at Miami's Hard Rock Stadium, Fluminense advanced after finishing second in their group. Fluminense join fellow Brazilian clubs Flamengo, Palmeiras and Botafogo in the business end of the 32-club tournament. A first-half goal from Daniel Svensson was enough to secure Borussia Dortmund's place in the Club World Cup round of 16, as they claimed a 1-0 victory over South Korea's Ulsan HD. The German side dominated from the outset at Cincinnati's sun-drenched TQL Stadium on Wednesday (Thursday AEST), with the attacking trio of Jobe Bellingham, Felix Nmecha and Karim Adeyemi putting the Ulsan goal under siege in the opening exchanges. The breakthrough finally came in the 36th minute when Bellingham provided a precise pass to Svensson and the Swede scored with a straightforward finish. Ulsan goalkeeper Jo Hyeon-woo prevented Dortmund from increasing their lead in the first half, producing a fine save to stop Serhou Guirassy's powerful header. Pascal Gross thought he had doubled Dortmund's advantage with a well-struck left-footed shot, but Jo was equal to the task once again. Ulsan improved after the break, finding space as they looked for an equaliser, with Lee Jin-hyun's shot from a difficult angle on the left saved by Dortmund keeper Gregor Kobel on the hour mark. Despite continued pressure, Dortmund failed to find the net, with Julien Duranville shooting wide and Jo stopping a Yan Couto attempt in the dying minutes. Dortmund finished top of Group F with seven points, two points clear of Brazilian side Fluminense in second after they drew 0-0 with Mamelodi Sundowns. The South African champions finished third in the group with four points, while Ulsan were bottom after losing all three of their games. Dortmund next face the runner-up from Group E, either River Plate, Inter Milan or Monterrey. In Miami, Fluminense completed a full Brazilian contingent in the round of 16 after their goalless draw with Mamelodi Sundowns secured their progress. Despite being on the back foot for much of the match at Miami's Hard Rock Stadium, Fluminense advanced after finishing second in their group. Fluminense join fellow Brazilian clubs Flamengo, Palmeiras and Botafogo in the business end of the 32-club tournament.

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