Early Sports Chat for 6 June 2025
A young sprinter says that officials "stole her moment".
Tags:
To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following:
See terms of use.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Otago Daily Times
3 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
Walter to guide Black Caps in all three formats
Former Otago coach Rob Walter has been handed the top job. He will take over as Black Caps coach later this month. His contract runs through to the conclusion of the ICC T20 World Cup in New Zealand and Australia in November 2028. He replaces Gary Stead, who stepped down from limited-overs duties but had hoped to remain as the test coach. New Zealand Cricket opted against splitting the head coaching role and Walter will lead the Black Caps in all three formats. He is excited to carry on the work of his predecessor. "The Black Caps have been a successful and highly-regarded team on the world scene for some time now and it's a real privilege to be given the chance to add to that," he said. "It's an amazing opportunity to work with such a talented group of players and support staff through a period of time in which so many global events, as well as massive bilateral series, will be contested. "I just can't wait to get started. It's exciting, it's challenging, and the opportunity is enormous for everyone." Walter will oversee a demanding period. The Black Caps will compete in the ICC World Test Championship, the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics and three major ICC events, including the ICC 2027 Cricket World Cup. He is an experienced coach with an intimate knowledge of domestic cricket in New Zealand. He is also a familiar face in Otago. Walter moved to Dunedin from Pretoria in 2016 to coach the Volts. The 49-year-old had a five-year stint in Otago before relocating to Hawke's Bay coach Central Districts. He was appointed as the white-ball coach for South Africa in January 2023. He had previously served as the Proteas' strength and conditioning coach (2009-2013) and also had a stint with the Titans before he washed up in Dunedin. In an early interview with the Otago Daily Times , he said he had toured New Zealand with the Proteas in 2012 and was struck by the beauty of the country and the improvement the Black Caps were making. "This started a dialogue between myself, Mike Hesson and Brendon McCullum around their thoughts on New Zealand Cricket ... and potentially my involvement in NZC at some level sometime in the future. "I did not think it would happen until a little later on in the piece but an opportunity presented itself, and so I had to consider whether the it was the right time to act on that opportunity." Walter took a while to adjust to the culture in Volts' camp at the time. Initially, his style did not go over so well. But he was able to adjust and win over his players. He led the team to the Super Smash playoffs in 2019-20 and back-to-back appearances in the final of the Ford Trophy in 2018-19 and 2019-20. He had a successful stint with the Central Stags, guiding the team to the Ford Trophy and Plunket Shield double in 2022-23. Walter also coached the New Zealand A squad which toured India in 2022 and previously had stints in the Indian Premier League as assistant coach of the Pune Warriors and Delhi Daredevils.

RNZ News
13 hours ago
- RNZ News
Elon Musk and Donald Trump in fiery war of words
America's biggest bromance has broken up. Elon Musk and US president Donald Trump are stuck in a fiery war of words that kicked off on social media. Musk called for the president's impeachment and alleged Trump's name appears in unreleased files related to late billionaire sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. It is a feud sparked by Donald Trump's so-called "big beautiful" tax and spending bill which Elon Musk has spoken out against since leaving the White House last week. US correspondent Todd Zwillich spoke to Lisa Owen.

RNZ News
14 hours ago
- RNZ News
NBA: Buzzerbeater gives Indiana Pacers win over Oklahoma City Thunder in finals opener
Indiana hadn't led in the game until Haliburton drained the shot with 0.3 seconds remaining. Photo: AFP Guard Tyrese Haliburton hit a 21-foot pull-up jumper in the final second, as Indiana Pacers enjoyed a stunning 111-110 comeback win over Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 1 of the NBA Finals. The Pacers hadn't led in the game, until Haliburton drained the shot with 0.3 seconds remaining. The best-of-seven series resumes with Game 2 in Oklahoma City on Monday (NZT). Indiana trailled by 15 early in the fourth quarter, before chipping away at the Thunder lead to ultimately win the final quarter 35-25. Oklahoma City forced plenty of turnovers, especially early, but the Thunder couldn't take advantage often enough, scoring just 11 points on Indiana's 25 giveaways. The Pacers turned the ball over 20 times in the first half alone. Early in the fourth quarter, Indiana were barely hanging on. Down by 13, the Pacers missed three consecutive shots on one possession. - Reuters