logo
Kevin Walters handed boost as potential Kangaroos defector 'hasn't made a decision'

Kevin Walters handed boost as potential Kangaroos defector 'hasn't made a decision'

Yahoo29-07-2025
New Kangaroos coach Kevin Walters said he only wants to take players to England who want to represent the green and gold as Tino Fa'asuamaleaui admits he hasn't come to a decision over a potential switch. Walters knew one of his first roles as the national coach was to address reports trio Hamiso Tabui-Fidow, Payne Haas and Fa'asuamaleaui are all thinking of playing for Samoa at the end of the season.
The trio have all played for Australia at some point, but are considering playing for Samoa moving forward. While this has opened up a debate around State of Origin eligibility, the trio are yet to make any official call with the NRL season still going.
Although Fa'asuamaleaui has broken his silence around the situation and claimed he will make his decision after the season's end. But it appears Walters will have time to meet with the Queensland forward who hasn't made up his mind. "For now I haven't made a decision. I'm hoping I'm in the boat where I have to make a decision," Fa'asuamaleaui said.
"Obviously being in rehab probably rules that out at the moment. I just want to get my knee right, play good football and hopefully I get to that point at the end of the year where I get to select."
Fa'asuamaleaui said he has been tossing up the decision after a visit back to Samoa to see his family. "I am massively connected to my Samoan culture. Me and Iszac were fortunate enough to go back at the end of last year after 10 years," he said. "To be back there with my family and see all the kids I grew up with who now have kids like me, it brought a real connection to my culture. I have always loved being Samoan and I am still on that journey of learning my culture more and understanding it."
Fa'asuamaleaui played six games for Australia across 2022 and 2023, but has been injured in recent years having struggled to back-up for the green and gold at the end of the season. And while Fa'asuamaleaui is unsure of who he will play for, Walters claimed he isn't going to ask any of them to remain in the green and gold if they don't want to represent the jersey.
RELATED:
Hughes re-signs as Munster twist could prevent another star leaving
Stunning development for Cleary brothers as Luai under heavy fire
Kevin Walters issues demand to Aussie stars
Speaking on NRL 360, Walters claimed he respects the decision of the players wanting to make a switch and won't stand in their way. The former Australian representative said he wants to restore the pride in the jersey and only wants players who want to play for Australia in the 22-man squad to tour England.
'I have had some conversations and picked up the phone,' Walters said on Monday. 'There will be some meetings in the next couple of weeks with those guys. I won't be trying to convince them to play for the Kangaroos.
"I will sit down with these guys and outline my plan on where we are going to take the jersey and then get an understanding of their feelings towards that and how they feel about playing for the Kangaroos. If they want to continue and play for our jersey that is great I love that and if they don't I totally respect that.'
Tabuai-Fidow played for Samoa in the 2022 World Cup, but was hampered with injury and only featured in one game. He has represented Australia six times since then having won the Pacific Championship last year in a stacked side. Haas has represented Australia four times.
The Kangaroos will play a three-match Ashes series for the first time since 2003, with the first Test against England getting underway at London's Wembley Stadium on October 25. Walters will select a 22-man squad to tour England after the NRL season.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The England selection decision looming large before the Ashes
The England selection decision looming large before the Ashes

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The England selection decision looming large before the Ashes

On a quiet autumn afternoon at Lord's in October, captain Ben Stokes and head coach Brendon McCullum will meet national selector Luke Wright and ECB director Rob Key to pick England's Ashes squad. Wright used to be the one who would make the phone calls, delivering the good news and the painful blows, but McCullum has since taken on that responsibility, seeing it as his duty to speak personally with each player. Wright will often follow up with a call to those closest to the cut to explain the decision in more detail and discuss a path for their return. Wright will have spent the summer receiving briefings from scouts across county cricket and beyond, while analysts will have drilled down through deep data wells to model whose game will suit the Australian summer. The reality, however, is that McCullum is a man who trusts his gut over spreadsheets and algorithms, and his squad is mostly set. There is little chance to alter minds now, with no more Tests between Monday's dramatic finale at The Oval and the first ball in Perth in November. England already have their top seven set in stone, despite the struggles of Ollie Pope and Zak Crawley. The seam attack starts to pick itself if fitness allows, with Mark Wood and Jofra Archer requiring cryogenic preservation over the autumn in time to thaw in the Australian sun. What did England learn from this compelling series with India? Plenty, but the Ashes is a different game. England will face a very different bowling attack in contrasting conditions, on surfaces that offer bounce with the Kookaburra ball in hand. Playing India at Headingley on the solstice and Australia at the MCG on Boxing Day are both, technically, incidents of elite Test cricket, but they are entirely unique endeavours. England, and cricket, will undoubtedly have picked up some new fans over the past few weeks, and it is only right that they are made aware of the humbling circle on which the Test game runs: your team will compete gamely in home conditions, looking genuinely good at this, before travelling to a far-flung part of the world where most of their skills will be irrelevant. England have at least reaffirmed a few things. Crawley averaged about 30 here and will forever average about 30. Ben Duckett will be occasionally magnificent and get out to the straight ball. Pope will get out. England have the best middle order in the world. England's bowling attack isn't quite good enough. Gus Atkinson remains the most likely pace bowler to join Archer and Wood when fit, and he will be required to put in an almighty shift when they're not. Brydon Carse will have a big part to play and Josh Tongue will travel, while Jamie Overton was able to hit 90mph at The Oval – he is a favourite of McCullum, and Key has spoken about pace as an essential tool in Australia. Chris Woakes may not have been in line to travel anyway, but his dislocated shoulder will further damage his chances – Sam Cook has been excellent with the Kookaburra ball in county cricket and may go in Woakes's place as the subtle seamer. The more significant shoulder injury is to Ben Stokes, who must be fit to bat and bowl for five Tests if England are to pull off a first series win over Australia since 2015. Some questions remain unanswered, like what to do with Jacob Bethell's uncorked talent. His summer carrying drinks was not particularly instructive or beneficial for his development. Will he spend the winter being dragged around Australia as England's back-up batter? There will at least be some Lions games alongside the Tests in which to build red-ball experience. And then there is the question of spin. Will England need a front-line spinner in every Test? Yes, certainly, insisted Ricky Ponting this week, even in Perth where pace prevails. Ponting endorsed Shoaib Bashir, whose height and bounce he likened to Nathan Lyon's and whose off-breaks could find some turn in Mitchell Starc's foot marks. Bashir had his moments against India, winning the Lord's Test with the final wicket of Mohammed Siraj before a broken finger ended his series. But if he is picked for an Australian pitch that later fails to degrade into a turning track, there is little upside in a 21-year-old whose batting and fielding are akin to those of a garden cricketer. Liam Dawson didn't seize his chance at Old Trafford and that may ultimately count against him, and against the notion that the County Championship is the place to find Test players. Jack Leach is bowling well for Somerset and carries rich Ashes hinterland, while Tom Hartley has impressed for Lancashire this summer. But once you've been dropped from McCullum's Test side, it is notoriously difficult to earn a recall on county form. Rehan Ahmed is the wildcard, a genuine all-rounder who could even replace Pope at No 3 should England need a reshuffle during the series. Ahmed is still raw and his leg-spin is not a typically English weapon, but he would complement Joe Root's off-breaks when Stokes needs variety in attack. Yet it is Bashir who still holds the spinner's place right now. He is the pet project that Key and McCullum started back in 2023, at a Lions training camp in the UAE when they were wowed by his smooth style and high release, and chose to catapult him into the Test team. When they sit down with Stokes and Wright in October, there will be many names to discuss and scenarios to consider. But if there's one thing we know about Bazball, rarely does it lose faith in its chosen ones. Ashes 2025-26 Test matches First Test, Optus Stadium in Perth: 21-25 November Second Test, Gabba in Brisbane: 4-8 December Third Test, Adelaide Oval in Adelaide: 17-21 December (day-night Test) Fourth Test, MCG in Melbourne: 26-30 December Fifth Test, SCG in Sydney: 4-8 January

Pictures: Manchester United players move into stunning new-look Carrington
Pictures: Manchester United players move into stunning new-look Carrington

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Pictures: Manchester United players move into stunning new-look Carrington

Manchester United have confirmed that Ruben Amorim and his players returned to a new and revamped Carrington training facility on Wednesday morning. Carrington undergoes improvements Last year, United confirmed that they had initiated work on an ambitious £50m project that would see Carrington be transformed into a 'world-class' complex. A big part of Sir Jim Ratcliffe's bid to become co-owner of United was to invest heavily in improving United's infrastructure after several years of neglect and pitiful management by the Glazer family. Award-winning and Manchester-born architect Lord Norman Foster was hired to oversee the renovations at Carrington. United noted that they planned to revamp the gym, medical, nutrition and recovery areas and insisted there was 'a design emphasis on creating more space for collaboration and innovation among players and staff.' The project ran throughout the entire 2024/25 season and was set to officially open just before the start of the upcoming campaign. Last week, Amorim said about the redeveloped Carrington, 'It's like a new start with different standards and I think to go to our building, to the new building is like a fresh start.' 'So, I think the timing is completely perfect to do everything. The good thing is that everybody's aligned what we need to do and now it's to win games, game by game try to win every game and the performance are really important as well.' Now, United have announced that the players have returned to a new-look Carrington following the completion of their United States pre-season tour. United players return to new-look Carrington The club relayed in a statement, 'While away in the States, the refurbishment of our Carrington training complex was completed and the players have now moved in.' 'The innovative new facility will officially open with a ribbon-cutting event on Friday.' The post below features some photos of the players inside the upgraded facility. United also teased the Carrington's opening on social media. United are back in action on Saturday when they take on Fiorentina in their final pre-season clash before the Premier League campaign kicks off. Featured image Carl Recine via Getty Images online polls Follow us on Bluesky: @

Disturbing Simon Goodwin incident singled out as reasons for $1.2m axing emerge
Disturbing Simon Goodwin incident singled out as reasons for $1.2m axing emerge

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Disturbing Simon Goodwin incident singled out as reasons for $1.2m axing emerge

Fresh details have emerged about the reasons behind Simon Goodwin's axing as Melbourne coach, with the board's contrasting views on the state of the AFL club, and concerns for his wellbeing in the wake of a disturbing death threat cited as major factors. The 2021 premiership-winning coach was sacked on Tuesday after nine seasons at the Demons and with three games of the regular season still remaining. It came after a poor season for Melbourne, who sit in 12th on the ladder and are set to miss out on qualifying for the finals for a third successive year. The club's decision to part ways with Goodwin comes despite the fact he was signed on for another season in 2026, meaning the Demons will reportedly need to pay him out in excess of $1.2 million for terminating the contract. But AFL reporter Jon Ralph told Fox Footy on Wednesday night that the writing had been on the wall for months, following Melbourne's disastrous 0-5 start to the season. He revealed that last week's death threat on Goodwin 'took its toll' on the coach and his family, and that the Demons board did not want the 48-year-old to leave the club after hitting 'rock bottom' so they decided to act right away. Ralph also revealed that the board did not share Goodwin's optimism that they could be premiership contenders again next year, and that a parting of ways was the best thing for all parties. 'Simon Goodwin presented to that board on Monday night, it was all about how this club would compete for a premiership next year: 'We're so close, we can sniff it'," Ralph told Fox Footy's Midweek Tackle. 'That board was diametrically opposed to that view. They were crystal clear this was a club that needed some kind of step or two backwards before it pushed forward. 'So their path was different to his. Was he deluded? Was it blind faith? Somewhere in between? 'The other interesting sub-plot was the death threat to Goodwin last weekend. Hoax or not, it absolutely took its toll on Goodwin and his family. It also gave the Demons another reminder of the toll placed upon him. 'They didn't want him to go out rock bottom as a premiership coach. They could see he was never going to back down or quit, he was always going to forge on ahead to that next premiership. They almost had to make the decision for him. They're two key issues about why Goodwin was removed from his tenure.' RELATED: Abbey Holmes responds amid backlash over decision post-birth Eagles face decision as Victorian club 'not prepared' to pay Harley Reid Future of Demons stars questioned after Simon Goodwin axing Ralph pointed out that the $1.2 million owing to Goodwin after his sacking represents a 'costly' blow to Melbourne's soft cap and footy department spending. And the coach's departure has left the future of a number of Demons superstars under a massive cloud. Christian Petracca and Clayton Oliver have both been at the centre of previous trade requests, Judd McVee is coming off contract and thought to be exploring his options, while Jake Lever was reportedly disgruntled after being dropped last month. And Hawthorn legend Luke Hodge questioned what Goodwin's sacking means for captain Max Gawn's future, given the pair had such a close relationship. "There's going to be murmurs and tough conversations and his (Gawn's) mindset now will be 'am I going to have a relationship with the next coach coming in, will I be able to lead as I am'?" Hodge said this week. 'Is this a door opening for Max Gawn? He would have had no thought of ever leaving Melbourne. "They guided him as a young fella into this absolute star of our game. With a new coach coming in, is this his time to say, 'is there a premiership somewhere else for me to go and play?'. It won't be an easy decision for him, but he has to talk to the club, who will want to keep him.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store