
Margaret River's Jack Robinson looking to bounce back to form in Australian leg of WSL Championship Tour
Margaret River's Jack Robinson looking to bounce back to form in Australian leg of WSL Championship Tour

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


West Australian
36 minutes ago
- West Australian
World Test Championship Final: Australia sent into bat on opening day of clash with South Africa
Marnus Labuschagne's credentials as an opener will receive an instant examination, with Australia set to bat first in the World Test Championship final. South African captain Temba Bavuma won the toss and elected to bowl first in the showpiece Test match at Lord's. It means Labuschagne — elevated to open with the return of West Australian Cam Green — will walk out with Usman Khawaja. Green is playing his first Test for 16 months after radical back surgery. South African pair Kagiso Rabada and Marco Jansen are poised to open the bowling in a pace attack that also includes Lungi Ngidi. While overhead conditions are cloudy in London Australian captain Pat Cummins says he was happy to bat and predicted a dry wicket could bring spinner Nathan Lyon into play late in the match. Wickets in the United Kingdom have been dry early this season, but tenants Middlesex have put up big scores at Lord's in recent weeks. 'We're happy to bat first. It looks like a pretty good wicket, few clouds but it's pretty normal for England and it looks pretty dry, it might turn later in the match,' Cummins said. He also dismissed concerns over their build-up to the match, which has seen players fly in from across the world. 'It's been great, I think it's just something you get used to, the more you play. There are some people from India, from Australia, (some have been) over here, Smithy (Steve Smith) from New York,' Cummins said. 'We have had about a 10-day preparation and we are ready to go.' England champion Stuart Broad — who dominated at Lord's and has spent the week as a bowling consultant with South Africa — said the overhead conditions are crucial at the famous ground. 'The famous saying here is you look up, not down. It is a reasonable surface, but the reason South Africa won the toss and bowled is because of the clouds,' he said. 'When you bowl, you are hoping it doesn't get to day five, you are trying to get seven, eight wickets a day and make the breakthroughs.' As confirmed by Cummins on Wednesday, Josh Hazlewood has been favoured to Scott Boland and Sam Konstas misses out to make way for Labuschagne at the top of the order.

Sydney Morning Herald
an hour ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Rooney makes bold McIntosh call as Nine lands broadcast rights to world swimming champs
Summer McIntosh could usurp Katie Ledecky as the greatest female swimmer of all time. That's the view of former Australian star Giaan Rooney after the Canadian's latest record-breaking performance in the pool. Having already broken Ariarne Titmus' 400m freestyle world record and Katinka Hosszu's 200m individual medley world mark, McIntosh sent the swimming world into another spin on Wednesday with a superb performance in the 200m butterfly at Canada's world championship trials. McIntosh clocked a time of 2:02.26, just outside the world record of 2:01.81 set in 2009 by China's Zige Liu's in a now-banned supersuit. The 18-year-old could win as many as five individual gold medals at next month's world championships in Singapore, which will be shown on the Nine Network. Could McIntosh go past Ledecky's Olympic record of nine gold medals and counting? 'I do believe that given Summer's age, we could see her challenge that [women's] record of Katie's, definitely,' said Rooney, who will commentate for Nine at the upcoming world championships. 'I think going into Singapore is the time when we're like, 'right, we are going to be talking about Summer for the rest of time'. She's just going from strength to strength. 'I think [she could get the record] mainly because of the number of events she swims. There will definitely come a time when that will get harder for her as she gets older but there are things that could play into Summer's hands, like the fact there are rumours the LA 2028 Olympic swimming program is 11 days long.

The Age
an hour ago
- The Age
Rooney makes bold McIntosh call as Nine lands broadcast rights to world swimming champs
Summer McIntosh could usurp Katie Ledecky as the greatest female swimmer of all time. That's the view of former Australian star Giaan Rooney after the Canadian's latest record-breaking performance in the pool. Having already broken Ariarne Titmus' 400m freestyle world record and Katinka Hosszu's 200m individual medley world mark, McIntosh sent the swimming world into another spin on Wednesday with a superb performance in the 200m butterfly at Canada's world championship trials. McIntosh clocked a time of 2:02.26, just outside the world record of 2:01.81 set in 2009 by China's Zige Liu's in a now-banned supersuit. The 18-year-old could win as many as five individual gold medals at next month's world championships in Singapore, which will be shown on the Nine Network. Could McIntosh go past Ledecky's Olympic record of nine gold medals and counting? 'I do believe that given Summer's age, we could see her challenge that [women's] record of Katie's, definitely,' said Rooney, who will commentate for Nine at the upcoming world championships. 'I think going into Singapore is the time when we're like, 'right, we are going to be talking about Summer for the rest of time'. She's just going from strength to strength. 'I think [she could get the record] mainly because of the number of events she swims. There will definitely come a time when that will get harder for her as she gets older but there are things that could play into Summer's hands, like the fact there are rumours the LA 2028 Olympic swimming program is 11 days long.