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O'Callaghan breaks down in TV interview

O'Callaghan breaks down in TV interview

Mollie O'Callaghan chokes up after the women's 200m freestyle final at the 2025 Australian trials, before Lani Pallister speaks to Cate Campbell.

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No Dutch treat for Aussies in grasscourt wipeout
No Dutch treat for Aussies in grasscourt wipeout

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No Dutch treat for Aussies in grasscourt wipeout

Australian tennis hopes of an encouraging start to the grass-court season have been dashed as both Alexei Popyrin and Kim Birrell got knocked out of the annual pre-Wimbledon tournament at Rosmalen. The double defeat in the Dutch event on Thursday meant there are no Australians left in the singles at the venue where Alex de Minaur lifted the title in 2024. With de Minaur taking a rest before competing at Queen's Club next week, most hopes rested on sixth seed Popyrin, who was hoping to rebound swiftly after the disappointment of his fourth-round exit at the French Open at the hands of Tommy Paul. Up to a career-high ranking of 21 thanks to his run to the fourth round in Paris, Popyrin had looked forward to starting his grass campaign in style after a first-round bye, but found himself edged out in a three-set duel with Zizou Bergs. The Belgian, named after the French soccer great Zinedine Zidane whose nickname is 'Zizou', outlasted Australia's No.2 Popyrin 6-7 (3-7) 6-2 7-6 (7-3) after the Sydneysider had taken the opening set in their last-16 clash. Popyrin had his moments, including one dazzling angled crosscourt winner that he scooped up after chasing down a Bergs volley, but it wasn't enough to earn the 25-year-old his first quarter-final berth in a grass-court event. Meanwhile, in the women's event, world No.69 Birrell, who had defeated another Chinese Wang Xinyu in the first round, went down to Yuan Yue 6-4 6-3 in the last-16 to end the Australian interest.

Deal agreed over Postecoglou's successor at Spurs
Deal agreed over Postecoglou's successor at Spurs

The Advertiser

time2 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Deal agreed over Postecoglou's successor at Spurs

Tottenham have reached an agreement with Brentford to make Thomas Frank their next head coach. The PA news agency understands that, after days of negotiations, a deal was struck between the two Premier League clubs on Thursday. Spurs had quickly set their sights on Frank after Ange Postecoglou was sacked last week - only 16 days after he secured Europa League success - and made an official approach to Brentford on Monday. Discussions between Tottenham and Brentford initially centred on Frank's current terms at the west London club, which were set to run until the summer of 2027 and contained a release clause reportedly in the region of £10million. Further talks were required over which backroom staff Frank would take to Spurs but, eventually, a deal has been struck. Highly-rated Brentford first-team coach Justin Cochrane is set to follow Frank to Tottenham and, in the process, return to the club where he started his coaching journey. London-born Cochrane has been part of Frank's backroom staff since 2022, after he initially developed as a coach in Spurs' youth-team before a spell at Manchester United. Cochrane, 43, has earned a reputation as one of the brightest coaches in England and earlier this year joined Thomas Tuchel's coaching staff for the national team alongside his role at Brentford under Frank. Frank would take over a Spurs side which won a trophy for the first time since 2008 with victory in the Europa League final last month but finished 17th in the Premier League. The ex-Brondby boss has transformed Brentford during his seven-year spell in charge, with promotion from the Championship in 2021 followed by him establishing the club as a Premier League regular despite a modest budget. Later on Thursday, Tottenham announced Australian Mile Jedinak, Nick Montgomery and Sergio Raimundo - three members of Postecoglou's backroom staff - had officially left the club. Ryan Mason departed earlier this month to accept his first managerial role at West Brom. Tottenham have reached an agreement with Brentford to make Thomas Frank their next head coach. The PA news agency understands that, after days of negotiations, a deal was struck between the two Premier League clubs on Thursday. Spurs had quickly set their sights on Frank after Ange Postecoglou was sacked last week - only 16 days after he secured Europa League success - and made an official approach to Brentford on Monday. Discussions between Tottenham and Brentford initially centred on Frank's current terms at the west London club, which were set to run until the summer of 2027 and contained a release clause reportedly in the region of £10million. Further talks were required over which backroom staff Frank would take to Spurs but, eventually, a deal has been struck. Highly-rated Brentford first-team coach Justin Cochrane is set to follow Frank to Tottenham and, in the process, return to the club where he started his coaching journey. London-born Cochrane has been part of Frank's backroom staff since 2022, after he initially developed as a coach in Spurs' youth-team before a spell at Manchester United. Cochrane, 43, has earned a reputation as one of the brightest coaches in England and earlier this year joined Thomas Tuchel's coaching staff for the national team alongside his role at Brentford under Frank. Frank would take over a Spurs side which won a trophy for the first time since 2008 with victory in the Europa League final last month but finished 17th in the Premier League. The ex-Brondby boss has transformed Brentford during his seven-year spell in charge, with promotion from the Championship in 2021 followed by him establishing the club as a Premier League regular despite a modest budget. Later on Thursday, Tottenham announced Australian Mile Jedinak, Nick Montgomery and Sergio Raimundo - three members of Postecoglou's backroom staff - had officially left the club. Ryan Mason departed earlier this month to accept his first managerial role at West Brom. Tottenham have reached an agreement with Brentford to make Thomas Frank their next head coach. The PA news agency understands that, after days of negotiations, a deal was struck between the two Premier League clubs on Thursday. Spurs had quickly set their sights on Frank after Ange Postecoglou was sacked last week - only 16 days after he secured Europa League success - and made an official approach to Brentford on Monday. Discussions between Tottenham and Brentford initially centred on Frank's current terms at the west London club, which were set to run until the summer of 2027 and contained a release clause reportedly in the region of £10million. Further talks were required over which backroom staff Frank would take to Spurs but, eventually, a deal has been struck. Highly-rated Brentford first-team coach Justin Cochrane is set to follow Frank to Tottenham and, in the process, return to the club where he started his coaching journey. London-born Cochrane has been part of Frank's backroom staff since 2022, after he initially developed as a coach in Spurs' youth-team before a spell at Manchester United. Cochrane, 43, has earned a reputation as one of the brightest coaches in England and earlier this year joined Thomas Tuchel's coaching staff for the national team alongside his role at Brentford under Frank. Frank would take over a Spurs side which won a trophy for the first time since 2008 with victory in the Europa League final last month but finished 17th in the Premier League. The ex-Brondby boss has transformed Brentford during his seven-year spell in charge, with promotion from the Championship in 2021 followed by him establishing the club as a Premier League regular despite a modest budget. Later on Thursday, Tottenham announced Australian Mile Jedinak, Nick Montgomery and Sergio Raimundo - three members of Postecoglou's backroom staff - had officially left the club. Ryan Mason departed earlier this month to accept his first managerial role at West Brom.

Cummins' milestone inspires Australia in WTC final
Cummins' milestone inspires Australia in WTC final

The Advertiser

time2 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Cummins' milestone inspires Australia in WTC final

Pat Cummins has become the eighth Australian to take 300 Test wickets after demolishing South Africa in the World Test Championship final at Lord's. Australia secured a first-innings lead of 74, skittling the Proteas for 138 midway through the second session of day two on Thursday. But after his 5-51 in the first innings, Proteas spearhead Kagsio Rabada (2-15) stepped up again to claim Usman Khawaja (six) and Cameron Green (0) in a three-ball burst just before tea. Australia finished the session on 2-32, with new opener Marnus Labuschagne on 16 not out and Steve Smith unbeaten on four, with the lead out to 106. Victory in only the third WTC final would ensure Australia have landed four ICC trophies since November 2021. But South Africa are refusing to throw in the towel, having not won an international title since the 1998 Champions Trophy. The evergreen fast-bowling machine of Cummins, Josh Hazlewood, and Mitchell Starc proved too good for the batting of South Africa, who ended the WTC cycle on top of the table. While Starc started the destruction on Wednesday evening, Cummins (6-28) was relentless in finishing the job. It was the 14th five-wicket haul of Cummins' brilliant 68-Test career. The first paceman to captain Australia long-term, Cummins joins the country's greats in reaching 300 wickets. Shane Warne (708 wickets) and Glenn McGrath (563) sit one and two, while Cummins' teammates Nathan Lyon (553) and Mitchell Starc (384) are next in line. Dennis Lillee (355), Mitchell Johnson (313) and Brett Lee (310) are the others to take more than 300. Out of those eight, only McGrath has a better average (21.64) than Cummins' 22.08. "It's way more than I could've asked for," Cummins said. "For any fast bowler, 300 is a big number, it means you've battled a few injuries and niggles and got through it." The 32-year-old also finished with the best figures by a captain at Lord's, bettering England's Bob Willis' 6-101 in 1982. One of Cummins' six victims was Kyle Verreynne, who had to go after being trapped lbw. As Cummins was pedalling backwards while appealing, he and Verreynne collided with each other and tumbled over. The umpire gave the South Africa wicketkeeper not out, but Cummins successfully appealed. Starting day two in serious trouble at 4-43, the Proteas were able to frustrate Australia's star-studded bowling attack in the first session and move to 5-121 at lunch in pursuit of 212. But Cummins inspired a collapse of 5-12 to end the innings in a hurry. David Bedingham (45) top scored for South Africa, while Proteas captain Temba Bavuma survived a controversial DRS decision. Adjudged lbw on 16 off Josh Hazlewood, Bavuma left it late to review, but eventually took the decision upstairs with four seconds remaining. The ball would have been smashing into the stumps, but a spike on snicko incredibly meant Bavuma had survived. Former England captain Alastair Cook said during radio commentary he didn't believe Bavuma had hit it. But after looking promising, highlighted by pulling opposing captain Cummins for six, Bavuma (36) scooped a drive to cover where Marnus Labuschagne pulled off a terrific diving catch. This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final. Pat Cummins has become the eighth Australian to take 300 Test wickets after demolishing South Africa in the World Test Championship final at Lord's. Australia secured a first-innings lead of 74, skittling the Proteas for 138 midway through the second session of day two on Thursday. But after his 5-51 in the first innings, Proteas spearhead Kagsio Rabada (2-15) stepped up again to claim Usman Khawaja (six) and Cameron Green (0) in a three-ball burst just before tea. Australia finished the session on 2-32, with new opener Marnus Labuschagne on 16 not out and Steve Smith unbeaten on four, with the lead out to 106. Victory in only the third WTC final would ensure Australia have landed four ICC trophies since November 2021. But South Africa are refusing to throw in the towel, having not won an international title since the 1998 Champions Trophy. The evergreen fast-bowling machine of Cummins, Josh Hazlewood, and Mitchell Starc proved too good for the batting of South Africa, who ended the WTC cycle on top of the table. While Starc started the destruction on Wednesday evening, Cummins (6-28) was relentless in finishing the job. It was the 14th five-wicket haul of Cummins' brilliant 68-Test career. The first paceman to captain Australia long-term, Cummins joins the country's greats in reaching 300 wickets. Shane Warne (708 wickets) and Glenn McGrath (563) sit one and two, while Cummins' teammates Nathan Lyon (553) and Mitchell Starc (384) are next in line. Dennis Lillee (355), Mitchell Johnson (313) and Brett Lee (310) are the others to take more than 300. Out of those eight, only McGrath has a better average (21.64) than Cummins' 22.08. "It's way more than I could've asked for," Cummins said. "For any fast bowler, 300 is a big number, it means you've battled a few injuries and niggles and got through it." The 32-year-old also finished with the best figures by a captain at Lord's, bettering England's Bob Willis' 6-101 in 1982. One of Cummins' six victims was Kyle Verreynne, who had to go after being trapped lbw. As Cummins was pedalling backwards while appealing, he and Verreynne collided with each other and tumbled over. The umpire gave the South Africa wicketkeeper not out, but Cummins successfully appealed. Starting day two in serious trouble at 4-43, the Proteas were able to frustrate Australia's star-studded bowling attack in the first session and move to 5-121 at lunch in pursuit of 212. But Cummins inspired a collapse of 5-12 to end the innings in a hurry. David Bedingham (45) top scored for South Africa, while Proteas captain Temba Bavuma survived a controversial DRS decision. Adjudged lbw on 16 off Josh Hazlewood, Bavuma left it late to review, but eventually took the decision upstairs with four seconds remaining. The ball would have been smashing into the stumps, but a spike on snicko incredibly meant Bavuma had survived. Former England captain Alastair Cook said during radio commentary he didn't believe Bavuma had hit it. But after looking promising, highlighted by pulling opposing captain Cummins for six, Bavuma (36) scooped a drive to cover where Marnus Labuschagne pulled off a terrific diving catch. This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final. Pat Cummins has become the eighth Australian to take 300 Test wickets after demolishing South Africa in the World Test Championship final at Lord's. Australia secured a first-innings lead of 74, skittling the Proteas for 138 midway through the second session of day two on Thursday. But after his 5-51 in the first innings, Proteas spearhead Kagsio Rabada (2-15) stepped up again to claim Usman Khawaja (six) and Cameron Green (0) in a three-ball burst just before tea. Australia finished the session on 2-32, with new opener Marnus Labuschagne on 16 not out and Steve Smith unbeaten on four, with the lead out to 106. Victory in only the third WTC final would ensure Australia have landed four ICC trophies since November 2021. But South Africa are refusing to throw in the towel, having not won an international title since the 1998 Champions Trophy. The evergreen fast-bowling machine of Cummins, Josh Hazlewood, and Mitchell Starc proved too good for the batting of South Africa, who ended the WTC cycle on top of the table. While Starc started the destruction on Wednesday evening, Cummins (6-28) was relentless in finishing the job. It was the 14th five-wicket haul of Cummins' brilliant 68-Test career. The first paceman to captain Australia long-term, Cummins joins the country's greats in reaching 300 wickets. Shane Warne (708 wickets) and Glenn McGrath (563) sit one and two, while Cummins' teammates Nathan Lyon (553) and Mitchell Starc (384) are next in line. Dennis Lillee (355), Mitchell Johnson (313) and Brett Lee (310) are the others to take more than 300. Out of those eight, only McGrath has a better average (21.64) than Cummins' 22.08. "It's way more than I could've asked for," Cummins said. "For any fast bowler, 300 is a big number, it means you've battled a few injuries and niggles and got through it." The 32-year-old also finished with the best figures by a captain at Lord's, bettering England's Bob Willis' 6-101 in 1982. One of Cummins' six victims was Kyle Verreynne, who had to go after being trapped lbw. As Cummins was pedalling backwards while appealing, he and Verreynne collided with each other and tumbled over. The umpire gave the South Africa wicketkeeper not out, but Cummins successfully appealed. Starting day two in serious trouble at 4-43, the Proteas were able to frustrate Australia's star-studded bowling attack in the first session and move to 5-121 at lunch in pursuit of 212. But Cummins inspired a collapse of 5-12 to end the innings in a hurry. David Bedingham (45) top scored for South Africa, while Proteas captain Temba Bavuma survived a controversial DRS decision. Adjudged lbw on 16 off Josh Hazlewood, Bavuma left it late to review, but eventually took the decision upstairs with four seconds remaining. The ball would have been smashing into the stumps, but a spike on snicko incredibly meant Bavuma had survived. Former England captain Alastair Cook said during radio commentary he didn't believe Bavuma had hit it. But after looking promising, highlighted by pulling opposing captain Cummins for six, Bavuma (36) scooped a drive to cover where Marnus Labuschagne pulled off a terrific diving catch. This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final.

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