The Aussie teen handpicked by Tony Hawk to be in his new video game
The Gold Coast teenager has been handpicked by skateboarding legend Tony Hawk to be a playable character in the new Tony Hawk Pro Skater 3 + 4 video game – the only female Australian skater to feature.
'I got invited to LA to do all the filming stuff and had all the green dots on me [for CGI]. It was pretty cool,' Covell said.
'Just to get all the shots of my face and stuff, I had to sit in this big octagon full of cameras. And I had to bring down a few outfits to wear so they could shoot them for when I'm on the game.'
Covell wasn't even born when the original game came out in 1999. But, as her mum Julie said: '[Hawk] must have noticed or saw something unique about Chloe that would have been an asset to the game.'
Covell is one of eight new characters in the game, along with Yuto Horigome, Jamie Foy, Zion Wright, Margie Didal, Rayssa Leal, Aurelien Giraud and Nora Vasconcellos. Australian skater Shane O'Neill also makes his return, having first appeared in the 2020 release.
There are also a number of returning veterans, including Hawk, Bob Burnquist, Rune Glifberg and Kareem Campbell.
One of Covell's latest victories was at the X Games in Osaka three weeks ago, where her final run was so perfect the commentators suggested she looked like she was in a video game.
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The Advertiser
3 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Bullets hit bullseye by signing NBL championship winner
The Brisbane Bullets have signed NBL championship winner Jaylen Adams in a huge boost for the side's Stu Lash era. Amid reports they will soon announce the arrival of Australian NBA player Alex Ducas, the Bullets unveiled former Sydney Kings combo guard Adams as their second import for the 2025/26 season. Adams won an NBL championship and the league's most valuable player award at the Kings in 2022, receiving plaudits for his versatility and composure down the stretch. The Maryland native returned to Sydney for the past two seasons but could not replicate those heroics for an underachieving Kings side, though he did have a 43-point game against Adelaide in January. Outside of his time in the NBL, Adams played 44 NBA games between 2018 and 2021 across stints with the Atlanta Hawks, Portland Trail Blazers and Milwaukee Bucks. The arrivals of high-profile Matthew Dellavedova and Kendric Davis left the writing on the wall for Adams at the Kings in the off-season. He is the biggest signing yet for the Bullets under coach Lash, who will hope to snap a six-year play-offs drought as he replaces the ousted Justin Schueller at the helm. "I've seen what Brisbane is building and I want to be part of something special," Adams said. "This is a team and city ready to take the next step, and I'm coming in hungry to lead from the front, compete every night, and chase another title." Adams joins fellow American Casey Prather, big man Tyrell Harrison and veteran Mitch Norton as key components of the Bullets' roster for the upcoming season. The Bullets remain on the lookout for a top-quality back-court partner for Adams, and have been linked with Ducas, who was part of Oklahoma City's championship-winning roster last NBA season. A graduate of the same US college as Patty Mills and Jock Landale, Ducas played 21 games in his rookie NBA season for the Thunder, but did not feature in the post-season. The Brisbane Bullets have signed NBL championship winner Jaylen Adams in a huge boost for the side's Stu Lash era. Amid reports they will soon announce the arrival of Australian NBA player Alex Ducas, the Bullets unveiled former Sydney Kings combo guard Adams as their second import for the 2025/26 season. Adams won an NBL championship and the league's most valuable player award at the Kings in 2022, receiving plaudits for his versatility and composure down the stretch. The Maryland native returned to Sydney for the past two seasons but could not replicate those heroics for an underachieving Kings side, though he did have a 43-point game against Adelaide in January. Outside of his time in the NBL, Adams played 44 NBA games between 2018 and 2021 across stints with the Atlanta Hawks, Portland Trail Blazers and Milwaukee Bucks. The arrivals of high-profile Matthew Dellavedova and Kendric Davis left the writing on the wall for Adams at the Kings in the off-season. He is the biggest signing yet for the Bullets under coach Lash, who will hope to snap a six-year play-offs drought as he replaces the ousted Justin Schueller at the helm. "I've seen what Brisbane is building and I want to be part of something special," Adams said. "This is a team and city ready to take the next step, and I'm coming in hungry to lead from the front, compete every night, and chase another title." Adams joins fellow American Casey Prather, big man Tyrell Harrison and veteran Mitch Norton as key components of the Bullets' roster for the upcoming season. The Bullets remain on the lookout for a top-quality back-court partner for Adams, and have been linked with Ducas, who was part of Oklahoma City's championship-winning roster last NBA season. A graduate of the same US college as Patty Mills and Jock Landale, Ducas played 21 games in his rookie NBA season for the Thunder, but did not feature in the post-season. The Brisbane Bullets have signed NBL championship winner Jaylen Adams in a huge boost for the side's Stu Lash era. Amid reports they will soon announce the arrival of Australian NBA player Alex Ducas, the Bullets unveiled former Sydney Kings combo guard Adams as their second import for the 2025/26 season. Adams won an NBL championship and the league's most valuable player award at the Kings in 2022, receiving plaudits for his versatility and composure down the stretch. The Maryland native returned to Sydney for the past two seasons but could not replicate those heroics for an underachieving Kings side, though he did have a 43-point game against Adelaide in January. Outside of his time in the NBL, Adams played 44 NBA games between 2018 and 2021 across stints with the Atlanta Hawks, Portland Trail Blazers and Milwaukee Bucks. The arrivals of high-profile Matthew Dellavedova and Kendric Davis left the writing on the wall for Adams at the Kings in the off-season. He is the biggest signing yet for the Bullets under coach Lash, who will hope to snap a six-year play-offs drought as he replaces the ousted Justin Schueller at the helm. "I've seen what Brisbane is building and I want to be part of something special," Adams said. "This is a team and city ready to take the next step, and I'm coming in hungry to lead from the front, compete every night, and chase another title." Adams joins fellow American Casey Prather, big man Tyrell Harrison and veteran Mitch Norton as key components of the Bullets' roster for the upcoming season. The Bullets remain on the lookout for a top-quality back-court partner for Adams, and have been linked with Ducas, who was part of Oklahoma City's championship-winning roster last NBA season. A graduate of the same US college as Patty Mills and Jock Landale, Ducas played 21 games in his rookie NBA season for the Thunder, but did not feature in the post-season.


The Advertiser
3 hours ago
- The Advertiser
PM juggles military tensions amid football diplomacy
Football and tourism have been the focus of the prime minister's first full day in China as questions about Australia's participation in a potential future conflict with the Asian superpower overshadow his six-day tour. Former Socceroo Kevin Muscat joined Anthony Albanese on a morning walk along Shanghai's historic Bund promenade on Sunday to promote the two nations' interpersonal links. Now coaching Shanghai Port FC, Muscat last year became the first Australian manager to lead a Chinese Super League team to the premiership. The former midfield enforcer has brought over a host of Australian coaching staff, including fellow ex-Socceroo Ross Aloisi, in a sign of the deepening collaboration between Australia and China on the sporting field. A keen tennis player, Mr Albanese will also make an announcement about extending an Australian Open wildcard tournament in the southwestern city of Chengdu later in the visit. "One of the things about Australia and China that's so important is we build people-to-people relations and we do that by the participation of Australians here," the prime minister said. "Whether it be here in football, or whether it be the lead-in tournament that's going to take place in Chengdu for the Australian Open (or) the business relationships that we have here as well." Looking across the Huangpu River to the towering skyscrapers on the opposite bank, Mr Albanese reflected on the phenomenal economic transformation China had undergone in recent decades. That boom has seen no small benefit flow to Australia, whose iron ore exports helped build the Shanghai skyline and filled the federal government's coffers. "When I first came here in the 1990s, the area Pudong was very different indeed," Mr Albanese said in a meeting with local Chinese Communist Party official Chen Jining. "There were farms where there is now a great metropolis. "The development we can see across the river is symbolic of the extraordinary development that China has seen in recent decades, lifting literally hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and creating economic benefit for the people of China but also increased economic engagement with countries like Australia." A burgeoning Chinese middle class, with a new found appetite for travel, has flocked to Australia in recent decades though recent tourist numbers remain below pre-pandemic levels. To promote Australia as a travel destination, the prime minister will oversee the signing of a memorandum of understanding between online travel giant - which owns popular bookings sites such as Skyscanner - and Tourism Australia. He will also unveil a new tourism campaign to air in China starring local film star Yu Shi and Ruby the Roo, an animated kangaroo voiced by Rose Byrne. Amid the positive rhetoric around Sino-Australian relations, Mr Albanese is doing his best to dodge the US-sized elephant in the room. Military tensions were highlighted by revelations that US defence strategist Elbridge Colby has been pushing Australia and Japan to clarify what role they would play in a potential conflict with China But acting Defence Minister Pat Conroy on Sunday reiterated Australia's long-established stance on whether it would join the US in a war. "The decision to commit Australian troops to a conflict will be made by the government of the day, not in advance," he told ABC's Insiders program. Football and tourism have been the focus of the prime minister's first full day in China as questions about Australia's participation in a potential future conflict with the Asian superpower overshadow his six-day tour. Former Socceroo Kevin Muscat joined Anthony Albanese on a morning walk along Shanghai's historic Bund promenade on Sunday to promote the two nations' interpersonal links. Now coaching Shanghai Port FC, Muscat last year became the first Australian manager to lead a Chinese Super League team to the premiership. The former midfield enforcer has brought over a host of Australian coaching staff, including fellow ex-Socceroo Ross Aloisi, in a sign of the deepening collaboration between Australia and China on the sporting field. A keen tennis player, Mr Albanese will also make an announcement about extending an Australian Open wildcard tournament in the southwestern city of Chengdu later in the visit. "One of the things about Australia and China that's so important is we build people-to-people relations and we do that by the participation of Australians here," the prime minister said. "Whether it be here in football, or whether it be the lead-in tournament that's going to take place in Chengdu for the Australian Open (or) the business relationships that we have here as well." Looking across the Huangpu River to the towering skyscrapers on the opposite bank, Mr Albanese reflected on the phenomenal economic transformation China had undergone in recent decades. That boom has seen no small benefit flow to Australia, whose iron ore exports helped build the Shanghai skyline and filled the federal government's coffers. "When I first came here in the 1990s, the area Pudong was very different indeed," Mr Albanese said in a meeting with local Chinese Communist Party official Chen Jining. "There were farms where there is now a great metropolis. "The development we can see across the river is symbolic of the extraordinary development that China has seen in recent decades, lifting literally hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and creating economic benefit for the people of China but also increased economic engagement with countries like Australia." A burgeoning Chinese middle class, with a new found appetite for travel, has flocked to Australia in recent decades though recent tourist numbers remain below pre-pandemic levels. To promote Australia as a travel destination, the prime minister will oversee the signing of a memorandum of understanding between online travel giant - which owns popular bookings sites such as Skyscanner - and Tourism Australia. He will also unveil a new tourism campaign to air in China starring local film star Yu Shi and Ruby the Roo, an animated kangaroo voiced by Rose Byrne. Amid the positive rhetoric around Sino-Australian relations, Mr Albanese is doing his best to dodge the US-sized elephant in the room. Military tensions were highlighted by revelations that US defence strategist Elbridge Colby has been pushing Australia and Japan to clarify what role they would play in a potential conflict with China But acting Defence Minister Pat Conroy on Sunday reiterated Australia's long-established stance on whether it would join the US in a war. "The decision to commit Australian troops to a conflict will be made by the government of the day, not in advance," he told ABC's Insiders program. Football and tourism have been the focus of the prime minister's first full day in China as questions about Australia's participation in a potential future conflict with the Asian superpower overshadow his six-day tour. Former Socceroo Kevin Muscat joined Anthony Albanese on a morning walk along Shanghai's historic Bund promenade on Sunday to promote the two nations' interpersonal links. Now coaching Shanghai Port FC, Muscat last year became the first Australian manager to lead a Chinese Super League team to the premiership. The former midfield enforcer has brought over a host of Australian coaching staff, including fellow ex-Socceroo Ross Aloisi, in a sign of the deepening collaboration between Australia and China on the sporting field. A keen tennis player, Mr Albanese will also make an announcement about extending an Australian Open wildcard tournament in the southwestern city of Chengdu later in the visit. "One of the things about Australia and China that's so important is we build people-to-people relations and we do that by the participation of Australians here," the prime minister said. "Whether it be here in football, or whether it be the lead-in tournament that's going to take place in Chengdu for the Australian Open (or) the business relationships that we have here as well." Looking across the Huangpu River to the towering skyscrapers on the opposite bank, Mr Albanese reflected on the phenomenal economic transformation China had undergone in recent decades. That boom has seen no small benefit flow to Australia, whose iron ore exports helped build the Shanghai skyline and filled the federal government's coffers. "When I first came here in the 1990s, the area Pudong was very different indeed," Mr Albanese said in a meeting with local Chinese Communist Party official Chen Jining. "There were farms where there is now a great metropolis. "The development we can see across the river is symbolic of the extraordinary development that China has seen in recent decades, lifting literally hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and creating economic benefit for the people of China but also increased economic engagement with countries like Australia." A burgeoning Chinese middle class, with a new found appetite for travel, has flocked to Australia in recent decades though recent tourist numbers remain below pre-pandemic levels. To promote Australia as a travel destination, the prime minister will oversee the signing of a memorandum of understanding between online travel giant - which owns popular bookings sites such as Skyscanner - and Tourism Australia. He will also unveil a new tourism campaign to air in China starring local film star Yu Shi and Ruby the Roo, an animated kangaroo voiced by Rose Byrne. Amid the positive rhetoric around Sino-Australian relations, Mr Albanese is doing his best to dodge the US-sized elephant in the room. Military tensions were highlighted by revelations that US defence strategist Elbridge Colby has been pushing Australia and Japan to clarify what role they would play in a potential conflict with China But acting Defence Minister Pat Conroy on Sunday reiterated Australia's long-established stance on whether it would join the US in a war. "The decision to commit Australian troops to a conflict will be made by the government of the day, not in advance," he told ABC's Insiders program. Football and tourism have been the focus of the prime minister's first full day in China as questions about Australia's participation in a potential future conflict with the Asian superpower overshadow his six-day tour. Former Socceroo Kevin Muscat joined Anthony Albanese on a morning walk along Shanghai's historic Bund promenade on Sunday to promote the two nations' interpersonal links. Now coaching Shanghai Port FC, Muscat last year became the first Australian manager to lead a Chinese Super League team to the premiership. The former midfield enforcer has brought over a host of Australian coaching staff, including fellow ex-Socceroo Ross Aloisi, in a sign of the deepening collaboration between Australia and China on the sporting field. A keen tennis player, Mr Albanese will also make an announcement about extending an Australian Open wildcard tournament in the southwestern city of Chengdu later in the visit. "One of the things about Australia and China that's so important is we build people-to-people relations and we do that by the participation of Australians here," the prime minister said. "Whether it be here in football, or whether it be the lead-in tournament that's going to take place in Chengdu for the Australian Open (or) the business relationships that we have here as well." Looking across the Huangpu River to the towering skyscrapers on the opposite bank, Mr Albanese reflected on the phenomenal economic transformation China had undergone in recent decades. That boom has seen no small benefit flow to Australia, whose iron ore exports helped build the Shanghai skyline and filled the federal government's coffers. "When I first came here in the 1990s, the area Pudong was very different indeed," Mr Albanese said in a meeting with local Chinese Communist Party official Chen Jining. "There were farms where there is now a great metropolis. "The development we can see across the river is symbolic of the extraordinary development that China has seen in recent decades, lifting literally hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and creating economic benefit for the people of China but also increased economic engagement with countries like Australia." A burgeoning Chinese middle class, with a new found appetite for travel, has flocked to Australia in recent decades though recent tourist numbers remain below pre-pandemic levels. To promote Australia as a travel destination, the prime minister will oversee the signing of a memorandum of understanding between online travel giant - which owns popular bookings sites such as Skyscanner - and Tourism Australia. He will also unveil a new tourism campaign to air in China starring local film star Yu Shi and Ruby the Roo, an animated kangaroo voiced by Rose Byrne. Amid the positive rhetoric around Sino-Australian relations, Mr Albanese is doing his best to dodge the US-sized elephant in the room. Military tensions were highlighted by revelations that US defence strategist Elbridge Colby has been pushing Australia and Japan to clarify what role they would play in a potential conflict with China But acting Defence Minister Pat Conroy on Sunday reiterated Australia's long-established stance on whether it would join the US in a war. "The decision to commit Australian troops to a conflict will be made by the government of the day, not in advance," he told ABC's Insiders program.


West Australian
3 hours ago
- West Australian
Bullets hit bullseye by signing NBL championship winner
The Brisbane Bullets have signed NBL championship winner Jaylen Adams in a huge boost for the side's Stu Lash era. Amid reports they will soon announce the arrival of Australian NBA player Alex Ducas, the Bullets unveiled former Sydney Kings combo guard Adams as their second import for the 2025/26 season. Adams won an NBL championship and the league's most valuable player award at the Kings in 2022, receiving plaudits for his versatility and composure down the stretch. The Maryland native returned to Sydney for the past two seasons but could not replicate those heroics for an underachieving Kings side, though he did have a 43-point game against Adelaide in January. Outside of his time in the NBL, Adams played 44 NBA games between 2018 and 2021 across stints with the Atlanta Hawks, Portland Trail Blazers and Milwaukee Bucks. The arrivals of high-profile Matthew Dellavedova and Kendric Davis left the writing on the wall for Adams at the Kings in the off-season. He is the biggest signing yet for the Bullets under coach Lash, who will hope to snap a six-year play-offs drought as he replaces the ousted Justin Schueller at the helm. "I've seen what Brisbane is building and I want to be part of something special," Adams said. "This is a team and city ready to take the next step, and I'm coming in hungry to lead from the front, compete every night, and chase another title." Adams joins fellow American Casey Prather, big man Tyrell Harrison and veteran Mitch Norton as key components of the Bullets' roster for the upcoming season. The Bullets remain on the lookout for a top-quality back-court partner for Adams, and have been linked with Ducas, who was part of Oklahoma City's championship-winning roster last NBA season. A graduate of the same US college as Patty Mills and Jock Landale, Ducas played 21 games in his rookie NBA season for the Thunder, but did not feature in the post-season.