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Leap of faith: Olyslagers soars to gold in Paris

Leap of faith: Olyslagers soars to gold in Paris

Yahoo4 hours ago

Moments after leaving her rivals in her wake in the Diamond League yet again, Nicola Olyslagers set the bar even higher.
Australia's high-jumping royalty leapt to gold under the Parisian sky on Friday, rising over 2.00m to claim back-to-back gold medals on the world's premier athletics circuit.
It was her second jump that made the difference, relegating Ukrainian world record holder Yaroslava Mahuchikh to second and compatriot Eleanor Patterson to bronze.
At the top of her game tonight 🔥Nicola Olyslagers 🇦🇺 makes it another winning performance as her best jump of 2.00m gives her victory in Paris in the women's high jump.📸 Marta Gorczyńska for Diamond League AG#DiamondLeague 💎 #ParisDL 🇫🇷 pic.twitter.com/gey5OO0yad
— Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) June 20, 2025
But despite her seventh success overall after her most recent win in Stockholm, Olyslagers is not entirely happy.
"Tonight was great, it was the first time we jumped so late (at night), so for mindset it can be difficult," she said.
"I'm very thankful for another two-metre jump, but I really want a personal best, so we keep training."
The NSW jumper has her sights set on equalling or bettering her own national record of 2.03m, one of the goals motivating her for future meets.
The dual Olympic silver medallist believes one way of improving is by getting stronger.
"I tend to have very strong jumps in the first five jumps of the competition and then it slowly goes down. Potentially, I need to work a lot more on my muscles to stay strong as I'm running towards the bar."
Opening her competition at 1.91m, the double world indoor champion says entering any later may not be worth the risk.
"1.91 is very high! We need to work to find the best possibility, or some more training so I have the endurance to give my best at the end."
Compatriot Patterson's third-place finish (1.97m) was her third Diamond League podium of 2025 and the Victorian is closing in on the two-metre barrier.
In the women's 1500m, Linden Hall finished fourth in 3:57:63 to prevail in the domestic battle including Victorians Georgia Griffith (4:01:36) and Abbey Caldwell (4:01:86).
Kenya's Nelly Chepchirchir won the race in 3:57.02.
Olympic champion Marileidy Paulino outfought Salwa Eid Naser to win the women's 400m, while Grace Stark set a personal best to outgun Tobi Amusan in the women's 100m hurdles.
Dominican Republic's Paulino needed a season's best time of 48.81, a new meeting record, as the world champion came from behind to pip Bahrain's Naser, who took silver at last year's Olympics.
Nigeria's world record holder and 2022 world champion Amusan settled for second as the 24-year-old American Stark led from the start to win in 12.21 secs, knocking one tenth of a second off her personal best.
Next stop in the Diamond League, which offers significant world ranking points, is in Eugene, Oregon, on July 5.
with Reuters

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The rise of Auckland FC: Bill Foley, NBA's Steven Adams and Golden Knights inspiration
The rise of Auckland FC: Bill Foley, NBA's Steven Adams and Golden Knights inspiration

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

The rise of Auckland FC: Bill Foley, NBA's Steven Adams and Golden Knights inspiration

As the owner of several vineyards around the world, Bill Foley knows a thing or two about a successful vintage. Older vines with deeper roots tend to produce more distinguished, coveted wines. And you've got to be patient. If you nurture the grapes properly, results will follow down the line. But Foley also has a knack for overturning conventional logic, whether in business or sports. Advertisement So when the billionaire owner of Premier League club AFC Bournemouth launched a new football club in Auckland, New Zealand, a country traditionally dominated by rugby, success might have been considered a long-term dream. Instead, Auckland FC, which competes in the Australian top flight, won the league stage in its first year at a canter, and only narrowly missed out on lifting the A-League Champions trophy through the play-offs. Along the way, they made history by smashing a string of records for an expansion team — including the league's highest average attendances, winning its six opening games, and the longest run of clean sheets in Australian national league history. Add to that the highest domestic crowd record for a regular season football match in New Zealand. It is not the first time Foley's clubs — others are French Ligue 1 side Lorient and Scottish Premier League club Hibernian — have defied expectations. In 2017, he launched a new National Hockey League (NHL) club in, of all places, the Nevada desert. He caused surprise, and even prompted derision, by vowing that his new team, the Vegas Golden Knights, would lift the Stanley Cup within their first six seasons. But the Golden Knights did it, and although Auckland only just failed to repeat the trick within a single campaign, they appear to have uncorked something special in New Zealand. 'I was totally confident,' says Foley, reflecting on Auckland's audacious debut season. 'We should have won everything.' There was a defining moment in the play-off semi-final first leg win against Melbourne Victory (the team Brighton owner Tony Bloom has a minority share) when Auckland, winning 1-0 away, launched a counter-attack in which forward Neyder Moreno's shot hit the post, rebounded onto the other post then dropped into the arms of Victory goalkeeper Jack Duncan. Advertisement 'I had that sinking feeling of, 'Uh oh, I hope that doesn't come back to haunt us,'' Foley says. 'Of course it did.' That first leg ended 1-0 — a slim aggregate lead — and in the second leg back on Kiwi soil, the Australians won 2-0 with one of their goals a cruel deflection. The new boys were unlucky, then, in the manner they missed out on ultimate glory. But it was less good fortune than savvy planning and vision that led to their rapid ascent. The first thing was sensing a weakening in rugby union's grasp on Auckland. Partly due to safety concerns around concussions and injury, but also a complacency, which Auckland FC's chief executive Nick Becker, who was born and bred in the city and played high school rugby, noticed when he returned home after living in England (including working for Manchester City). Becker was tasked with building Foley's football club from the ground up and used his local knowledge, plus 20 years of experience in the UK, to ensure this venture would work. 'There is a famous rugby club in Auckland called Ponsonby,' he says. 'One of the oldest in New Zealand and effectively an All Black factory. 'When I left to move to England in 2003, it probably had two or three thousand kids playing there. Next door to it is a football club called Western Springs, which then had a handful of kids playing at it, at the most 50. 'When I returned, it had flipped on its head: Western Springs has over 3,000 kids and Ponsonby has 400 at the most. It's a generational shift. Rugby is the national game and I still love it, but it has kind of taken its feet off the pulse of the nation. 'They've done a bad job in connecting with communities while football has grown and grown with the success of the Premier League, La Liga and even MLS with Lionel Messi.' Becker connected with as many of Auckland's growing list of amateur football clubs as he could, while Foley demanded the same community focus that made the Golden Knights a success. 'In Vegas, we gave tickets to firemen, policemen, first responders, nurses, doctors, lawyers and teachers,' says Foley. 'We did a study that said there were around 150,000 avid hockey fans in Las Vegas all from somewhere else; whether it was Calgary, Minneapolis or Vancouver. Advertisement 'We made sure we got involved intimately with the community and there were similarities with Auckland. Vegas is not a hockey town. At first, we got a lot of feedback saying we were crazy, you can't skate on the sand, you can't do this and that. Well, if I'm told I can't do something, then I get really serious about accomplishing it. 'Auckland is a vibrant, multi-cultural city and has more in terms of families. We knew ticket prices had to be fairly accessible and drive traffic to the games, get our players involved with local teams and develop an academy-like structure.' At their 27,000-seater Go Media stadium, the club have developed a terrace culture. A section of fans have nicknamed themselves The Port, after the city's port area, growing into a noisy mix of locals and British ex-pats, of whom many bring their children to try and emulate the atmosphere of matches back home. There are also supporters from the city's Latino and Indian communities. Matchdays are family-oriented with an emphasis on keeping supporters at the ground before and after games, based on Foley's experience with U.S. sport. At one end of the stadium, Auckland have installed a huge inflatable slide which goes down a grassy hill — a big hit with young fans — and next to it is an inland beach area, which is another popular feature with the A-League season running through the Southern Hemisphere summer. 'We have the hardcore fans who sing for 90 minutes, then the family dynamic,' says Becker. 'It's really captured the imagination of Auckland.' Becker acknowledges that the speed of starting the club in the space of a year was, at times, daunting. 'I arrived back in Auckland in January 2024 and we played our first game 10 months later,' he recalls. 'At that point, all we had was a football director, our head coach and a commercial director, so there were four of us crowded around two desks at an office in one of Bill's other businesses. It was kind of mad how it all came together so well.' Advertisement Foley was in constant contact offering advice and steadying any nerves. As a graduate of U.S. military academy West Point, who had a successful career in his country's air force, he values his clubs' staff as he once did the men who served under him. 'He gave us solid direction,' adds Becker. 'One of the main things he said was: 'You'll go a lot further if you get good people'. So when we hired people across the club, and even players, it wasn't just, 'How good are they?' It was also: 'Are they a good human being?' 'There were nervy times when you're like: 'F***, is this going to work?' Whether it's walking out of boardrooms where they just haven't got it, or missing out on players because they didn't believe in what we wanted to do. It was a real start-up experience — and there are always moments when you question yourself.' It has helped that Auckland have won so many home games. 'We didn't forget the football side,' says Foley. 'We made sure we had a very competitive team.' Former Northern Ireland international Terry McFlynn, who had a successful playing career in Australia with Sydney FC and was running Perth Glory's academy, was hired as their director of football. In turn, he recruited his former Sydney team-mate Steve Corica to become Auckland's first-team manager. The club's popularity has resulted in commercial interest, with 35 deals signed already, including two with ANZ and Anchor, the country's biggest names in banking and commercial dairy, respectively. An embedded TV crew have followed their first season for a documentary out later this year. There is a boardroom star factor too. As with Bournemouth, where Foley brought Hollywood actor Michael B Jordan on board as an investor, he has compiled a who's who of famous Kiwis: former All Black Ali Williams, AllBirds footwear billionaire Tim Brown, Zuru Toys founder Anna Mowbray, and ex-West Ham defender Winston Reid. Advertisement There is even an NBA star onboard: Houston Rockets centre Steven Adams, who is from New Zealand. And the 31-year-old is not just lending his famous name to the club; he is invested in its success on both levels. 'I was attracted by the group itself,' he says. 'And by the Kiwi sportsmen who are successful, who know how to win, and have had winning experiences. I would say I am a football fan — not necessarily knowledgeable about all the tactics and whatnot, but I appreciate any form of physical expression.' Adams has been pleased to see his homeland respond so enthusiastically. 'It's been great to see the strong support,' he says. 'There is the sports side, obviously, but there's the whole experience: seeing families and kids out there, enjoying themselves. 'My hope is to win championships and also, the grassroots piece is really important. To create pathways for kids that give them more opportunities for school and their career.' Curiously, there is an Auckland football team competing back in the U.S. at the moment — but it isn't the one Adams has bought into. Auckland City, who made headlines by losing 10-0 to Bayern Munich on Sunday, are a semi-professional side who are there by virtue of being the champions of Oceania, or winners of the OFC Champions League. Because they compete in Australia, and Football Australia is affiliated with the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), Auckland FC and Wellington Phoenix cannot take part in the OFC Champions League. So no limelight in his homeland this summer then, but Foley's focus is increasingly laser-like on the sporting part of his business. 'I'm at the stage now of basically limiting most of my public company positions,' he explains. 'I have resigned as chairman of Alight (a health and wealth management company). Then I stepped down as chairman and CEO of Cannae, which is one of the investors in Black Knight Football Club. 'Now I'm the vice chairman and just responsible for football operations. That's all I want to do.' But after such a remarkable rise, is there a risk Auckland's second season might not live up to the first? 'Now the players have been to the semi-finals, and the group has stayed together, they know what it is like to be there and lose at that stage,' says Becker. 'They won't want that feeling again. The next step is to win it, and that's our motivation for next season. Advertisement 'The bigger risk might have been to go through and win it all. Then the motivation for next season would have been a different challenge, but now we have unfinished business.' The last word goes to Foley, with a smile but also a dash of that old military steel behind his eyes: 'If anyone sits on their laurels, they won't be playing for Auckland FC,' he says. 'Period.'

Not done yet: Titans eyeing late run at finals
Not done yet: Titans eyeing late run at finals

Yahoo

timean hour ago

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Not done yet: Titans eyeing late run at finals

Gold Coast stars AJ Brimson and Kieran Foran insist the last-placed side can still make a late run and contend for finals with one proviso. The Titans, who play Parramatta away on Sunday night, have also had good news on their two State of Origin representatives Moeaki Fotuaika and Tino Fa'asuamalaeaui. Both middle forwards travelled to Sydney on Saturday to join the team and are set to play the Eels. Fa'asuamaleaui had a sternum complaint he took into Queensland's 26-24 win over NSW in Perth, but is determined to play Parramatta so long as there is no late complication. Brimson was man of the match in last week's 28-8 win over Manly playing at fullback. It was easily the Titans' best win of the year with 11 players unavailable - two to Origin and nine injured. The Titans play North Queensland at home next week and then have the bye. Brimson said it was vital the side string back-to-back wins together, starting with Parramatta, so as to have a crack at a late run to the finals. "We are planning on (the Manly win) not being a one-off. We think this is what we have been capable of for weeks," he said. "You enjoy every win when you are on the bottom. We are trying to put together some wins to finish off the year and see where we can go with it. "After a short turnaround and as outsiders that was a good team performance. "We spoke about taking the shackles off because we enjoy playing footy and that was Titans footy … backing ourselves and playing eyes-up footy. "We are back on track with the way we want to play. We have got Parramatta and we are not getting ahead of ourselves." Veteran Foran also had his best game of the season at No.6 and said the Titans were capable of figuring in September. "I still believe we can," he said. "I've always maintained we've got a great footy side here. "The first part of the season hasn't gone to plan on the back of some disappointing performances. "We've got to reset and go again. It's a block at a time. If we do that, you never know. "We've got to go step by step." In other Titans team news, boom back-rower David Fifita, named as 18th man, won't return this week after ankle surgery but is close to making a comeback. Parramatta are also at the bottom of the ladder and will be without halves Dylan Brown (suspended) and Mitchell Moses (injured). Their places will be taken by debutant Joash Papalii and Dean Hawkins.

Jed's NRL debut too emotional for Stuart family
Jed's NRL debut too emotional for Stuart family

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Jed's NRL debut too emotional for Stuart family

Ricky Stuart was so emotional in the days leading up to his son Jed's NRL debut that he could barely speak to the Canberra winger. And so nervous was he about how his middle child would go against the Wests Tigers, the veteran Raiders mentor lost sleep thinking about Friday night's game. All the while, Jed was sleeping like a baby, having felt ready for his shot at the top grade for some time. THE DEBUTANT 🔥Raider #404 Jed Stuart scores on debut!#WeAreRaiders — Canberra Raiders (@RaidersCanberra) June 20, 2025 "He didn't talk to me much during the week," the 23-year-old revealed. "Every time he brought it up he'd get emotional. I'm just glad we got the win for him, he would have been so disappointed if we didn't. "The week was good. I found out last Tuesday because the boys had the bye and I had to know if I was playing Cup or not. "I had a week to process everything, tell the close family and get the messages from them and what-not. "I was more nervous about being nervous. Then, getting here I was just excited to get out there and play with the boys." Stuart Snr. need not have worried. Only on rare occasions in the lead-up did emotions take over for Jed. He had a sleepless night before Monday's jersey preparation, and there were tears before leaving home later in the week. But he was calm once getting to the ground, with 70 friends and family known to be attending the match and another bus coming up from Canberra. See the special moment Jed Stuart was presented with his first NRL jersey by his family in the lead up to his debut on Friday night. #WeAreRaiders — Canberra Raiders (@RaidersCanberra) June 16, 2025 "The only time I got emotional was when I went home just before coming to Campbelltown and mum gave me a hug to say goodbye," Jed said. "She said I'd been telling her that I wanted to play NRL since I was three years old, and 'now you're doing it'. "That got the tears going a bit." Jed's jersey was presented by his mother Kaylie rather than Ricky, while it was Raiders captain Joe Tapine who called the Raiders flyer to tell him he was debuting. On the field, Jed showed why Raiders players have been telling Ricky for months that the winger was ready. He caught an attacking bomb with his first touch, saved a 40-20 with a bat-back and scored a first-half try with a corner put down in the 16-12 win. It was at that point when the try was scored that Stuart Snr. admitted to the emotions of a dad briefly overtaking those of an NRL coach. "But then we had a game to win too, and I had to be the coach," Ricky said. "This week has been the hardest week I've had as a coach "From a father's point of view, I don't want him to be man of the match. I just want him to hold his own. And he did that. "I've been waking up 3am with some real bad thoughts, but he didn't do those tonight which was good." Both will now have it easier ahead of next Friday against Newcastle. "I was just happy to get one, I couldn't even dream of doing that," Jed said of his try. "I was just keen as, happy as, emotions running wild."

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