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‘Wouldn't return calls': All Blacks twist in Ponga exit saga amid Roosters rumblings

‘Wouldn't return calls': All Blacks twist in Ponga exit saga amid Roosters rumblings

News.com.aua day ago
Knights captain Kalyn Ponga doesn't want to play for the All Blacks, even if he does switch to rugby union, it has been revealed.
Reports emerged on Monday that Ponga wanted out of his Knights contract, which runs through until the end of the 2027 season.
It was reported a New Zealand rugby union agent was shopping Ponga around to international rugby clubs.
Journalist Dean Ritchie says there are growing concerns at the Knights that Ponga will soon depart the club with France and Japan the most likely destinations.
'Certainly the suggestions out of Newcastle today were that the fears are increasing that Kalyn Ponga won't be there next year,' Ritchie said on NRL 360.
'Some Newcastle officials desperately tried to find this mysterious New Zealand manager today. They found out his identity but they couldn't find him.
'He wouldn't return calls.
'Certainly there's a growing speculation that he will end up in French rugby or Japanese rugby but I am told quite categorically that he will not at all be interested in playing for the All Blacks.
'I think Kalyn Ponga wants a change. I think he wants to head overseas, and I think somewhere in France would suit Kalyn.'
Ritchie believed the Knights would only grant Ponga a release on the condition that he was going to rugby union, and not to another NRL club like the Roosters, with whom he has been linked.
'I think they would release him to go to rugby, if that's Kalyn's wish, given the service that he's given to Newcastle and the Newcastle community, but I don't think there would be any release to go to the Roosters,' Ritchie said.
When asked whether the Knights were getting value for money for Ponga, journalist Paul Crawley gave an honest response.
'No, they're not,' Crawley said.
'We all know what a great player Kalyn is when he's at his very best, but value for money.
'He hasn't aimed up for what his talent and what his pay grade suggests.'
Ritchie agreed with Crawley.
'He's clearly an elite player but $1.4 million, I don't think he's given them consistent value for money,' Ritchie said.
'He has the odd game here or there where he looks like one of the all-time great players but consistently, over a sustained period, they just don't get the value.'
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Tour de France: Abrahamsen wins stage 11, Pogacar crashes and anti-Israel activist arrested
Tour de France: Abrahamsen wins stage 11, Pogacar crashes and anti-Israel activist arrested

SBS Australia

timean hour ago

  • SBS Australia

Tour de France: Abrahamsen wins stage 11, Pogacar crashes and anti-Israel activist arrested

Norway's Jonas Abrahamsen has won stage 11 of the Tour de France in Toulouse, while defending champion Tadej Pogacar emerged largely unscathed despite crashing 4km from the line. Pogacar fell after hitting the back wheel of another rider, but his rivals Jonas Vingegaard and Remco Evenepoel sportingly waited for the Slovenian to catch up after he got back on his bike. Ireland's Ben Healy retained the leader's jersey. Pogacar sheepishly laughed off the tumble. "I'm a bit beaten up, I've been through worse days, but yeah that was unexpected," he said. Tadej Pogacar emerged largely unscathed from the crash, saying he was a "bit beaten up" but had "been through worse days". Source: AAP / Dirk Waem/Belga/Sipa USA He was also swift to thank his rivals. "Big respect," he said of the gesture. "The race was nearly over but I doubt I would have been able to catch up." Pogacar said he had feared the worst when Norwegian Tobias Johannessen rode across the front of him. "He completely cut me off. I saw my head going toward the sidewalk and I was worried I'd get hurt. Luckily I've just lost some skin," said the three-time champion. Rider who caused crash apologises, 'terrified' of online abuse Johannessen, a Uno-X teammate of stage winner Abrahamsen, apologised for causing the crash. "I am terribly sorry for what happened," he wrote on X. "I was trying to follow a move and I can see that I was too close," he added. "I made a mistake ... I hope he is as good as he can be after a crash like that." Johannessen also expressed his horror at the online abuse he was receiving as a result. "I would not wish anyone the amount of threats I get in my inbox," he said. "I am [terribly] sorry but also terrified of the hate from all the people. This feels very scary." Pogacar said he felt the fall would hurt him on Thursday's mountain stage. "We are ready as a team for Hautacam," he said of the main obstacle on stage 12. "But a day after a fall like that you are never at your best." Pogacar later received the all clear from the team doctor, who said the 26-year-old had "suffered no serious injury". "He has some general bruising and abrasions to his left forearm and hip, but is otherwise okay," UAE's medical director Adrian Rotunno confirmed. Healy was next to Pogacar when he fell and narrowly missed coming down with him. "I didn't see him fall. I'll be honest, I was looking somewhere else. That's possibly what happened to him," said the 24-year-old Healy, who took the lead at the end of stage 10 in the Massif Central. Healy retained the overall lead on his first day in the fabled yellow jersey, while Pogacar remains second at 29sec and Evenepoel third, another minute off the pace. The peloton next heads into the Pyrenees where the first real mountains will test their legs on the legendary Hautacam climb. "I'm not sure I'll still have the lead tomorrow night," said Healy. "It's a large task but I'll fight all the way. Either way this has been a real whirlwind for me." Thrilling cat-and-mouse duel Anyone who expected a quiet day was instead treated to a thrilling stage over 156.8km from Toulouse and back, which Abrahamsen unexpectedly won. Abrahamsen also won the combativity award as he was at the origin of the long-range breakaway that foiled the ambitions of the sprinters. Abrahamsen then contested a cat-and-mouse duel down the home straight with Swiss Mauro Schmid as the cunning Mathieu van der Poel crept up on them and finished third. The Norwegian fractured a collarbone two weeks before the Tour. "Thanks to the team who did everything to get me ready in time," said Abrahamsen. "They are very good people and I've been here since 2017. "I like to have pain in my legs, I've been like this since I was 15." Following Tuesday's rest day, Wednesday's run was billed as a likely sprint finish with 70 points at stake in the sprint standings in Toulouse. The stage, however, featured five small climbs along the route, ensuring it was constantly fast and nerve-wracking. When Pogacar fell late on he struggled to put his chain on after sliding across several metres of tarmac. French climber Lenny Martinez is in the king of the mountains polka dot jersey as the race heads into the Pyrenees and will be the focus for home fans all weekend with further blockbuster crowds expected. Anti-Israel protester arrested A protester wearing a T-shirt reading "Israel out of the Tour" was arrested after running onto the final straight of the 11th stage. The protester, who was also holding a Palestinian keffiyeh scarf, got past security barriers and ran towards the finish line in Toulouse as Abrahamsen won the sprint finale. The demonstrator's T-shirt read "Israel out of the Tour". Source: AAP / Jasper Jacobs/Belga/Sipa USA The man was intercepted by a race staff member and arrested, the local prefecture said. 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Ponga won't win Newcastle a title, so let him leave. This 20-year rot is the real issue
Ponga won't win Newcastle a title, so let him leave. This 20-year rot is the real issue

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Ponga won't win Newcastle a title, so let him leave. This 20-year rot is the real issue

Now, Ponga is 27, and he has always been ambitious, wanting to win a premiership or challenge himself at the top level in either code – league or union. The challenge of trying to play for the All Blacks is obviously appealing, and Ponga's Maori heritage and links to New Zealand are important to him. The cold, hard fact is he won't win a premiership at Newcastle. Several senior players – Leo Thompson, Jackson Hastings, Jayden Brailey, Adam Elliott and Jack Hetherington – are going to follow Daniel Saifiti out the door and another rebuild looms. From my point of view, if Kalyn requests a release from the last two years of his contract, I say goodbye, good luck and thank you for your service to the Knights. He is a phenomenal, freakish athlete and probably deserves to be on the world stage that rugby can offer. He's attracted other players to Newcastle and helped deliver sponsors. If he truly wants to go to rugby, it's time to let him go. The massive worry for Newcastle if Kalyn leaves at the end of this season is what does 2026 look like? Fletcher Sharpe would move to fullback, where his support play and speed are great assets, while Dylan Brown would play five-eighth or halfback on the richest deal in rugby league history. But who would be his halves partner? I genuinely don't know who fits best alongside him. And with Brailey off to Canberra, the club sees Phoenix Crossland as a small No.13 going forward. So the only other dummy-half on the books is Matt Arthur, who has played one game this year and is yet to prove himself. The Knights missed out on Tallyn Da Silva. That's two positions in your playmaking spine where you don't know what the plan is. Putting it politely, it's a complete mess. Five recruitment managers in six years Again, the club is apparently moving on from O'Brien, who seems to be on his last legs after taking Newcastle to four top-eight finishes in his five full seasons at the club. Finals football looks beyond them in 2025. I think O'Brien has done a good job under extreme pressure in a league-mad town. Those results speak to something like stability on the field, but he has been let down terribly by instability around him. Jack Gibson's old quote about winning starting in the front office rings so loud when you consider the five different recruitment managers Newcastle have had since 2018. For a while, the Knights were averaging a new man in charge every 12 months, in arguably the most important position outside head coach. In 2018, Troy Pezet was shaping the roster. Then Alex McKinnon took over in 2019. By 2021, it was Clint Zammit calling the shots. Then Adam Doyle stepped in when Zammit went to the Roosters. General manager Peter Parr ended up running recruitment when Doyle wrapped up, and now it's Peter O'Sullivan undertaking a massive overhaul. Each recruitment man arrives with a different idea of what player suits the Knights DNA, and what that Knights DNA even looks like. We see it at a club like Brisbane, with a great history of attacking players, who recruit and develop players like Reece Walsh and Ezra Mam. The Panthers have long been a grinding, tough side, where a guy like Liam Martin thrives. The Storm are strong, disciplined and very defence-orientated, especially around the ruck. Craig Bellamy works his magic with tough, no-frills forwards. Canberra are an unorthodox team. They've recruited players who can offload up front, and surrounded them with speed from players such as Kaeo Weekes, Xavier Savage, Chevy Stewart and Ethan Strange. Each of these clubs are in the top six and going to play a massive part in this year's premiership race. 75 per cent: Development is the Knights DNA Then there's Newcastle. The club has always been built on local juniors. This year, the club is running 14th in the NRL, 11th in NSW Cup and Jersey Flegg (under-21s) and 10th in SG Ball (under-19s), where the Knights have otherwise played finals in recent years. The Harold Matthews (under-17s squad) were runners up to the Warriors in May. These are the kids the club needs to identify and coach the eyeballs out of, because there just hasn't been a progression of local juniors to first grade in the past six years. This isn't O'Brien's fault. But this is where Newcastle need to rebuild – going right back to the very evening the Knights played their first game in 1988 and the club's DNA was set in stone with the 'three T's'. Inaugural coach Allan McMahon, understudy David Waite and juniors coach Keith Onslow came in with the mantra that you had to be tough, you had to be able to tackle, and you had to have plenty of tomorrows – meaning you had a future ahead of you. They came in with a 10-year plan, that by 1998, 75 per cent of the Newcastle side would be locals. In 1997, we won the club's first premiership with 11 of the 17 players in the grand final team local juniors. It was the same number in 2001. The Knights are a development club, built from within because they just can't compete with richer, more powerful rivals. It's time to blow up the junior system and ask Waite and Onslow how to do it. Because the Knights have Brown arriving on a $13 million contract next year, when the club should never have to import a half or hooker. Places like Newcastle, the coalfields where I'm from, the Upper Hunter, Central Coast and Mid North Coast are rugby-league mad regions. But the Knights haven't produced a representative-class halfback since Jarrod Mullen came into the NRL in 2005. Danny Buderus was the last representative-level dummy half from the region, more than 20 years ago. The system is broken. Whoever the next coach of the Knights is, they're facing a huge challenge, and it will probably be years before they can challenge for premierships. And if Ponga leaves, it will just amplify the pressure on Brown. Be patient Newcastle fans. I feel for you. We're in for another rebuild. Why young halves need to study Tom Dearden Onto the footy, and the Dolphins should have beaten Cronulla last week. If Jeremy Marshall-King dived on the ball that Toby Rudolf batted dead, that result would have gone the other way. Even with Isaiya Katoa pulling the strings and Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow coming back, I'm always drawn to Gorden Tallis' favourite line: forwards win the game; the backs decide by how much. The Dolphins are hurting up front, with Daniel Saifiti, Tom Gilbert, Felise Kaufusi and Tom Flegler – all representative forwards – sidelined. Given they're joined by Max Plath, Jack Bostock, Kodi Nikorima, Mark Nicholls and Kulikefu Finefeuiaki, that injury toll has me thinking Thursday night is a bridge too far for the home side. Like the Dolphins, North Queensland could easily have beaten the Bulldogs last weekend, and I think their Origin players will be freshened up this week for a fast, open game that favours attacking skills. I see Scott Drinkwater, Tom Dearden and Reece Robson getting the Cowboys home. And on Dearden, it's incredible to think how far he's come from his first few years at the Broncos. I watched him closely as a young talented half, and that wooden spoon run in 2020 seemed to break him – he just looked so devoid of any confidence, and he's admitted that. Then you look at the way Dearden, Todd Payten and the club have rebuilt him into the playmaker he is now. I think his Origin III showing will go down as one of Queensland's classic individual performances – just pure toughness and competitiveness, with Dearden's kicking game and ball playing improving out of sight.

Ponga won't win Newcastle a title, so let him leave. This 20-year rot is the real issue
Ponga won't win Newcastle a title, so let him leave. This 20-year rot is the real issue

The Age

time2 hours ago

  • The Age

Ponga won't win Newcastle a title, so let him leave. This 20-year rot is the real issue

Now, Ponga is 27, and he has always been ambitious, wanting to win a premiership or challenge himself at the top level in either code – league or union. The challenge of trying to play for the All Blacks is obviously appealing, and Ponga's Maori heritage and links to New Zealand are important to him. The cold, hard fact is he won't win a premiership at Newcastle. Several senior players – Leo Thompson, Jackson Hastings, Jayden Brailey, Adam Elliott and Jack Hetherington – are going to follow Daniel Saifiti out the door and another rebuild looms. From my point of view, if Kalyn requests a release from the last two years of his contract, I say goodbye, good luck and thank you for your service to the Knights. He is a phenomenal, freakish athlete and probably deserves to be on the world stage that rugby can offer. He's attracted other players to Newcastle and helped deliver sponsors. If he truly wants to go to rugby, it's time to let him go. The massive worry for Newcastle if Kalyn leaves at the end of this season is what does 2026 look like? Fletcher Sharpe would move to fullback, where his support play and speed are great assets, while Dylan Brown would play five-eighth or halfback on the richest deal in rugby league history. But who would be his halves partner? I genuinely don't know who fits best alongside him. And with Brailey off to Canberra, the club sees Phoenix Crossland as a small No.13 going forward. So the only other dummy-half on the books is Matt Arthur, who has played one game this year and is yet to prove himself. The Knights missed out on Tallyn Da Silva. That's two positions in your playmaking spine where you don't know what the plan is. Putting it politely, it's a complete mess. Five recruitment managers in six years Again, the club is apparently moving on from O'Brien, who seems to be on his last legs after taking Newcastle to four top-eight finishes in his five full seasons at the club. Finals football looks beyond them in 2025. I think O'Brien has done a good job under extreme pressure in a league-mad town. Those results speak to something like stability on the field, but he has been let down terribly by instability around him. Jack Gibson's old quote about winning starting in the front office rings so loud when you consider the five different recruitment managers Newcastle have had since 2018. For a while, the Knights were averaging a new man in charge every 12 months, in arguably the most important position outside head coach. In 2018, Troy Pezet was shaping the roster. Then Alex McKinnon took over in 2019. By 2021, it was Clint Zammit calling the shots. Then Adam Doyle stepped in when Zammit went to the Roosters. General manager Peter Parr ended up running recruitment when Doyle wrapped up, and now it's Peter O'Sullivan undertaking a massive overhaul. Each recruitment man arrives with a different idea of what player suits the Knights DNA, and what that Knights DNA even looks like. We see it at a club like Brisbane, with a great history of attacking players, who recruit and develop players like Reece Walsh and Ezra Mam. The Panthers have long been a grinding, tough side, where a guy like Liam Martin thrives. The Storm are strong, disciplined and very defence-orientated, especially around the ruck. Craig Bellamy works his magic with tough, no-frills forwards. Canberra are an unorthodox team. They've recruited players who can offload up front, and surrounded them with speed from players such as Kaeo Weekes, Xavier Savage, Chevy Stewart and Ethan Strange. Each of these clubs are in the top six and going to play a massive part in this year's premiership race. 75 per cent: Development is the Knights DNA Then there's Newcastle. The club has always been built on local juniors. This year, the club is running 14th in the NRL, 11th in NSW Cup and Jersey Flegg (under-21s) and 10th in SG Ball (under-19s), where the Knights have otherwise played finals in recent years. The Harold Matthews (under-17s squad) were runners up to the Warriors in May. These are the kids the club needs to identify and coach the eyeballs out of, because there just hasn't been a progression of local juniors to first grade in the past six years. This isn't O'Brien's fault. But this is where Newcastle need to rebuild – going right back to the very evening the Knights played their first game in 1988 and the club's DNA was set in stone with the 'three T's'. Inaugural coach Allan McMahon, understudy David Waite and juniors coach Keith Onslow came in with the mantra that you had to be tough, you had to be able to tackle, and you had to have plenty of tomorrows – meaning you had a future ahead of you. They came in with a 10-year plan, that by 1998, 75 per cent of the Newcastle side would be locals. In 1997, we won the club's first premiership with 11 of the 17 players in the grand final team local juniors. It was the same number in 2001. The Knights are a development club, built from within because they just can't compete with richer, more powerful rivals. It's time to blow up the junior system and ask Waite and Onslow how to do it. Because the Knights have Brown arriving on a $13 million contract next year, when the club should never have to import a half or hooker. Places like Newcastle, the coalfields where I'm from, the Upper Hunter, Central Coast and Mid North Coast are rugby-league mad regions. But the Knights haven't produced a representative-class halfback since Jarrod Mullen came into the NRL in 2005. Danny Buderus was the last representative-level dummy half from the region, more than 20 years ago. The system is broken. Whoever the next coach of the Knights is, they're facing a huge challenge, and it will probably be years before they can challenge for premierships. And if Ponga leaves, it will just amplify the pressure on Brown. Be patient Newcastle fans. I feel for you. We're in for another rebuild. Why young halves need to study Tom Dearden Onto the footy, and the Dolphins should have beaten Cronulla last week. If Jeremy Marshall-King dived on the ball that Toby Rudolf batted dead, that result would have gone the other way. Even with Isaiya Katoa pulling the strings and Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow coming back, I'm always drawn to Gorden Tallis' favourite line: forwards win the game; the backs decide by how much. The Dolphins are hurting up front, with Daniel Saifiti, Tom Gilbert, Felise Kaufusi and Tom Flegler – all representative forwards – sidelined. Given they're joined by Max Plath, Jack Bostock, Kodi Nikorima, Mark Nicholls and Kulikefu Finefeuiaki, that injury toll has me thinking Thursday night is a bridge too far for the home side. Like the Dolphins, North Queensland could easily have beaten the Bulldogs last weekend, and I think their Origin players will be freshened up this week for a fast, open game that favours attacking skills. I see Scott Drinkwater, Tom Dearden and Reece Robson getting the Cowboys home. And on Dearden, it's incredible to think how far he's come from his first few years at the Broncos. I watched him closely as a young talented half, and that wooden spoon run in 2020 seemed to break him – he just looked so devoid of any confidence, and he's admitted that. Then you look at the way Dearden, Todd Payten and the club have rebuilt him into the playmaker he is now. I think his Origin III showing will go down as one of Queensland's classic individual performances – just pure toughness and competitiveness, with Dearden's kicking game and ball playing improving out of sight.

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