America's Cup 2027 to be held in Naples
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RNZ News
19 hours ago
- RNZ News
Black Ferns soak up Rugby World Cup buzz as opening game looms
Black Ferns hooker Vici-Rose Green. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/ The Black Ferns' rookies knew a Rugby World Cup would be like nothing else and their first few days in England have made that clear. The team is in York ahead of the opening game of their title defence against Spain on Monday morning (NZT). Who will win the 2025 Women's Rugby World Cup? We ran 10,000 simulations to rank the contenders Hooker Vici-Rose Green said it already felt vastly different to any other tournament. "It'll be my first World Cup so that's pretty special. World Cups are a pinnacle event. I'm just really excited to run out and whenever that is, soak up every opportunity and just do my family proud back at home," said Green, who had to leave her dog and seven cats in New Zealand. "My parents are back at home and I've got a couple siblings [looking after them]. They're not all mine. If anyone wants one they can have one. They're little rascals!" Vici-Rose Green of New Zealand. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/ Halfback Maia Joseph is another Black Ferns player competing at a World Cup for the first time. "It's the buzz around a World Cup. The World Cup ceremony was really cool to be a part of, seeing what the media and all the English public have brought to the World Cup. The amount of support around it as well." Joseph, Green and the team are now back into full training ahead of their opening match. "We were really lucky to be able to come over on Thursday last week, so we've had a good few off days and four or five days to get rid of the jet lag and I think today being the first training day, everyone was just super excited to start," Joseph said. While there are plenty of Black Ferns players attending their first World Cup there are more who have been to a previous tournament. Some have been to multiple World Cups, with Kelly Brazier attending her fourth and Portia Woodman-Wickliffe, Theresa Setefano and Stacey Waaka their third. "There's a lot of experience in our team and then there's a few newbies, like myself. So they've just gotten around us. I can't express how much gratitude I have for them. They've helped me absolutely grow in this space and I'm just really excited to see everyone's weapons unleashed," Green said. Maia Joseph playing for the Black Ferns. Photo: © Photosport Ltd 2024 Joseph believes having players with World Cup-winning experience will be key to their chances of success. "They bring experience. We have a few players who haven't just won one, but won two and three World Cups. So I think the experience they bring is huge and that's definitely for me, someone who's debuting, a confidence, which is something you can't really buy. That's really important to us." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
Chris Wood named in Premier League Team of the Year
Chris Wood of Nottingham Forest celebrates after scoring a goal. Photo: MI NEWS / AFP All Whites striker Chris Wood has been named in the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA) team of the year. Last season Wood enjoyed his best campaign to date in the English Premier League, scoring 20 league goals for Nottingham Forest. Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah was named the PFA's Player of the Year on Wednesday, with the Egyptian becoming the first player to win the award three times. Salah, who joined Liverpool in 2017, was the Premier League's top scorer last season, with his 29 goals, along with 18 assists, playing a key role in the club winning the league title, finishing 10 points ahead of runners-up Arsenal. The 33-year-old had already clinched the Premier League Player of the Season award, the Golden Boot for most goals scored and the Playmaker award for most assists, making him the first player to win all three awards in the same season. Salah first won the PFA award in 2018 after his first season at Liverpool, and again in 2022, and this year came out on top of a six-man shortlist, voted for by PFA members from the 92 Premier League and Football League teams. That shortlist included his Liverpool teammate Alexis Mac Allister, along with Newcastle United's Alexander Isak, Manchester United's Bruno Fernandes, Arsenal's Declan Rice and Chelsea's Cole Palmer. Salah signed a two-year contract extension with Liverpool in April, ending months of speculation linking him with a move to the Saudi Pro League. Aston Villa and England midfielder Morgan Rogers was voted Young Player of the Year, after the 23-year-old scored eight league goals in his 37 starts last season and netted four goals in the Champions League including a hat-trick against Celtic. Arsenal midfielder Mariona Caldentey was named Women's Player of the Year. The Spaniard scored nine league goals in her first season with the club along with eight goals in the Champions League where Arsenal beat her former club Barcelona to win the trophy. Canadian 21-year-old forward Olivia Smith, Liverpool's leading scorer last season across all competitions with nine goals, picked up the Young Player of the Year award. Smith has since joined Arsenal for a reported fee of one million pounds ($1.35 million), making her the first female player to break the seven-figure barrier. Liverpool had four players from last season, including Salah, named in the Premier League team of the year, along with new signing from Bournemouth, Milos Kerkez. Premier League Team of the Year: Matz Sels (Nottingham Forest); Virgil van Dijk (Liverpool), Milos Kerkez (Bournemouth), William Saliba (Arsenal), Gabriel Magalhaes (Arsenal); Declan Rice (Arsenal), Ryan Gravenberch (Liverpool), Alexis Mac Allister (Liverpool); Mohamed Salah (Liverpool), Alexander Isak (Newcastle United), Chris Wood (Nottingham Forest). - Reuters / RNZ

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
Trump claims he's ended six wars. Has he?
US President Donald Trump meets European leaders in the the White House on Monday. Photo: AFP / Andrew Caballero-Reynolds Analysis - President Donald Trump is not just trying to end the vicious war in Ukraine . He's claiming he's already ended almost one war for each month of his second term - spanning the Middle East; Africa; and Central, South and Southeast Asia. "I've done six wars - I've ended six wars," Trump said in his meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and European leaders on Monday. "Look, India-Pakistan, we're talking about big places, you just take a look at some of these wars. You go to Africa and take a look at them." The White House proclaimed in a statement this month that "President Trump is the President of Peace," listing claimed diplomatic agreements between Armenia and Azerbaijan; Cambodia and Thailand; Israel and Iran; Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo; Egypt and Ethiopia; and Serbia and Kosovo, as well as the Abraham Accords, a normalization pact signed in Trump's first term between Israel and some Arab states. Some of this is classic Trumpian hyperbole. And the president's team is scanning the globe looking for fires to extinguish to claim quick wins for his transparent campaign for a Nobel Peace Prize. Trump hasn't suddenly reinvented American foreign policy. Every administration works to halt wars and to advance US interests. Most don't take constant victory laps - indeed, such triumphalism can often destroy quiet diplomacy. Yet Trump has saved lives. In some cases, he's used presidential power in novel ways to stop sudden conflicts from escalating into full-scale wars. But his success raises new questions that also apply to Ukraine. Is Trump in it for the long haul or just for deals he can hype, much as he licensed products as a businessman and stamped his name on them? And will Trump's evisceration of the US Agency for International Development and downsizing of the State Department deprive him of the tools the US needs to turn breakthroughs into lasting peace agreements that solve underlying causes of wars? An excavator is used to clear the rubble in front of a building recently hit in Israeli strikes in Tehran on 26 June, 2025, following a ceasefire with Israel that ended 12 days of fighting. Photo: -AFP Trump kept insisting Monday - as he tried finesse his adoption of Russia's opposition to an immediate Ukraine ceasefire - that he was more interested in final deals. Ironically however, some of his "six wars" deals are closer to ceasefires than peace agreements that permanently end generational disputes. And in the case of Iran and Israel, Trump's claims to have made peace after their 12-day conflict are complicated by US involvement in strikes against Tehran's nuclear program. While an informal truce is in place, there's no sign a slow-boiling state of war involving all three nations since Iran's Islamic Revolution in 1979 will end. Trump is also conveniently forgetting his failed attempt to end the war between Israel and Hamas. And global outrage over reports of widespread starvation in Gaza and the president's staunch support for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could thwart his hopes for a Nobel Prize - whatever happens with Ukraine. His record is also blotted by the failure of his first-term peace efforts with North Korea. Leader Kim Jong Un now has more nuclear weapons than before Trump offered him fruitless, photo-op summits. Some of Trump's biggest successes have been behind the scenes. "I'm struck by the fact that the ones that were helpful, especially India-Pakistan, were conducted in a professional way, quietly, diplomatically … laying the ground and finding common ground between the parties," said Celeste Wallander, a former assistant secretary of defense who is now with the Center for a New American Security. The most recent triumph was a joint peace declaration signed by Armenia and Azerbaijan on their long-running conflict in the Caucasus. The agreement, inked at a lavish White House ceremony, commits the two former Soviet republics to recognizing each other's borders and to renouncing violence against the other. But complex negotiations loom on knotty constitutional and territorial issues before a full peace agreement. This deal is notable for two things - the way foreign states flatter Trump to get what they want, and an imperialistic streak in much of his peacemaking. The rivals, for instance, agreed to open a transportation corridor to which the US will have full development rights and to call it the "Trump Route for Peace and Prosperity." Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev declared, "President Trump, in six months, did a miracle." This is smart deal for the US as it counters the influence of rival powers Russia and Iran in the region. But it will need Trump's constant attention. "Wishes and verbal declarations are not enough," two former US ambassadors to Azerbaijan, Robert Cekuta and Richard Morningstar, wrote in a recent Atlantic Council commentary. They called on Trump to deploy officials from the State Department, the Commerce Department and other agencies to lock in the agreement. Another of Trump's recent triumphs came in Southeast Asia, where he threatened to shelve trade deals with both Thailand and Cambodia to halt a border war last month that killed at least 38 people. The leverage pressed home in calls to leaders of each country was effective, and it might not have occurred to another president. But Trump didn't work alone. The agreement was brokered by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet knew the drill, however. He nominated Trump for the Nobel Prize for "extraordinary statesmanship." Pakistan took a similar step, as part of a successful diplomatic offensive to win over Trump and to disadvantage its nuclear-armed rival India after the president intervened in a border clash in May. But the government of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, an erstwhile Trump buddy, dismissed Washington's claims of a pivotal role. And other states, including Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Britain, were also involved. Trump's claims to have ended a war are selective. The agreement is fragile and doesn't solve the territorial dispute that sparked the fighting - over the Himalayan region of Kashmir, which has caused three full-scale wars. Trump has proclaimed a "glorious triumph for the cause of peace" in a deal brokered between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. This contains important first steps on recognizing borders, renouncing war and disarming militia groups. However, no one expects the conflict to end soon, since the main Rwanda-backed M23 rebel group has rejected the agreement. Some analysts see the initiative, also brokered by Qatar, as a US attempt to secure mineral rights as part of an African "great game" against China. Trump's claim to have brokered peace between Egypt and Ethiopia is a stretch. He's referring to a dispute over a Nile dam in the latter nation that Egypt fears will reduce the flow in its share of the key strategic waterway. He has called for a deal over the dam, but no binding agreement has been reached. The White House claims on Serbia and Kosovo originate in Trump's first term, when the rivals agreed to economic normalization steps. But they still don't have diplomatic relations, 17 years after Kosovo declared independence from Serbia. And recent normalization efforts have involved the EU more than the Trump team. In many ways, Trump's claims to have ended six wars are typical of a presidency that claims massive wins that often add up to less than what they seem. But there are real achievements in his record, and the possibility of genuine long-term breakthroughs if Trump can maintain application and patience. That's a good lesson for his nascent Ukraine peace drive. - CNN