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The Chiefs beat ACT Brumbies and will face the Crusaders in the Super Rugby final

The Chiefs beat ACT Brumbies and will face the Crusaders in the Super Rugby final

HAMILTON, New Zealand — The Hamilton-based Chiefs will travel to Christchurch to play the Crusaders in next weekend's Super Rugby final after beating the ACT Brumbies 37-17 on Saturday to reach the title match for the third-straight year.
Winger Emoni Narawa scored two tries for the Chiefs and Corey Toole scored a double for the Brumbies as each side scored three tries.

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Bavuma's brave team make giant leap for South African Test cricket
Bavuma's brave team make giant leap for South African Test cricket

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Bavuma's brave team make giant leap for South African Test cricket

South Africa lost their shot at winning this World Test Championship in 2022, when their board announced the team were going to play 28 games in the next four years. They lost it for a second time during the spring of last year, when they packed their reserve team off to play a series against New Zealand because their centrally contracted players had to stay back and play in a franchise tournament. They lost it a third time when the team were bowled out for 138 on Thursday morning and they lost it a fourth when they let Australia's tail put on 134 runs for the last four wickets, leaving them needing 282 to win. Finally, after they had just about run out of ways to lose, they won. Advertisement Related: Markram steers South Africa to historic World Test Championship final triumph The last runs came hard and the winning ones seemed to be the most difficult of all. It was chaos on the outside of the old brick walls that surround Lord's on Saturday morning. It seemed every South African in the city seemed to be piling in to see their team win the World Test Championship and five minutes before the start of play the queues ran down and around Wellington Road, where the rush of latecomers forced the traffic wide to the other side of the street. But inside, the scoreboard moved like a stopped clock. 'We were trying to get it over and done with,' said Aiden Markram, 'but it just wasn't easy.' 'Even when we got it down to 10 runs,' Temba Bavuma said. 'You were on the edge, thinking anything can happen. I mean the belief was there, but it was pretty hard to accept that we were so close to winning something.' South Africa have blown too many big games to feel sure of scoring even the bare handful they needed here. Kyle Verreynne got himself in a hell of mess trying to pick off the very last they needed after the scores were tied. He ought to have been given out caught behind after he gloved the ball while he was trying to hit a ramp for four, but Australia had used up all their reviews. Besides, by that point even they seemed to have decided they ought to just let South Africa have it. After everything they have been through across the years, even Australians were not going to begrudge them this victory. Advertisement South Africa are not a great team, but they have just beaten one. Markram is not a great batter, but he played like one. Bavuma is not a great captain, but he has won a great victory, one which may turn out to be the most consequential in the team's history. After all those defeats in other International Cricket Council tournaments across the years, the consequences of losing this final were unthinkable. Now, the implications of winning could be incalculable. Bavuma drew an explicit comparison with the success of the Springboks, whose back-to-back World Cup wins under Siya Kolisi have done so much. Related: 'Chokers? This win squashes that': Bavuma hopes WTC victory can unite South Africa Bavuma is the first Black man to captain the cricket team and if previous generations fought against one strain of discrimination, he has had to confront another form of it by dealing with the lingering stigma attached to Black players in an era when so many white players have quit because they feel racial quotas are discriminatory. Advertisement 'For me to be recognised more than just as a Black African cricketer, but to be seen as somebody who has achieved something that the country wanted so much, that's something which will make me walk around with my chest out, and I just hope that it will inspire the country,' Bavuma said. And beyond. Bavuma spoke about how it was a victory for all the 'small' teams in Test cricket, which, these days, includes all nine Test playing nations apart from India, Australia and England. South African Test cricket is the canary in the mine and 18 months ago it had just about keeled over. Since then, they have found a way to win eight games in a row, a run that culminated in this famous victory. Bavuma and Markram both said they want to play more Test cricket. South Africa do not have a home series scheduled for another 15 months, when they will play Australia, again. 'What's important is to keep Test cricket as No 1 in South Africa,' said Markram. 'We understand all the dynamics in the cricket world, but for young players coming through, it has to be about wearing this baggy Test cap for South Africa.'

Auckland City FC: ‘We are the working-class team at the FIFA Club World Cup'
Auckland City FC: ‘We are the working-class team at the FIFA Club World Cup'

New York Times

time5 hours ago

  • New York Times

Auckland City FC: ‘We are the working-class team at the FIFA Club World Cup'

Angus Kilkolly lives life to a steady rhythm. Auckland City's centre-forward is a hard-working, instinctive goalscorer, but also a regional manager for a tool company. When he speaks to The Athletic, dawn is breaking in New Zealand through the window behind him. 'My day-to-day is managing people and sales,' Kilkolly says. 'My life revolves around getting to the office for 7am, going to training after work, and then coming home at 9pm. Outside of work, it's just football. Then I live that on repeat.' Advertisement As he speaks to us, Kilkolly is four days away from leaving for the Club World Cup in the United States where, today (Sunday), Auckland City — the champions of the Oceania confederation in each of the past four seasons — with their amateur players, will begin their group-phase schedule against one of the sport's superpowers: Bayern Munich, 34-time champions of Germany, including in 12 of the last 13 years, and six-time European champions. For the 29-year-old, it means the familiar rhythms are about to change. When we talk to Kilkolly, City still have two fixtures to fulfil before they leave for the States so must play those on consecutive days — the following Saturday and Sunday — and there is an important hire that must be made before he turns on his out-of-office. His boss is joking about that — he thinks — but this is familiar. All of his annual leave is used on football trips. Last season, he and Auckland City went to French Polynesia and the United Arab Emirates. This year, they have already played in the Solomon Islands, and Kilkolly will need to take unpaid leave to cover their stay in America. Some members of the squad have not made the trip, having been unable to secure the time off from work. This is the world from which City's players come — and they are not to be confused with the other team from Auckland. Auckland FC are a franchise founded in 2024 that competes in the mostly Australian A-League. As a result, they would take part in the Asian Champions League (AFC) if successful, rather than the Oceania (OFC) equivalent, from which City qualified for this Club World Cup. That is not the only difference. Auckland FC are a fully professional team owned by Bill Foley, the American billionaire who also owns Bournemouth in the Premier League and ice hockey's Vegas Golden Knights in the NHL, plus stakes in French side Lorient and Hibernian in Scotland. They play in a 25,000-capacity stadium and are sponsored by blue-chip companies including McDonald's and New Balance. Advertisement All of which is very much not Auckland City. Their home is Kiwitea Street, which holds 5,000 fans. The cost of their flights to America alone for this tournament was roughly twice their annual revenue. Of course, they are underdogs and from the other side of football's velvet rope; the inequities describe themselves. But Kilkolly and his team-mates are truly football men who have sacrificed as much as anyone to be at this first revamped and expanded Club World Cup. Locally, City are a power. They are 10-time national champions, and have won the OFC Champions League 13 times since 2006, each one qualifying them for the Club World Cup; they even managed a bronze medal in the far smaller annual version 11 years ago, beating Mexican top-flight side Cruz Azul on penalties in the third-place play-off. On the global stage, they play the role often occupied by their opponents in New Zealand and wider Oceania. 'In most games,' Kilkolly explains, 'we have about 67 per cent possession and play against low blocks, so it probably is going to be a little bit different (in the States). We face teams with 11 guys on the edge of the box quite often and it can be hard to break down. 'We're very possession-based. We've scored a lot of late winners in our history because we're patient and wear teams down. A lot of teams want the chance to beat Auckland City. It's their cup final in a sense.' During some league games since the group-stage draw was made in December, there have been comments from rival players, too, about what Bayern may inflict upon them at Cincinnati's TQL Stadium later today. So, is there any trepidation? 'Not really,' Kilkolly says. 'I look at the way my life and career have gone and and I don't think there's time for fear. If there's fear, there's doubt. If we go in there with confidence and work off naivety instead, there's probably more chance of success.' Kilkolly grew up in Hawke's Bay, around 200 miles (320km) south-east of Auckland on New Zealand's North Island, and has been playing football since he was four. His first steps were with Hawke's Bay United, where his father, Tim, was involved in the academy. 'That's where I found my love for the game,' he says. 'Getting older, I was always the first at training. I would always be at a game on the weekend, or travelling on buses to away matches. Advertisement 'You've got to dream. I wanted to see how good I could be, and I've just tried to see how much experience I can get out of the game. I guess that's why I went to Lithuania when I was 19 — to try to have a go in Europe. I didn't really enjoy it, but it was another place where football took me. Another life experience.' Kilkolly first played at a Club World Cup, in its original format, with Team Wellington in 2018. He joined Auckland City in 2021 and has been to two editions of the FIFA tournament since, but nothing to compare to what's coming over the next few weeks. But although none of his family are going to the U.S. and Auckland's three group games all kick off early-morning New Zealand time, his mother and two sisters will be watching, and have planned to get together, brew a coffee and watch the team's third fixture, against 35-time Argentine champions Boca Juniors (a 6am kick-off in Auckland). That will likely be a tender moment. Three years ago, Kilkolly was in the middle of a training session when he received a call to tell him his brother had taken his own life. Last year, his father passed away in April, having been diagnosed with cancer two months earlier. Through the shock and lasting grief, football has provided sanctuary. 'I come from a region where you have to be resilient, and you are taught early that life isn't always easy,' he adds. 'But there have been times when it has been tough and football has been the saviour. Being able to train so much and play so much has given me a happy place, and for two or three hours, it has given me somewhere where I can forget.' His attitude towards the daunting task ahead is what you might expect. Enjoy it, play hard and well, and leave without any regrets. But part of Auckland City's function at this tournament is not just to give a good account of themselves, but to show young footballers back home that it is possible for someone from New Zealand to play on the global stage. They have a broader purpose and a desire to reinforce the positive community work they are already performing. In March, the new Club World Cup trophy toured through Mount Roskill, a suburb of just under 30,000 people to the south of Kiwitea Street. Many City players, including Kilkolly, are part of coaching programmes in local schools. Not to find the next elite players, necessarily, but to provide mentorship, promote healthy lifestyles and inclusivity. Advertisement In partnership with local government and charitable foundations, the club are also raising funding for a new NZ$6million (£2.7m; $3.6m) all-weather surface and other facilities that will serve local children from a multi-cultural region facing socio-economic challenges. For Kilkolly and the other City players, this is the legacy aspect of their Club World Cup participation. 'That's 100 per cent it — we're looking at what we're leaving behind and Auckland football is going to be in a better position than when we started,' he says. 'You're not going to see the return on some of these things in the next 10 or 20 years, but it's about us as a side doing our part in history. There's going to be an all-weather pitch built at Mount Roskill and kids will be able to play football through the winter. Before you know it, there might be kids from Mount Roskill making the first team at Auckland City. 'There is a greater good here. We are the working-class team at this Club World Cup, showing that you can come from any sort of area in life.' One of Kilkolly's team-mates, Michael den Heijer, fell into football as a young boy. During a childhood that he says 'had some interesting times', the sport provided sanctuary. 'My family life was unsettled,' Den Heijer says. 'My parents separated when I was 12 and football was just this safe space where I could get away from some of the issues at home.' A ball-playing defender or midfielder, Den Heijer's journey through the sport has taken him a long way. When The Athletic speaks to him, the team have arrived in the U.S. and settled into their hotel in Philadelphia, where they were to play a tournament warm-up friendly against the B team of local MLS side Philadelphia Union. Den Heijer is 29. He was a New Zealand youth international and was in the squad for the 2013 Under-17 World Cup in Sweden. In his later teens, he successfully trialled with Kashiwa Reysol in Japan, but struggled to adapt to the culture and language. He returned home, where routes into professional football are almost non-existent. Advertisement 'It must be one of the hardest careers to pick,' he says. 'In New Zealand, it must be harder than becoming a heart surgeon.' He is joking, of course, but footballing's heartlands were certainly a long way away. Still, Den Heijer made that leap of faith again, setting off for Europe this time, on the strength of vague promises from strangers. 'It's very hard to get an opportunity, but there was one on LinkedIn where some agent told me he had a club for me in Germany, near Berlin, and that I should come and take a look,' he says. 'I remember turning up to the hostel where they wanted me to sleep and there were people on the doorstep who looked like they had been taking heroin, and the room inside was a shambles. I called the agent and said, 'Sorry, this is not for me. Can you take me to the train station?'.' He travelled by rail to the Netherlands, where he would spend three years at second-tier NEC Nijmegen. But he would never make a senior appearance for them and was released in 2019. Spells with SV DFS in the sixth division of Dutch football and FC Kleve, a German fifth-tier side, followed. Den Heijer has psychological scars from that period. The lowest points were desolate and full of perilous financial insecurity, exacerbated eventually by the Covid-19 pandemic. 'You need ultimate self-belief to succeed in Europe and that's something I lacked,' he says. 'I didn't have a sporting mentor in my life and I was over there by myself. The toughest moments were hard. Being released by NEC, but then not having anywhere to go because I hadn't featured in many games… I had no money. They were really, really tough times.' Den Heijer took jobs where he could, including selling ornamental trees for a company run by one of DFS's sponsors. 'The town makes money from growing those trees and selling them all over Europe,' he explains. 'I would be standing in nursery fields, tying trees to bamboo fences and then putting them in trucks. I thought, 'What am I doing? This is not my dream'. But when I thought about coming back to New Zealand, that would be like admitting I'd failed.' The option was soon taken away. Lockdowns prevented Den Heijer and his partner, who he met during those days in the Netherlands, from travelling to New Zealand until March 2021. But when he did get back, it was a turning point. He signed initially with Auckland United, his current team's local rivals, before joining City in 2023. In the period since, he has helped win the domestic National League once, and OFC Champions League three times, and is now participating in his third Club World Cup. Advertisement Away from football, he is a program co-ordinator for a not-for-profit organisation called the Life Changer Foundation, which provides preventative health and well-being programmes to young people. Reading between the lines, it seems a way of providing youngsters with support that, years ago when Den Heijer's career was falling apart, he could have used himself. 'It just clicked,' he says. 'Now I have a team that I look after, delegating who goes into which school. I work about 30 hours a week. Some days I'm in the schools facilitating, and then I'll head off to training after school finishes, four nights a week. 'I'm leaving home at 7.30am, then straight to training afterwards. Some days, I do coaching as part of the Mount Roskill Foundation. 'Young people are not taught some of the skills that are needed to cope with life's challenges. When I think about some of the tougher moments I had as a teenager, they came about because my mom was in such a tough place after the separation from my dad.' Den Heijer seems in a good place now. He's good-humoured and quick to laugh. He admits to being 'nervous and excited' about the tournament, but it seems more like a reward for having survived the adversity that he has encountered, rather than a final challenge. His father, his stepmother and partner will all be in the States, travelling from game to game to support City. His mother will be back home in front of the TV, bursting with pride. 'She's always been a quiet watcher,' he adds. 'She'll just send me a text before the games: 'Run like the wind'.'

After a long Super Rugby season, a final that seemed inevitable
After a long Super Rugby season, a final that seemed inevitable

Fox Sports

time6 hours ago

  • Fox Sports

After a long Super Rugby season, a final that seemed inevitable

Associated Press WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — After 77 matches in the regular season and five more in the playoffs, Super Rugby has thrown up the final that seemed obvious since the tournament began. The Hamilton-based Chiefs who finished the regular season in first place will face the second-placed Crusaders in Christchurch on Saturday. The Crusaders gained top-seeding when the Chiefs lost to the Blues in the first playoff round and will host the final for a record eighth time. Through the ups and downs of the season, the Chiefs and Crusaders clearly established themselves as the two best teams in Super Rugby with matching 11-3 records in the normal season. The Crusaders beat the Queensland Reds and Auckland-based Blues in the playoffs while the Chiefs lost to the Blues and beat the ACT Brumbies after advancing to the semifinals as the top-ranked quarterfinal loser. After their 21-14 win over the Blues on Saturday, the Crusaders will defend a 31-0 record in home playoffs in the final. The Chiefs will be playing in the final for the third-straight year after losing to the Crusaders in 2023 and the Blues in 2024. The Crusaders will attempt to win the title for the 13th time in full Super Rugby competitions — they won twice in regional tournaments during the COVID pandemic. The Chiefs will attempt to win for the third time, the first since 2013. Penney's redemption Last year, in their first season under head coach Rob Penney, the Crusaders won only four matches in one of their worst-ever seasons. The Crusaders' management decided to keep Penney on and this year he has led them to the final. When asked how he would celebrate the semifinal win over the Blues, Penney replied 'very quietly. The job is not done." 'I'm excited to be where we're at and just rapt we've got another week. The organization has got such a great history and to be able to be a small part of the team getting to this part is wonderful.' The Crusaders showed all the grit that has been part of their winning culture when they held out the Blues through more than 40 phases close to their goal-line in the dying minutes of Friday's match. Backrower Christian Lio-Willie finally won the turnover that ended the match in the 85th minute. 'The last few minutes was just heart and soul,' Penney said. Defense coach Matt Todd 'has done great work with the D which has been building all year. 'The boys dug deep and showed how much it means to them and how much they care about this place. And they wanted to get another week which is just such a joy.' Chiefs extend Brumbies' playoff woes After a tight first half, the Chiefs won with some comfort thanks to flyhalf Damian McKenzie who kicked six penalties and two conversions for 22 points. After leading 19-17, the Chiefs scored 18 unanswered points to close out the match. 'It was an outstanding performance from the lads,' McKenzie said. 'The Brumbies came out of the blocks fast as we knew they would and I liked the way we were really composed and stuck to our game.' McKenzie kept the ball in front of the Chiefs' forwards while the Brumbies suffered a major blow when Wallabies flyhalf Noah Lolesio failed a head injury assessment in the 11th minute. Once again, the Brumbies fell just short of the title game after reaching the semifinals in each of the last three years. Australian teams are now 0-21 in playoff matches in New Zealand. 'There's frustration because it's the same story as last year,' Larkham said. 'We've had this story for more than two years in a row now. 'It's not a good feeling getting this far in the competition and not getting to the final.' ___ AP rugby: recommended

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