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NRL live: Canberra Raiders vs Paramatta Eels, Canterbury Bulldogs vs St George Illawarra Dragons, Melbourne Storm vs Manly Sea Eagles

NRL live: Canberra Raiders vs Paramatta Eels, Canterbury Bulldogs vs St George Illawarra Dragons, Melbourne Storm vs Manly Sea Eagles

The ladder-leading Canberra Raiders kick off a day of potential banana-peel games for the NRL's top three against lowly opponents.
The Raiders take on the 15th-placed Eels, with a loss leaving them vulnerable to being leapfrogged by third-placed Canterbury, taking on the Dragons; or second-placed Melbourne, closing out the day's play against rivals Manly.
Follow all the action in our live blog below, check out all the stats in the full ScoreCentre, and tune in to our live radio coverage.
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Banner night for Australian women's basketball: Opals win Asia Cup gold
Banner night for Australian women's basketball: Opals win Asia Cup gold

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Banner night for Australian women's basketball: Opals win Asia Cup gold

The Australian Opals have franked their stunning Olympic bronze with a slice of gold medal history in the first big tournament since their Paris triumph. Australia, for the first time since 2017 when it won silver on debut, has claimed the Asia Cup, emerging on top of Japan in a nailbiting final, 88-79. The elusive gold medal grants the Opals direct entry into next year's FIBA World Cup in Germany and completes the Asia Cup set, after a silver and three straight bronze medals at the tournament. Were it not for the grit and guts of fourth-quarter hero Ally Wilson, it might have all unravelled. Holding onto a handy, if not safe, eight-point lead at the beginning of the fourth quarter, the Opals were stunned by a Japanese salvo that tied the scores with seven minutes to play. Japan had led for just 46 seconds of the game but an 11-0 run threatened to rip it away from Australia. Wilson, who has become synonymous with Australia's Gangurrus program as a two-time 3X3 Asia Cup MVP and dual gold medallist, showed she is more than up to the task in the big show, exploding with 12 of the last 18 Opals' points to ensure they were never headed. And that might not even have been her biggest contribution. As the Opals were plundered by Japan's sharpshooting prodigy Kokoro Tanaka for 19 first-half points, coach Paul Goriss, searching for answers, turned to Wilson. And he made mincemeat of the teen, who did not make a field goal in the entire second half, adding just two free throws with a tick under three minutes to go in the game. It was a truly stunning effort from the 31-year-old. She missed the entire group stage with a knee complaint, only managing a very rusty 10 minutes in the semi against Korea a night earlier. Fresh off arguably her best ever WNBL season in Perth, Wilson needed no more motivation than a gold medal within her grasp to find peak fitness, her steal and bucket with 5.56 to go breaking the deadlock for good. FOWLER'S FIRST TOURNAMENT MVP BRILLIANCE Alex Fowler, in her first senior national team tournament, enhanced her reputation more than any other Opal, crowned the 2025 Asia Cup MVP . The ultra-consistent do-it-all forward rarely put a foot wrong throughout the tournament, averaging 11.8 points, 7.2 rebounds, 3.8 assists, 1.4 steals on efficient 60 per cent shooting. Fowler capped her tournament off with her finest performance in the final — an Opals team-high 15 points to go with 6 rebounds — all offensive — and 2 assists. Fowler, the former Canberra Capital now plying her trade under master mentor Shannon Seebohm in Townsville, does a little bit of everything — kind of like what Steph Talbot has done for the Opals for years at big tournaments. The 24-year-old has a massive future in the green and gold ahead of her. Dare I say it, with her length and obsessive attack on the glass, she's also a chance at WNBA honours. The Townsville product has come under the wing of celebrated Opals' veteran staple Cayla George. While George saved her best for the semi — a 20-point, 13-rebound masterclass against Korea — the tall timber made sure she got the Opals started in the first quarter, banging in back-to-back treys in the first two minutes of the game. She dished out five assists and stood tall in the last, finishing the game with five rebounds. REID ALL ABOUT IT It's not outlandish to say Steph Reid is arguably the best — and definitely the safest — pure point guard in Australia. And her efforts in China — perhaps more than any other Opal — ensured she joined Fowler in the Asia Cup All Star Five on her way to a history-making gold medal. That's as good an early birthday present as she could ever dream of ahead of her 29th, which she'll celebrate on Tuesday. Reid led the entire tournament in assists at 7.4 per game and turned it over just five times in five games, leading to a ludicrous assist-to-turnover ratio of 7.4. She added 11.2 points per game on equally incredible 54-62-100 shooting splits. The Victorian point guard produced a near flawless tournament, leading all players in assists At 168cm and not overly long, what Reid lacks in height she more than makes up for in fight and precision. Reid might be the nation's unluckiest point guard, too. This scribe once heard the great Robyn Maher lament Reid's non-selection in the Paris squad. Reid will be 31 when LA rolls around in 2028 and should be there to provide vital back-court poise and experience for young duo Jade Melbourne and Georgia Amoore.

2025 British Open, Day 4 live scores: Min Woo Lee's PGA regret as Scheffler closes in on Open title
2025 British Open, Day 4 live scores: Min Woo Lee's PGA regret as Scheffler closes in on Open title

News.com.au

time3 hours ago

  • News.com.au

2025 British Open, Day 4 live scores: Min Woo Lee's PGA regret as Scheffler closes in on Open title

Min Woo Lee admitted he could have handled euphoria of his first PGA Tour win better as his giant-slaying effort to beat Scottie Scheffler preceded the worst majors run of his career. The world No.37 was on a massive high only a week before the Masters when he won the Houston Open, but he missed the cut in three of the four majors this year, including at Royal Portrush for The Open. In each of the last three years before that, he's missed only one cut at the majors. Lee's victory to topple world No.1 Scheffler had predictions of him contending in one of the big four in 2025, but he only survived to play the weekend at Augusta National, and knows he has a lot of adjusting to do when it comes to the brutal men's professional golf schedule. 'It's great having a win, and mentally you think you're still up on that high and you don't have enough time to just sit down and think of what you did,' Lee said. 'After a week everyone's congratulating you and it was five days off and then you play the Masters. So, it's like you just have to turn it off and turn it on very quickly and I don't think I handled it as good as (I could have). Wins don't come often, so I'm just learning from that. 'It feels like you are on top of the world and then you play a hard stretch of golf. But we want to be there, we want to play as good as we can in those events and I want to put myself in those situations.' Lee was one of the eight Australians who missed the cut at golf's most historic event, including Cameron Smith and Adam Scott, with only Marc Leishman managing to play the final 36 holes in Northern Ireland. Lee, 26, will reset for the PGA Tour's play-offs before coming back to Australia in a bid to win the Australian PGA Championship for a second time and then take on Rory McIlroy in the Australian Open at Royal Melbourne. His sister, Minjee, became a three-time major winner this year when she claimed the KPMG Women's PGA Championship, fuelling Min Woo's desire for more success at majors level. 'It's good to have that (PGA Tour win) in the bag,' Lee said. 'It's just one of those things just got to reset and then hopefully next year we can do better.'

Gold Coast Titans coach Des Hasler blows up at players in the shower
Gold Coast Titans coach Des Hasler blows up at players in the shower

Courier-Mail

time3 hours ago

  • Courier-Mail

Gold Coast Titans coach Des Hasler blows up at players in the shower

Don't miss out on the headlines from NRL. Followed categories will be added to My News. Gold Coast Titans coach Des Hasler was not happy after his side fell to the Wests Tigers 21-20 on Sunday. The Tigers trailed 20-16 with five minutes left but levelled it up when Jeral Skelton crossed in the left corner. Doueihi would miss the subsequent sideline conversion but became the hero just minutes later. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. Doueihi kicked the matchwinning field goal in the dying seconds as celebrations broke out at Leichhardt Oval. Hasler was left seething after the loss and his frustration boiled over in a fiery locker room moment that was captured on camera. As Hasler entered the rooms to address his playing group, he was left infuriated by the sounds of the showers running. The 64-year-old exploded into a fit of rage as he shouted at the players in the showers, forcing them to walk out and sit with the playing group. The vision was shown on Sunday Night with Matty Johns with Bryan Fletcher making jokes at the players who were scolded. 'I think he's blowing up because they're all showering in their undies,' Bryan Fletcher quipped. Des Hasler blows up at Titans players Hasler's frustration was just as evident during his post-match press conference as he lamented several 'dumb' mistakes by his playing group. 'It's really disappointing that in the second half we fumble, we bumble, we miss tackles, we throw balls over the sideline, we get carried over the sideline and we complete 9 from 15 sets. 'I'm really disappointed in that performance. It was really dumb. 'We didn't need luck. There was the scrum penalty and three knock ons that the referee missed, but I'm not going to blame the loss entirely on the referee's performance. 'We didn't help ourselves.' The loss drops the Titans to 4-13 on the season and keeps them glued to the bottom of the ladder. Originally published as Gold Coast Titans coach Des Hasler blows up at players in the shower

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