Cummins explains Marnus promotion
Cricket: Australian captain Pat Cummins has explained the team's decision to promote Marnus Labuschagne up the order, rather than going with young gun Sam Konstas.
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Daily Telegraph
25 minutes ago
- Daily Telegraph
2025 Peter Mulholland Cup live stream: St Gregory's College v Hills Sports High
Don't miss out on the headlines from Rugby League Live Stream. Followed categories will be added to My News. When St Gregory's College coach Tom Morrison calls bullocking lock Lorima Cosgrave a Mack truck, he means it. He still has the tyre mark down his chest to prove it. Coming head-to-head with his young charge in a local seniors game, Morrison got a first hand insight of what other front rowers across the Peter Mulholland Cup have had to deal with this season. It is a raw power he wants to see again when the proud Campbelltown nursery hosts Hills Sports High on Tuesday. The clash will be exclusively live streamed FREE on KommunityTV. Lorima Cosgrave in action for the Western Suburbs Magpies in the SG Ball Cup. Picture Warren Gannon Photography 'He is a Mack truck, once he gets going he is very hard to knock off centre,' Morrison said. 'He played some games in the seniors for Campbelltown City and he scored a good try in the game against us. He made half a break and I came across thinking I could make a cover tackle on him. 'He stomped me into the turf and kept on running to the tryline. 'He is a classy player, but I keep trying to tell him he isn't a dummy-half anymore, he's a middle forward out and out.' The lock is one of several players in an undersized engine room which has continued to punch above its weight in 2025. Ryan Mackander in action for the Macarthur Tigers in the Laurie Daley Cup. Picture Warren Gannon Photography Front rower Ryan Mackander has been phenomenal for the school, while Jake Gaffney has shown he isn't afraid to hold the gloves up against bigger opposition packs. With two wins from two games, St Gregory's have already punched their ticket to the finals series, putting last year's anguish of missing play-offs by a mere two points on for-and-against. While the result of their contest against Hills Sports High doesn't matter in the grand scheme of the season, for Morrison a win is almost critical. 'We want to play well at our school and put on a show for the school,' he said. 'A lot of teams really enjoy their home field advantage, but we haven't had that in recent years. We have really struggled for results there, so we want to give them something to cheer.' It will be a final run out for Hills Sports High who are not able to qualify for the finals after losing their opening two matches of the season. Originally published as 2025 Peter Mulholland Cup live stream: St Gregory's College v Hills Sports High

The Age
29 minutes ago
- The Age
After decades of heartbreak, South Africa clinch historic victory over Australia in world Test final
London: Australia have lost their World Test Championship title to South Africa after the Proteas pulled off a nervy fourth innings chase at Lord's, to end decades of trauma in big finals. Aiden Markram (136) guided his side to within just six runs of victory with a magnificent century before he was finally caught by Travis Head off Josh Hazlewood, but the damage was already done. Just minutes after the crowd stood to applaud Markram as he left the field, keeper-batsman Kyle Verreynne hit Mitchell Starc through the covers to clinch a remarkable five-wicket victory after Pat Cummins' men made the Proteas sweat by keeping runs tight and taking the wickets of Temba Bavuma and Tristan Stubbs. Australian desperation was underlined by how Cummins burned through all his team's three DRS referrals in the space of about an hour as he tried to gamble for wickets. They also appealed for a catch at short leg off Travis Head's boot, but replays showed the ball had hit the ground first. Even Verreynne would have been sent on his way late, caught behind attempting to ramp Starc. It was ultimately a decisive triumph for the South Africans, who claimed their first win in a major global tournament final after years of near misses, most recently at last year's Twenty20 World Cup in the Caribbean. All up, their heartbreak in knockout games at the biggest tournaments – the men's 50-over world cup, the Twenty20 world cup, and the men's Champions Trophy – spanned two quarter-finals, 12 semi-finals and one final. 'Years in the waiting… [against] the biggest opposition, in Australia, they've given us so much heartache over the years, but now the exclamation mark of an ICC event,' said former Proteas skipper Shaun Pollock in commentary after the winning runs were struck. 'They'll be singing, they'll be dancing on the streets of South Africa.' But this win was their eighth Test match victory in as many games. Steve Smith could only watch the final stages from the team balcony in the members' pavilion after suffering a compound dislocation of his right little finger after trying to take a catch on the third day.

Sydney Morning Herald
29 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
After decades of heartbreak, South Africa clinch historic victory over Australia in world Test final
London: Australia have lost their World Test Championship title to South Africa after the Proteas pulled off a nervy fourth innings chase at Lord's, to end decades of trauma in big finals. Aiden Markram (136) guided his side to within just six runs of victory with a magnificent century before he was finally caught by Travis Head off Josh Hazlewood, but the damage was already done. Just minutes after the crowd stood to applaud Markram as he left the field, keeper-batsman Kyle Verreynne hit Mitchell Starc through the covers to clinch a remarkable five-wicket victory after Pat Cummins' men made the Proteas sweat by keeping runs tight and taking the wickets of Temba Bavuma and Tristan Stubbs. Australian desperation was underlined by how Cummins burned through all his team's three DRS referrals in the space of about an hour as he tried to gamble for wickets. They also appealed for a catch at short leg off Travis Head's boot, but replays showed the ball had hit the ground first. Even Verreynne would have been sent on his way late, caught behind attempting to ramp Starc. It was ultimately a decisive triumph for the South Africans, who claimed their first win in a major global tournament final after years of near misses, most recently at last year's Twenty20 World Cup in the Caribbean. All up, their heartbreak in knockout games at the biggest tournaments – the men's 50-over world cup, the Twenty20 world cup, and the men's Champions Trophy – spanned two quarter-finals, 12 semi-finals and one final. 'Years in the waiting… the biggest opposition in Australia, they've given us so much heartache over the years, but now the exclamation mark of an ICC event,' said former Proteas skipper Shaun Pollock in commentary after the winning runs were struck. 'They'll be singing, they'll be dancing on the streets of South Africa.' But this win was their eighth Test match victory in as many games. Steve Smith could only watch the final stages from the team balcony in the members' pavilion after suffering a compound dislocation of his right little finger after trying to take a catch on the third day.