Early Sports Chat for 11 July 2025
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RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
Hayden Wilde's doctor on his remarkable comeback
Hayden Wilde. Photo: PHOTOSPORT Hayden Wilde's comeback from a horrific accident to win a major race in London on the weekend is a result of dogged toughness, his doctor says. Three months after being hit by a truck on a training ride in Japan, the New Zealand triathlete returned to competitive action with a remarkable victory at the T100 series race on Sunday. The Olympic silver medallist couldn't hold back tears when he crossed the line, having overcome one of the darkest moments of his career. Three months prior, the 27-year-old was in a hospital bed in Japan beginning the recovery from several broken ribs, a broken scapula, and a punctured lung after being knocked off his bike by a truck. Wilde phoned his doctor Sam Mayhew back in New Zealand immediately after the accident in Tokyo. "He phones me up on the side of the road acting as though it wasn't even that bad and then you wait two hours until he's actually in hospital and you get the extent of the injuries and I was like 'jeepers how were you even talking to me' so it's pretty extraordinary what he's been able to achieve in the last three months to get back to racing. "With Hayden he's so tough it was hard to really know what's initially happened. I was firstly worried about concussion because he's just sitting there on the side of the road talking to me from Tokyo, so sort of checking those things." Wilde told his doctor his arm was "a bit sore" but that everything else seemed okay. "Then two hours later I'm getting the full report of the extent of the injuries and I was like 'oh dear'." Dr Mayhew told First Up that it didn't take him long to decide he needed to get to Tokyo. "I got a phone call Sunday afternoon and by Sunday night it was pretty clear it was pretty serious and then made the call to fly to Tokyo that next morning." Getting Wilde surgery on his shoulder in a timely manner became the biggest concern. "Can we get the surgery, when can we get it, how can we get it, and the longer we leave it the riskier it would be for his long-term outcomes. "They [the doctors in Japan] sort of really wanted to wait for about three weeks to allow the ribs and lungs to heal... that's all well and good if he wasn't trying to become an elite triathlete again but it was really concerning about leaving his shoulder in a state without being repaired for three weeks because what happens is it can really seize up... "We didn't really want that shoulder joint to have long-term issues or arthritic issues because it took too long to be put back into a good place and surgically repaired." Hayden Wilde in May. Photo: Hayden Wilde Dr Mayhew helped advocate for Wilde and sorted out the logistics of getting him cleared for an emergency medical flight to Belgium - a week later the surgery was performed. Dr Mayhew, who has worked with Wilde for a number of years, said he was professional in everything he did. "I think probably within about two hours of getting to Tokyo and seeing what the status was, he was already talking about you know X, Y, and Z in terms of rehab and what he needs to do and that means lining up physios, lining up rehab centres. "His brain was already switched on about 'what do I need to do, what are the one percents I can do everyday to be that little bit better' through the rehab and recovery. "He's got a massive team around him that helps with this but it really is led by Hayden and it's really amazing how quickly he could switch from 'okay this sucks but I'm going to get on with it and do something about it'." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
6 hours ago
- RNZ News
Sports News for 13 August 2025
Former Premier League referee David Coote has been given an 8 week ban by the England football's governing body in relation to comments he made about former Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp in a video that went viral last year. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
Nottingham Forest's Chris Wood has big ambitions for new Premier League season
Chris Wood of Nottingham Forest battles for the ball with Mohamed Al-Thani of Al Qadsiah during Forest's last pre-season friendly. Photo: MI NEWS Nottingham Forest's New Zealand striker Chris Wood wouldn't be doing badly if he had another Premier League season like his last, but days out from the new season kicking off he has his sights set even higher The 2024/25 Premier League season will probably always hold a special place in Wood's football CV. He started more games and scored more goals than ever before at the top level. His 20 goals in 36 matches was among the best in the last Premier League season and his contribution helped Forest finish seventh in the league and to be in a position to play European football this season for the first time in 29 years. Wood called last season "life-changing" not only on the football field, but he also got married and had his first child. On a personal level, the 33-year-old will not change much this season as he pursues another prolific goal-scoring tally. "It's just trying to go in with the same mindset and the same mentality of trying to improve and trying to outperform what I did last year. "I know I had a good season, but I'd like to go and do even better, strive for more and be ambitious in that sense, it's not going to be easy, no getting away from that, but we've got the team that's capable of providing chances and hopefully I can still stick them away." Wood does not see the start of the new season as a fresh start, rather an opportunity to build on his body of work. "I feel fit and as good as ever. I'm not one with blistering pace so I'm never going to lose it, so that's good coming into my my older years, where I can actually still continue to do what I did when I was 22-years-old. "It's always a build from the previous, you always want to continue to do more, continue to achieve more. In the football or sports industry you never want to drop off, you've always got something more to achieve the following season, even if you have a good season the year before, you need to go and do it again." At a club level Wood said Forest would "evolve" but they could not stray too far from what had made them successful. He said it would be a case of finding the balance between "not trying to change too much, but also improving and becoming a better side, all rounding collectively". "It's a very different season we're going to be playing 55,60 games this year depending on cup competitions it's a lot more than what we were last year. So we're going to have to have a squad that's good enough to do it all and I think we do and I'm sure with the recruits that will come in in the next three weeks they'll be the same thing. "We've got different players that have come into the team this season, and it's going to be a different way of playing sometimes in the season. We want to achieve more whether that's in the Premier League, in the Europa League, it's yet to be seen. But if we can put two and two together with both of them, it'll be fantastic if we can go on runs in both competitions." Chris Wood celebrates scoring his team's third goal during the Premier League match between Nottingham Forest FC and Brighton & Hove Albion FC in February. Photo:While Wood feels at home in Nottingham and is enjoying feeling the buzz of the fans that club is back playing European football, two other All Whites, Tyler Bindon and Marko Stamenic, are also signed with Forest but are unlikely to play club football alongside Wood this season. Bindon has been loaned to Sheffield United in the Championship and despite Stamenic playing a pre-season friendly for Forest he seems destined for a second loan spell with Greek club Olympiacos. Wood expects it will not be long until more New Zealanders join him in the Premier League. "Tyler's moved to Sheffield I think is a very, very smart one, both for him and the club. I think he's going to do extremely well there it's a big club that will be pushing for promotion. "[Libby Cacace] was fantastic on his debut for Wrexham, I watched it, and I think that's a great move for him, it's a foot inside the English door ready to take the progression into the Premier League when he gets the chance because I believe he will get the chance sooner rather than later." Not long after the Premier League season wraps next year, players will be turning their attention to the 2026 FIFA World Cup which kicks off in July. New Zealand have qualified for the world cup for the third time and will be looking to Wood to play a big role in the tournament co-hosted by United States, Canada and Mexico. Wood was on managed minutes the last time he played for New Zealand in the Canadian Shield in June after his standout season with Forest. Chris Wood came off the bench against Cote d'Ivoire in June. Photo: Andrew Lahodynskyj / The All Whites have international friendlies lined up for the September , October and November FIFA international windows. The All Whites captain will be back on New Zealand soil for the second game against Australia in Auckland on 9 September. "We don't get to play Australia often, and especially leading into a World Cup year it's exciting. It's a challenge for us and we want to beat them, we haven't been able to beat them for a while." Nottingham Forest kick-off their Premier League season on 18 August (NZT) against Brentford, who finished 10th last season.