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New recruit Jake Williams rallies Napier City Rovers for final two Central League games
New recruit Jake Williams rallies Napier City Rovers for final two Central League games

NZ Herald

time15 hours ago

  • Sport
  • NZ Herald

New recruit Jake Williams rallies Napier City Rovers for final two Central League games

'The focus should always be whenever you play that you give your absolute everything,' he said. Napier City Rovers players Sam Lack, centre, and Jake Williams prepare pre-match on Bluewater Stadium's grass. Photo / Neil Reid 'And I think with these last two games, that's critical. For me, I want to make sure that from a team perspective we just give it our all. 'That's what we owe the fans, what we owe to the staff. So, we'll try and get the maximum amount of points we can in these last two games and see where we end up.' Williams said there was a 'hunger' throughout the squad to finish the 2025 Central League strongly. 'When you step on the field every Saturday or Sunday, you just want to do the best you can for the region,' he said. Midfielder Jake Williams joined Napier City Rovers in June. Photo / Neil Reid 'With one more home game, we want to put on a real performance and a real display for not only ourselves, but also for the supporters.' Williams arrived at Napier City Rovers in June after a four-year stint studying at playing football at the College of the Holy Cross, a highly regarded Massachusetts-based college. A scholarship student, he later graduated from his studies with honours: a major in English and minor in Business, Ethics, and Society. In the sporting arena, he captained Holy Cross' football team for two of the seasons he played for them. He described his time in the US as being a 'really good experience', adding he was available to talk to young Kiwi footballers considering the US scholarship route. Jake Williams (No 8) joins teammates in celebrating an Eric Kostandini Ziu (right) goal against Miramar Rangers. Photo / Neil Reid The 24-year-old juggled whether to chase a potential professional football pathway, before ultimately returning to New Zealand and linking with the Bill Robertson-coached team. 'I hadn't been back in New Zealand for quite some time and the New Zealand lifestyle is pretty hard to pass up,' Williams said. Despite spending four years studying in the US, Williams was already no stranger to Bluewater Stadium when he signed with Napier City Rovers. He had previously played there against his new club for both the Wellington Phoenix Reserves and Miramar Rangers. Williams said it was now nice to play at one of New Zealand's best football grounds as a home player. 'It was a big event, and you felt the butterflies ... you knew how much it means to the supporters,' he said of playing there as a visiting player. Veteran player and assistant coach Stephen Hoyle (left) approached Jake Williams (right) about joining Napier City Rovers. Photo / Neil Reid 'For them to welcome me like the way they have [since signing] is pretty special. 'The way that the people have looked after me, welcomed me into the club - from the players, staff and supporters – has been unbelievable. 'And I want to keep supporting and keep helping out as much as I can on the field.' Williams' footballing pedigree also includes being a former age-group New Zealand rep, being a member of the New Zealand under-17 team that won Fifa's 2016-17 Oceania Under-17 Championship. Teammates include Napier City Rovers defender Matt Jones, another player who arrived at the club after completing his studies in America and who has been a standout over the past two seasons. The midfielder said representing his country was something he looked back on with 'immense pride' and was a 'special time' for his family. Bluewater Stadium was a place Jake Williams says was tough to play at when he was at the Wellington Phoenix Reserves and Miramar Rangers. Photo / Neil Reid 'When you stand out there and listen to the anthem, singing it before a match, there's something incredibly special about that. That's something I will never take that for granted.' Williams has been impressive since making his Napier City Rovers debut. With fellow mid-season recruit Eric Kostandini Ziu, he joined a squad that has been training together since June. Williams took the pitch for his new club for the first time seven months after his last game for Holy Cross but wasted little time in displaying his power and skill on the ball. 'I've been happy with how I've developed, happy with how I've improved and started to show my quality of what I can offer for the side,' Williams said two and a half months from his debut. 'I just want to make sure that you know you're getting the full 120% of me.' Jake Williams is contributing off the pitch at Napier City Rovers, helping project manage the Bluewater Stadium enhancement project. Photo / Neil Reid Williams isn't just contributing to Napier City Rovers on the pitch. Off the pitch he is helping lead Napier City Rovers' Bluewater Stadium enhancement via his job as a junior project manager with PGC Constructors. The project will lead to an improvement to facilities for players and supporters alike. From the playing side, that includes expanding and upgrading the changing rooms. While in America, Williams worked on several multimillion-dollar projects involving power plant builds. 'It's something for supporters and players to be excited about,' Williams said of the Bluewater Stadium project. 'It will give Bluewater Stadium some nice little touch-ups which will make it even more special to play at.' Inside the Rovers video series: Episode 1: Match Fit Episode 2: Teen's Dream Episode 3: New Beginnings Episode 4: For Keeps Episode 5: Kiwi Steve Episode 6: Capital Punishment Episode 7: Bouncing Back Episode 8: The Centurion Episode 9: The Running Man Episode 10: Family Pride Episode 11: On Target Episode 12: Road Trip Blues Episode 13: A-League Bound Neil Reid is a Napier-based senior reporter who covers general news, features and sport. He joined the Herald in 2014 and has 33 years of newsroom experience.

Bogancloch review – the further adventures of a Scottish hermit in Ben River's beguiling essay
Bogancloch review – the further adventures of a Scottish hermit in Ben River's beguiling essay

The Guardian

time27-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Bogancloch review – the further adventures of a Scottish hermit in Ben River's beguiling essay

Film-maker Ben Rivers, one of the doyens of Britain's small but stubborn-as-bindweed experimental film scene, catches up with Scottish recluse Jake Williams, the subject of his 2011 film Two Years at Sea and, before that, his 2006 short This Is My Land. All three films never deign to tell viewers much at all about Williams, who spends great chunks of the film doing almost nothing, like sleeping by a tree, taking a bath, or just pottering about at his home, Bogancloch in Aberdeenshire. However, there are oblique hints in plain sight if you look closely. In the bric-a-brac of Williams' digs and the closeup shots Rivers inserts of some of Williams' scratched and smudged photographs of places around the world he's once visited, one of which shows the subject as a young man with a resplendent head of red hair. These days, his scalpline has much receded and both head hair and luxurious beard have turned white as a goblin, which at least makes him of a piece with the silvery black and white 16mm film stock Rivers shoots the film on. When he cuts away to those rumpled photographs, everything suddenly goes into colour. If that stab of pigment doesn't shake you up, wait until Rivers breaks out the drone for a spectacular final shot. Not quite a documentary and not quite a work of fiction either, this is a contemplative curio that gets across that Williams himself leads a liminal life on the edge of society but not entirely separate from it. We see him meeting hikers in the wood and enjoying a visit from a choir around a campfire who sing a spectacular folk song in Scots dialect that's about an argument between life and death. He even teaches some schoolkids about the solar system with an assist from a giant umbrella, although they all clear off as fleet as foxes when the bell rings. But Jake seems like a happy soul for all his solitude, happy to sing a song to himself and have a friendly conversation with his talkative cat, with whom in one early scene he shares a roadkill feast. It looks like a pretty mellow, content sort of life from where I'm standing, and not much different than that of your average self-employed home-based worker, but with more snow and silence. Bogancloch is in UK cinemas from 30 May.

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