
New coach to get eyes on squad in preseason clash
A preseason clash with Southland at the University Oval will be Brown's only meaningful opportunity to assess his squad before the rivals clash again in the NPC opener on Stag Day in Invercargill on August 2.
He has named both his new imports, Fijian Drua lock Joseva Tamani and English winger Charlie Powell, in the Otago starting XV.
Tamani is joined at lock by Taieri beanpole Eric Peita, who is not in the NPC but gets an opportunity to show what he can do if a spare lock, as expected, is needed at some stage.
Zingari-Richmond hooker A-One Lolofie will make his debut and is joined by young Highlanders prop Rohan Wingham and Ben Lopas.
With Christian Lio-Willie in camp with the All Blacks, rising Southern No8 Konrad Toleafoa starts at the back of the scrum with clubmate Harry Taylor at openside and Highlanders rookie Will Stodart at blindside.
Bob Martin plugged away for Taieri for some time without cracking the Otago squad but he will start at halfback with Nathan Hastie on deck for Harbour in the Dunedin club final and Dylan Pledger preparing for the world under-20 final with the Baby Blacks.
Outside him, the versatile Sam Gilbert will start at first five, and there is a powerful midfield in the form of Thomas Umaga-Jensen and Josh Timu.
A very new outside back combination has Powell, who played for Southland last year, joined by Dunedin winger Kyan Rangitutia and exciting Green Island fullback Sam Nemec-Vial.
The reserves bench includes mostly well-performed club players including rising flanker Max Ratcliffe, Southern spark Mackenzie Palmer and Green Island's MacEwan brothers, Heath and Christian.
An unexpected addition is Jae Broomfield, the New Zealand Universities vice-captain who has come south to try his luck after struggling to break into the Canterbury squad.
Henry Bell and Lucas Casey are on duty for Kaikorai in the club final, Finn Hurley, Jona Nareki, Oliver Haig, Jake Te Hiwi and Josh Whaanga are injured, and leading first five Cameron Millar is not being risked as he has a minor niggle.
The Stags have named former Otago utility Sam Fischli at openside, and Irish recruit Cian Hurley.
Highlanders winger Michael Manson features in a talented backline that features former Highlander Scott Gregory, back from Italy, and a fine midfield combination of Matt Whaanga and Isaac Te Tamaki.
hayden.meikle@odt.co.nz

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Otago Daily Times
5 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
Hastie heading to Force
Departing Highlanders halfback Nathan Hastie passes the ball against the Brumbies this season. Nathan Hastie's career resurgence will continue away from the Highlanders. The talented halfback is heading home — he was born in Perth — and will join the Western Force for the 2026 Super Rugby season after he has completed an NPC campaign with Otago. It could be a case of perfect timing for Hastie. While the Force have Nic White as their regular No 9, the former Wallaby has just turned 35. It might not be in the realms of fantasy to picture 24-year-old Hastie shining with a chance to play regularly in Super Rugby and knocking on the door of Australian selection at some stage. He will join Tom Donnelly, the former Otago coach and Highlanders assistant, at the Force. Hastie fans will be disappointed to see the combative halfback depart. The King's High School old boy and Harbour club representative had to be patient to really get his chance for the Highlanders thanks to a combination of niggling injuries and the presence of Aaron Smith and Folau Fakatava. That chance came this year, when he earned seven starts and was in outstanding form, playing with real spark and showing a willingness to trust his instinct and run with the ball. It came as something of a surprise when he then missed several match-day squads. Hastie was announced on a three-year deal at the Highlanders in early 2024, so either the club renegotiated his contract or they have reached a deal with the Force. The Highlanders, to be fair, appear loaded at halfback. Former All Black Fakatava recently signed a new deal, and pretty much everyone expects rising New Zealand under-20 star Dylan Pledger to graduate to a full contract. That presumably means Taranaki's Adam Lennox, who was in the wider squad this year and played several games, will be contracted as the third Highlanders halfback. Hastie, an Otago Daily Times Class Act recipient in 2019, finished with just 12 caps (one try) for the Highlanders, and he will add to his 16 caps for Otago when the NPC starts this weekend.


Otago Daily Times
8 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
Lionesses roar again to defend Euros title
Chloe Kelly fired in the decisive spot-kick as England beat Spain 3-1 in a penalty shootout to win Euro 2025 this morning. They successfully defended the title they won three years ago, after an enthralling game that ended 1-1 after extra time. It was another spectacular turnaround from Sarina Wiegman's side, who came back from two goals down to beat Sweden in a shootout in the last eight and beat Italy in the semifinals with another extra-time goal from Kelly. World and Nations League champions Spain made the breakthrough in the 25th minute as Ona Batlle crossed and the England defence was caught flat-footed, allowing Mariona Caldentey to head the ball past Hannah Hampton. With Lauren James struggling due to an ankle injury, England were struggling, but Kelly came off the bench to replace her just before the break and it proved an inspired substitution from Wiegman. Kelly helped close down England's porous left flank and provided the cross for Alessia Russo to level in the 57th minute, the forward heading home her inch-perfect assist. Spain continued to monopolise the ball but could not find another goal before the end of normal time, and the story continued through extra time as they probed and probed, but could not break the English defence as the game finished 1-1. The Spaniards got the shootout off to a great start when Cata Coll stopped Beth Mead's effort, but England keeper Hannah Hampton saved from Caldentey and from Aitana Bonmati to put England in the driving seat. Coll got Spain back into it with another one-handed stop to block Leah Williamson, but Spain substitute Salma Paralluelo hit her kick wide of the target. That set the stage for Kelly to repeat her 2022 heroics, when she scored the extra-time winner over Germany that won them the title at Wembley. KELLY PRANCING Kelly made her trademark prancing run-up before smashing the ball into the net and peeling away in ecstasy to celebrate with her teammates in front of the England fans. "I'm so proud, so proud of this team, so grateful to wear this badge, and I'm so proud to be English ... I was cool, I was composed and I knew I was going to hit the back of the net," Kelly said. The final was the first time since the inaugural edition in 1984, in which England were beaten by Sweden, that the game was decided by a penalty shootout. "Unbelievable, incredible, showing throughout this tournament we can come back when we go a goal down, and we have that grit. We've got English blood in us, so we never say die and we just keep going, and we did that today," an elated Hampton said.


NZ Herald
11 hours ago
- NZ Herald
On the Up: The Dunedin tech start-up taking on the world's sport data
About six and a half years ago, I started a data consulting business. Through that business, I started working with high performance at New Zealand Rugby. We went with them on a journey moving from spreadsheets into a data visualisation tool, and then working off a data platform. I was working with the All Blacks and then the Super franchises, which led me to working with the Highlanders. Andy [Watts, Axon Perform product lead] was the performance analyst, so we were doing a lot of work together. Andy contacted me prior to the 2023 Rugby World Cup while I was working with Japan and said, 'I love this and I'm going to get out of rugby, how do I get into this?' That was really the start of this turning into something that every team needs. Axon Perform compiles data from several providers into one collective platform to give sports teams actionable insights for their players. One example shown here features the Blues' kicking performance during this year's Super Rugby season. What goes into the reports the platform produces? There are a number of third-party providers that teams will use for game analytics; primarily, we use one called Opta. The teams subscribe to Opta, and then the data gets sent to us. Each team will have their own subscription based on what competitions and players they want to follow, whether that's the Japanese Top 14, Super Rugby or the international competitions. There's a huge amount of data, but data is useless without insight. We bring that all into one place. The actual analytical piece at the end, the reports, they've evolved over the last five years, and probably more so in the last 18 to 24 months since we've been selling as a platform. You work with a number of rugby teams already. What are the opportunities going forward? We currently work with the British & Irish Lions, the Springboks, and the Sydney Roosters in the NRL. We also recently picked up the English men's and women's 15s teams, and we've got a number of other international and club teams trialling the product. There are only so many teams in rugby that we can work with, because globally it's not that big. We're currently working towards launching in football, which is quite exciting. We've been building out core template models that will allow us to present something to the market so they can see what we're delivering very soon. Did you fund the business yourself, and do you plan on raising capital for any expansions? Very self-funded so far, and we'll be taking on investment in the near future, once we have the level of traction that we want. No numbers yet, but I've got an idea of what I'd like it to be. There are a lot of factors when you're raising money, obviously around valuation and how much percentage of the business you want to give away. There are a lot of permutations and a lot of things that we need to make sure we've achieved before we get to that point. In the technology space, we're really talking about what's the potential value of it in five to 10 years. Axon Perform's solution is used by the rugby world champion Springboks, the British & Irish Lions, and the NRL's Sydney Roosters. Photo / Photosport What has been the biggest challenge in starting the business? Money's always a challenge; it's always trying to do things on the smell of an oily rag. But when I first started my consulting business, it was very much built on relationships, and it's been very similar with the sports stuff as well. I've built everything to this point on relationships, but now it's about moving to the next stage, and that's going into the market where you don't know people and encouraging them to become customers. That's the new challenge. What would be your advice to other budding entrepreneurs wanting to start a business? I think the advice for people that are trying to get into entrepreneurship or into business is to build a community first. Get out there and challenge yourself to become known on social media. Marketplaces like LinkedIn and Instagram don't reduce you to your local environment. If you can get out there, expose yourself and let people get to know you first, then the chances of building relationships and building networks get easier. Tom Raynel is a multimedia business journalist for the Herald, covering small business, retail and tourism.