logo
Striving for global success

Striving for global success

PHOTO: SWPix/SUPPLIED
Southland cyclist Riley Faulkner will not only represent the region but the country once again on the international stage.
The James Hargest College student was named as part of the 10-strong New Zealand team who will head to the Netherlands to compete at the Junior Track World Championships in August.
Faulkner is the New Zealand sprint champion and was also part of the team sprint that won the silver medal last year in China.
The championships will take place in the renowned velodrome at the Omnisport complex in Apeldoorn from August 20 to 24.
The New Zealand women's team will be made up by Faulkner (Southland), 17; Sophie Maxwell (Canterbury), 17; Shaylah Sayers (Canterbury), 16; and Jesse Thomson (Canterbury), 16.
While the men's comprise Hunter Dalton (Auckland), 18; Joshua Grieve (Otago), 17; David Kwon (Auckland), 16; Ben Murphy (Cambridge), 17; Alex Schuler (Cambridge), 18; and Flynn Underwood (Hamilton), 18.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Canterbury stint helped shape Lions star
Canterbury stint helped shape Lions star

Otago Daily Times

time11 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Canterbury stint helped shape Lions star

Lions first-five Finn Russell honed his catch-pass skills during his brief time in Canterbury. PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES St Andrew's College director of sport John Haggart is not surprised that British and Irish Lions star Finn Russell's playmaking skills are becoming the story of the Lions tour. Once seen as too flashy and unpredictable, the Scotland No 10 is now widely recognised as the complete package. What is less widely known is where Russell's world-class passing game was sharpened: Canterbury. Back in 2013, a 20-year-old Russell spent 15 weeks playing for Lincoln University, coached by Haggart, who was also the head of Canterbury Rugby's international high performance unit at the time. Russell came to New Zealand courtesy of the John MacPhail Scholarship – a Scottish Rugby programme which sends young players overseas to learn from elite systems. 'Finn wasn't your typical, driven, high-performing academy boy coming out of a private school. He worked as a stone mason,' Haggart told Telegraph Sport. 'He loved a beer. He loved being around students. He loved enjoying himself after a game. Because of the environment he was in, he was able to flourish rather than being restricted by boundaries.' But while Russell embraced the social side of Kiwi rugby culture, his time in New Zealand was defined by the hard yards. PHOTO: LINCOLN UNIVERSITY RUGBY CLUB Haggart said the Canterbury system placed huge value on mastering the basics – passing, catching, and decision-making. 'You spend time before training and after training just working on the fundamental run-catch-pass. 'When Finn came out, he had an opportunity as a young man, in the 15 weeks that he was over here, just to spend time on his run-catch-pass. 'It is pretty simple stuff but because Russell was at a stage of learning in his life, he was able to adopt those principles really quickly and put that into practice,' Haggart said. ​By the end of his stay at Lincoln, Russell had won the club's player-of-the-year award. And, according to Haggart, there was real interest from within Canterbury Rugby to keep him longer. ​'Canterbury had spoken to me and we had spoken to Finn about the possibility of him extending his stay here and I know Canterbury were very keen to bring him in,' Haggart said. 'But he was under contract and we had a long-standing relationship with the SRU (Scottish Rugby Union) that we needed to respect. 'If he had been out here on his own, I am sure Canterbury would have hidden his passport and said 'you are not going anywhere'.'

Black Sox: Kiwis grab silver in Softball World Cup final
Black Sox: Kiwis grab silver in Softball World Cup final

NZ Herald

time14-07-2025

  • NZ Herald

Black Sox: Kiwis grab silver in Softball World Cup final

The New Zealand men's softball team found redemption at the 2025 WBSC World Cup Finals, which took place in Prince Albert, Canada. Photo / WBSC This year's final was also Aotearoa, NZ's 10th appearance in a World Championship final, finishing runners-up in four competitions (1988, 1992, 2009, and 2015). In 1976, they shared the gold medal with Canada and USA, as the play-offs couldn't be completed because of poor weather. Head coach Thomas Makea (Ngāti Kahungunu, Ngāti Porou, Ngāti Marama, Ngāti Makea ki Rarotonga), who took over in 2023, said the team set out to rebuild after a challenging few years. He said their haerenga (journey) to the final was fuelled by the team's connection and a sense of whanaungatanga. The Black Sox reached the final after an 8-3 victory over Japan in the Super Round, where they needed a five-run win to qualify on Team Quality Balance. The only side in the competition to beat NZ was Venezuela, who earlier defeated the Black Sox 7-2 in group play. The New Zealand Black Sox at the WBSC Men's Softball World Cup 2025. Photo / WBSC Game replay The Black Sox opened the gold medal match with a chilling haka, laying down a wero (challenge) to Venezuela in a rematch of the 2013 World Cup final. They threatened early, putting runners on base in the first inning but couldn't convert runs. Lead-off hitter Ben Enoka picked a walk, and Cole Evans pushed him to third with a line drive, but the side couldn't capitalise. Young Canterbury pitcher Liam Potts, 21, started strong on the mound for NZ, retiring the first three Venezuelan batters, including a strikeout to close the first. Black Sox pitcher Liam Potts pitched the side to its second win of the WBSC World Cup, holding the world's number one ranked side, Argentina, to only one run. Photo / WBSC The scoreboard remained scoreless until the bottom of the third, when Pedro Flores broke the deadlock, smashing a solo homer over centrefield to put Venezuela on the board. Despite solid contact and disciplined at-bats, the Black Sox couldn't find a breakthrough through the next two innings, with both sides allowing no runs to concede. Venezuela's starting pitcher Maiker Pimentel battled through an ankle injury, but had to leave the game in the top of the fifth after re-aggravating it. Luis Miguel Colombo Perez came on but didn't last long, leaving the mound after Rhys Evans drew a walk and advanced to second on a passed ball. Ben Enoka was then hit by a pitch, putting two on with two outs. But despite the opportunity, Jerome Raemaki struck out on a drop ball by new pitcher Eudomar Toyo, leaving the two runners stranded on base. Pita Rona took over on the mound for the Black Sox in the bottom of the fifth, replacing Potts after a solid start. He walked his first batter, putting runners on first and second with no outs. But the Black Sox defence stepped up to the plate, Rhys Evans fielded a grounder and made the force out at third, followed by a diving catch in foul territory by Te Kirika Cooper-Nicola in left field to end the inning and keep Venezuela from extending their lead. In the top of the sixth, top batters, Cole Evans and Reilly Makea both struck out swinging on drop balls from Toyo, who continued to cause problems for the Black Sox. Black Sox first-basemen and power-hitter Seth Gibson clutched two impressive home-runs against Japan to help secure their spot in the final. Photo / WBSC But Thomas Enoka broke the silence with a sharp line drive up the middle, followed by Seth Gibson who kept his hot bat alive with a stand-up double that pushed Enoka to third. With two on and two out, Venezuela made a tactical move, bringing injured starter Maiker Pimentel back on to the mound – disrupting NZ's momentum. This worked for the South-Americans, as second baseman Tane Mumu popped up for the third out retiring the inning and leaving NZ scoreless. In the bottom of the sixth with a runner on one after picking a walk, Venezuelans Jesus Kleiver Barreto Rodriguez hit a two-run shot – his third home run of the tournament – bringing the score to 3-0. Venezuela's starting pitcher Maiker Pimentel battled through an ankle injury, pitching his team to a 3-0 victory over New Zealand. Photo / WBSC In the final inning, the Black Sox were unable to close the gap. Te Wera Bishop connected with a hard line drive, but Venezuela's third baseman leapt high to make a crucial catch, robbing what could've been a double. Hohepa Monk, pinch-hitting for Rhys Evans, struck out swinging, and Ben Enoka, the veteran lead-off, went down on a final swing and a miss. Venezuela sealed a 3-0 win, denying NZ their eighth world title. In the bronze medal match, team USA had the upper hand over Japan, taking the win 10-1. – RNZ

Black Fern Grace Brooker joins Essendon AFLW after injury comeback
Black Fern Grace Brooker joins Essendon AFLW after injury comeback

NZ Herald

time14-07-2025

  • NZ Herald

Black Fern Grace Brooker joins Essendon AFLW after injury comeback

Unsure whether she would be re-contracted with the Black Ferns after her comeback, Brooker began to look for an adventure elsewhere. Even across the ditch. Canterbury centre Grace Brooker makes a break against Waikato. Photo / Photosport 'When I was a kid, whenever an AFL game came on TV my dad would tell me this was the best game of sport in the world,' she says. 'While my goal was always to make the Black Ferns, I also wanted to be the best athlete that I could be. So, to be the best athlete I figured I'd have to play the best sport, and I sent my highlights video to the recruitment officer for all of the AFLW clubs in Australia.' So after a season with Matatū, Brooker has code-hopped to Australian Rules, signing with Melbourne club Essendon. She's been training with the Bombers since May. Settling into a sport she's never played before has been daunting, she admits, but the players and management have welcomed her warmly. 'These girls are so fit – I've never been one of the least fit in a team before but it's the case here,' Brooker laughs. 'They've integrated me really slowly to take care of the person before the player, so everyone's been great. 'A lot of my rugby skills are transferrable but the handballing I'm having to work on – I'm an absolute beginner.' A sports-mad kid, Brooker began playing rugby aged five in North Canterbury – one of the only girls in the junior teams. Heading to boarding school at 13, she joined the Christchurch Girls High School team – playing for school on Wednesdays before heading back to Hurunui to play netball and rugby on weekends. Brooker, playing for Matatū against the Blues at Invercargill in 2024. At 14, she turned out for the High School Old Boys women's team. 'There weren't the same rules back then, so I was playing against Black Ferns as a Year 10 student. I told the club I was a flanker but they were like, 'Nope, get on the wing you skinny little girl'. I haven't been out of the backs since,' Brooker laughs. Former Canterbury and Black Ferns midfielder Grace Brooker has switched codes. Photo / Photosport Still a kid, she played University of Canterbury in a final where her opposite was USA sevens player Naya Tapper. 'We lost 70-0 and I'm pretty sure she was responsible for about 50 of those points, just running around me,' she says. 'I was too slow to keep up and whenever the ball came to my wing, I could hear my Dad from the sideline just telling me to hang in there.' Despite the brutal loss, Brooker's work around the field was noticed early and she made the Canterbury U18 squad at 14. At 18, she made her Farah Palmer Cup debut for Canterbury – the day after they won the competition, she was back in the classroom. 'I turned up in my Canterbury kit, went to the Dean and asked if I could go join in the Mad-Monday celebrations. He looked at me, rolled his eyes, and said, oh go on then. I was lucky to have such supportive teachers – I loved school, and they always knew I'd try my best,' she says. In her first year at university, Brooker received her first Black Ferns contract and was selected for the national sevens development team. 'I was in rugby camps all though O Week so when I turned up at uni a couple of weeks later, everyone had already found their friends. I hated being at the halls and spent a lot of time at home when I wasn't training. I'd wake up at 4.30am to train, go to classes, train again and then go home – it was a pretty low time but I did eventually make a few friends,' she says. After missing all of the 2018 tours, Brooker's luck turned to make her debut in August 2019, in the last game of the season against Australia at Eden Park – becoming Black Fern #214. 'My coach John Haggart told me, 'If you get the ball, just run!' I did, and they were the greatest 15 minutes of my life. It's true you just float over the field when you wear that black jersey, you just feel superhuman,' Brooker says. After a tumultuous 2020 with Covid disrupting any possibility of an international tour, Brooker hit the 2021 pre-season with a renewed drive. 'The coaches told me that they wanted me to become the new threshold for game fitness. So, I thrashed myself,' she says. 'I didn't have enough knowledge to train smart, so I just went out and ran myself into the ground as I thought that's what they wanted. 'I was the fittest I'd ever been but along the way, I also developed this weird mental ability to ignore pain and biological signs to stop exercising.' In a fitness test to run a lap of the field, Brooker pushed herself too hard. 'I completely blacked out – I finished it and started throwing up and couldn't breathe,' she says. 'I had pushed so hard for so long that I developed post-traumatic vocal cord dysplasia. When my heart rate would get too high, my vocal cords would shut off my airways – in short, my body would force me to stop because I had got my mind to a point where mentally I could push through everything.' The issue was solved with speech therapy, but Brooker was scared – 'I felt like I couldn't trust my brain to stop me from pushing too hard. It was weighing on my mind when I went into the next Black Ferns tour of England and France.' Brooker made her starting debut against England in the second test. Twenty minutes in, she chased down an England winger, bent to make the tackle and felt her kneecap shoot up her leg as her patella tendon ruptured. 'I couldn't slow down so just rolled off the field. There was horrific pain, and I remember looking down at the hole where my knee was supposed to be,' she says. She was taken straight to hospital and underwent surgery. It was traumatic experience – under Covid protocols, she had no one there to support her. 'The hospital was overrun and I wasn't allowed to eat or shower until after the surgery, so was still in my rugby kit with no food over 36 hours later,' she says. With no early spot available in the MIQ facilities back in New Zealand, Brooker flew to France to rejoin the tour. Back at home, Brooker began the slow, painful rehabilitation with her physio, Jen Croker. 'When I was eventually able to start lifting weight, the pain was incredible, I would cry or vomit at every training,' Brooker says. 'I was glad I had built that mental strength, but it was touch and go if I was ever going to play again. Grace Brooker: 'There are always going to be injuries.' Photo / SmartFrame 'I was just pushing so much I think Jen didn't have the heart to tell me that it was unlikely.' It wasn't just Brooker's knee that she needed to heal, but her mind. 'After my injury I became very socially anxious. My whole identity was tied to becoming a Black Fern … but when that was suddenly taken away, and I couldn't walk for two months, I didn't know who I was. 'I would have panic attacks and couldn't get out of my car to go to work. If it wasn't for support from Whitney Hansen [Matatū Head Coach], Jessie Hansen [Matatū Mental Skills Coach], Jen, and sessions with a psychologist [where] I was able to access through InStep, I don't think I would have got through that really dark space – they literally saved me by helping me to live the way that I wanted to.' After 15 months of excruciating rehab, Brooker was selected for the 2023 Matatū squad. Desperate to get back to the field, ongoing pain in her knee continued to dog her every move. 'I never had doubt that I would get back to playing but the pain was intense; after big sessions on the Thursday afternoon I would end up in tears. When I ran on for the first pre-season match against the Hurricanes Poua, I was cracking a lot of painkillers,' she admits. 'It was becoming clear I'd likely have this pain for the rest of my life. I've thrown everything at it – got opinions from specialists and even saw a holistic healer who waved some charcoal over it.' She's now on a specialised pain management programme, with a focus on strengthening her deteriorated quad muscle, 'and getting my body moving in the way that it's meant to. I was still on painkillers for the last game of the season, but we won the Aupiki competition that year – that was the best pain relief.' Despite her chronic pain, Brooker's impact was noticed and rewarded with another Black Ferns contract. Travelling to Canada for the Pacific Four competition, she got the most time in the black jersey of her career. In the meantime, former Matatū coach Blair Baxter asked her to join the New Zealand sevens development team in France, before she headed to join her sister Millie in Ireland and Scotland for a working holiday. While living in Ireland, Brooker figured she should try Gaelic football and absolutely loved it – 'although I got pulled up for too much contact at times,' Brooker laughs. Returning to New Zealand after a six-month rugby stint with the Yokohama TKM club in Japan, Brooker settled back to another Aupiki season this year – still managing her knee pain and hoping for one more shot at the Black Ferns. But by the end of the season, she knew it wasn't to be. 'I had a pretty cool back-up plan and so a few days after the Aupiki final against the Blues I headed over to Melbourne,' she says, joining Essendon. 'I was so depressed after losing that final – a lot of us had horrible post-campaign blues so it was a good distraction.' With such brutal injuries behind her, Brooker's incredible optimism, resilience and dedication to her sport continues to stand out. 'I can't do my knee again, there's a wire in there now,' she says. 'As for the vocal cords, I've got the toolkit to get myself back on track if I need to. 'There are always going to be injuries and any athlete is a bit delusional if they think it won't happen to them. I'm lucky to have amazing support around me in Australia and back home so there's no point in being scared, it's only going to hold me back. 'You always need at least one or two people in your corner – you can't get through these injuries by yourself. I think it's important people know it's possible to get through potential career-ending injuries and achieve your goals. I hope my experience can help someone feel less alone.' One of Brooker's biggest lessons has been knowing she's more than her sport. 'I'm at my best when I'm around my sport and I'm still finding my balance, but it doesn't define me. Plus, I may as well dig in while I can,' she says. With no sign of slowing, Brooker will be one to watch in the Essendon Bombers when the AFLW season kicks off on August 14. This story was originally published at and is republished with permission.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store