
First XV rugby: Lindisfarne's big chance in Central North Island semifinal
Lindisfarne had six, in forwards Manuel Vaoheilala, Charlie East and Louie Uregei, and backs Angus Scott, Noah Rogers and Reid Palmer.
Lindisfarne co-coach Laurent Simutoga says the side have reached the same stage as in 2024, and are determined to go at least one better in the next step towards winning the competition for only the second time.
St Peter's Cambridge completed an unbeaten record in the preliminaries with a 67-17 win over St John's College Hastings in Cambridge last Saturday and play Wesley College in the other semifinal.
St John's – who were down 36-5 at halftime and having been beaten also 36-5 by New Plymouth school Francis Douglas Memorial College last Wednesday – ended a second season in a row without a win in the competition.
The mid-table tightness of the Super 8 competition was highlighted on Saturday when Hastings BHS started with slim hopes of being the second finalist, yet less than an hour and a half later had slipped to fifth place.
With PNBHS having secured the top seeding and a rights to a home final with six wins and a loss, the major damage to the prospects of a Hawke's Bay school joining them came in Hamilton.
Needing a win to retain any chance, Hastings BHS were beaten 31-22 by Hamilton BHS.
The position could have been reversed had they not conceded a last-second penalty against Rotorua and been beaten 34-33 by Rotorua in Hastings on June 19.
On Saturday Hamilton led 19-3 at halftime but a strong Hastings comeback, including tries in the 64th and 68th minutes of a game of 35 minutes each way, closed the gap to 26-22 to Hamilton with just three minutes to go.
Hastings battled back, fielding the ball from the kick-off, but Hamilton capitalised on a turnover about 20 metres out and bagged the last points.
Hamilton scored five tries to three. Hastings' only points in the first came from a penalty goal kicked by first five-eighths Tana Faumuina, who converted two of the tries in the second half.
Flanker PJ Peivi scored two tries in a match for the second time in a row, and the last was scored by halfback-off-the-bench France Tevita.
Hastings and Napier BHS, who finished in sixth place, are expected to meet in another Hurricanes region match next week.
Doug Laing is a senior reporter based in Napier with Hawke's Bay Today, and has 52 years of journalism experience, 42 of them in Hawke's Bay, in news gathering, including breaking news, sports, local events, issues, and personalities.

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


NZ Herald
a day ago
- NZ Herald
Game on: Lotto seeks Powerball rule change by 2027 - will Govt play ball?
'I will be presented with the proposed changes for approval later this year.' The current odds of winning Lotto Powerball are 1 in 38m. Should Lotto add one extra Powerball number, the odds would decrease to 1 in 42.2m. Every extra ball added would lower the odds. Lotto NZ wouldn't be drawn on how many extra balls it wants to add to the draw. Lotto NZ's new Statement of Performance Expectations for 2026 says game bosses aim to make the change at the start of the 2027 financial year - delayed from their original date of January 2026. Under the heading 'Performance Drivers' it said updating Powerball would be a key focus for the next year. 'Powerball has not changed since 2017, despite population growth, player behaviour changes and the erosion of prize value in real terms,' the document read. Lotto players are expected to play for more regular top-dollar Powerball jackpots should a matrix change come into force in 2027. Photo / Ben Fraser 'We are therefore reviewing how this game is structured to ensure it will continue to drive sales, engage customers and support our strategy of responsible and stable growth. 'A 'matrix change' would increase the number of Powerballs in the draw, increasing the likelihood of higher average jackpots.' Lotto NZ's proposed Powerball change needs sign off from its Government stakeholders. Photo / Michael Bradley Lotto NZ told the Herald ticket sales are the highest they've ever been - meaning Powerball is being struck more regularly. More regular wins means fewer of the more exciting mega-jackpots - like the $50m draws that attract 'exponential' ticket sales. What will the proposed change mean? To win Lotto Powerball, players currently have to get all six first division numbers - and the Powerball. There are 10 balls in the Powerball draw, numbered one to 10. The current odds of winning Lotto Powerball are 1 in 38m. Should one extra Powerball number be added, the odds would decrease to 1 in 42.2m. Adding two balls would see the odds drop to 1 in 46m, while increasing the size of the Powerball draw to 15 balls would see the odds dwindle to 1 in 57.5m. Current soaring sales are seeing Powerball being struck more regularly, which has reduced the frequency of high-stakes mega draws. The matrix change would decrease the number of wins, increasing the frequency of $50 million draws, lotto said. 'It's important that lottery games continue to evolve so that games remain compelling to players, prize value is not eroded through inflation, and the odds of winning move in line with population growth,' Lotto NZ chief innovation and product officer Ben Coney told the Herald. 'Our enduring interest is in having a Powerball game that is appealing to our customers, generates consistent profit for distribution to the community and allows for responsible growth over time.' 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. Sign up to The Daily H, a free newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


NZ Herald
2 days ago
- NZ Herald
NPC: Tale of two captains and a Hawke's Bay Magpies dream
The Bay won four matches that season, but without a win in 1978, were relegated. They bounced back with an unbeaten record in Division 2 North Island in 1979, in which Sisam, transferred from Auckland, kicked a record five drop goals in one game, one half of it, in fact. It was the first of five times Hawke's Bay have won second division titles, which, having been handed a permanent spot in the first division in a four-team expansion with the introduction of the professional Air New Zealand Cup in 2006, was supplemented by three title wins in its second-tier championship. They've reached the division one final just once, two years ago when beaten 22-19 by Taranaki. The Hawke's Bay Rugby Union had been desperate to become a first division regular, at one stage merging with Manawatū at NPC level to form the Central Vikings, a 1997-1998 second division experiment which, despite success on the field, ended at the NZRFU board table with a decision denying promotion. Lock Tom Parsons - who started with the Magpies in 2012, and, with 95 appearances, is primed to claim the 100th in what he says is likely to be his last season - nails one issue, although it applies to all, when he describes the championship as 'a sprint'. 'That's how we look at it,' he says. There are just 10 games in the regular season, which compares with 18 in the Japan One Rugby Division 1, in which he played this season for Urayasu D-Rocks, the 16 in American Major League Rugby, in which players included Magpies goalkicking ace Lincoln McClutchie and lock Frank Lochore. There's no real form guide for Sunday, other than that the Magpies have won their last four matches against the Steelers - the last two, in Napier in 2022 and Pukekohe in 2023, were by just one point - and that the Magpies started last season with four wins in a row, finished in fifth place while the Steelers were eighth. Both sides exited in the quarter-finals. Tom Parsons of Hawke's Bay leads his team on to the field for his 100th first class match in 2022. Photo / Aaron Gillions / Now long established as captain, father-of-three Parsons was named 'co-captain' with Jacob Devery this season, although Devery indicates it's a succession plan. 'He [Parsons] is the captain, I'm in a support role,' says Devery, who has played in 35 games for the Bay. Parsons goes back to a match against Counties Manukau in 2013, the loss of the Ranfurly Shield just six days after Hawke's Bay won the 'the log' since the end of the 1966-1969 reign. There was some redemption when the Magpies beat the Steelers in 2014 and took the shield back to Napier. Devery is yet to be in a losing team against the Steelers. For both, a career inspiration was hooker and captain Ash Dixon, the last player to achieve 100 appearances for the Magpies, while Devery, who became a Magpie at age 18 in his first year out of Hastings Boys' High School, says he also had All Black Dane Coles at the Hurricanes, and the benefit of Magpies teammate Keanu Kereru Symes, with whom he's been playing rugby for more than a decade. At 34, Parsons has particular memories of one game, when playing for a teammate meant as much as playing for the team. Going back to 2020, he says: 'Ash Dixon's 100th game down in Otago. We won the Shield. That one's pretty special.' Dixon departed at the end of the following season, to go to Japan, but captaincy successor Parsons is more likely to be hanging up the boots, saying he has had the chance to go back to Japan for another season, but it's time to spend more time with the family. Devery, 26, is in confident mood, saying he's had a good season for the Hurricanes, and is ready for more with the Magpies, an experienced squad with several of the team approaching match milestones along the way. They say much of the Magpies, and their leadership roles, is about making sure there is a culture the players enjoy, and turning that into success on the field, on Sunday, for starters. 'It'll be a physical game,' Parsons says. 'Hopefully, we're going to be able to wear them down and come out on top.' It is a big weekend of representative rugby in Hawke's Bay, including NPC Heartland side Ngati Porou East Coast playing Central Hawke's Bay sub-union at Park Island, and Te Matau a Maui Hawke's Bay Maori playing Poverty Bay Maori at Maraenui Park, both on Saturday. On Sunday, Wairoa sub-union will be defending the Barry Cup against East Coast side Ruatoria at Lambton Square, Wairoa. The Schedule The Magpies 2025 draw: Sunday August 3, 4.35pm, v Counties Manukau (home); Sunday August 10, 4.35pm, v Otago (away); Saturday August 16, 7.10pm, v North Harbour (home); Friday August 22, 7.10pm, v Canterbury (home); Saturday August 30, 4.35pm, v Northland (away); Saturday September 6, 2.05pm, v Wellington (home); Saturday September 13, 2.05pm, v Bay of Plenty (away); Friday September 19, 7.10pm, v Taranaki (away); Thursday September 25, 7.10pm, v Auckland (home); Saturday October 4, 7.10pm, v Manawatū (away). Doug Laing is a senior reporter based in Napier with Hawke's Bay Today, and has 52 years of journalism experience, 42 of them in Hawke's Bay, in news gathering, including breaking news, sports, local events, issues, and personalities.


NZ Herald
2 days ago
- NZ Herald
YMP v Gisborne Boys' High game of the weekend in Poverty Bay club hockey
Gisborne Boys' High goalkeeper Francois Louw goes low to try to stop a Napier Boys' High player scoring in a penalty shootout at the Super 8 hockey tournament in Palmerston North this week. Gisborne won 4-3 after the playoff for seventh and eighth ended 2-all after regular time. Gisborne are back in action on Saturday in a Poverty Bay men's hockey game against top-of-the-table YMP. Photo / Bonnie Easterbrook It's top-of-the-table tussle in Poverty Bay men's club hockey on Saturday when leaders YMP A take on a Gisborne Boys' High First XI fresh from a rare win at their annual Super 8 tournament. The men start proceedings at 12.30pm on Saturday with Waituhi up against Lytton Paikea Sports Club