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West Australian
7 days ago
- Sport
- West Australian
'Superpower' shift as Wallaroos absorb double blow
Emily Chancellor doesn't claim to have the ball-running "superpower" of the back-rower and captain she's replacing. But the new Wallaroos skipper and No.6 hopes to bring one of her own in a side she reckons has switched to selfless, big-picture thinking ahead of the World Cup. With Siokapesi Palu (foot) recovering from surgery, veteran ruck menace Chancellor will lead Australia for the first time, against Wales at Brisbane's Ballymore on Saturday. Converted rugby sevens star Charlotte Caslick (ankle) was also injured in the side's last outing in New Zealand, where she wore the No.13. Both are hopeful of returning during the World Cup in late August. With just two Tests - they meet Wales again in Sydney next weekend - before their Cup opener against Samoa on August 23, coach Jo Yapp has also made unforced changes to her front row, second row and backline. But with Georgina Friedrichs an obvious replacement in the centres and Chancellor teaming with Ashley Marsters in the back row, there is no panic. "Yes, I'm playing No.6 but that's not my superpower, that's hers," Chancellor told AAP of Palu's ball-carrying prowess. "It's going to rely on us to share that load. "But you bring G-Fred back in ... she has one of the best workrates in the team, so we have that superpower back and we've suddenly got two players who can get over the ball in myself and Ash. "There's no-one brought in that you wonder if they can step up." Chancellor, 33 and vice-captain this year, is a ready-made leader after winning Test player of the year in her rookie 2018 season, enjoying stints in the UK and Japan and then missing the 2024 season with an anterior cruciate ligament tear. "I played against many of these (Welsh) girls," Chancellor said of her Premiership Women's Rugby stint with Harlequins. "And injury teaches you a lot about yourself; it makes you reflect and you can get to that point where you ask, 'Why am I doing this?'. "And that never crossed my mind. I've come back into this squad with a lot more perspective and it increases your team-first mentality." She's noticed that mindset elsewhere too as the women's program benefits from extra investment that includes the support of designated high performance manager Jaime Fernandez. "She's pushing our case to Rugby Australia and we've now got some girls who are full-time," Chancellor said. "Who have made the decision we're earning just about enough, never enough, but enough to survive and fully commit to this game." Sevens stars Sharni Williams and Shannon Parry were the only squad members operating on a full-time capacity for the Wallaroos in their 2021 Cup campaign. "The mental strength, willingness to dig deep and, to be honest, response to selections, shows a massive growth," Chancellor said of the differences since then. "It shows it's not just about you getting picked or not, or wanting to play a certain position. "It's understanding the role in a big squad. It's not personal." In seven World Cups Australia have a sole third-placed finish and otherwise finished no higher than fifth. Canada and New Zealand, who the Wallaroos challenged for 40 minutes before losing 37-12 a fortnight ago, remain the clear women's powerhouse sides. But the Wallaroos lead Wales 7-1 in head-to-head battles and are among the next rung of challengers. "The scoreboard matters and winning's important for the emotions," Chancellor said of the significance of Saturday's result. "But we're on the edge of a new way of playing and you regress to go forward again. We've been dabbling on the tipping point of playing nice, exciting, fast rugby." WALLAROOS SQUAD TO FACE WALES: Lydia Kavoa, Katalina Amosa, Bridie O'Gorman, Kaitlan Leaney, Annabelle Codey, Emily Chancellor (capt), Ashley Marsters, Tabua Tuinakauvadra, Layne Morgan, Tia Hinds, Desiree Miller, Trilleen Pomare, Georgina Friedrichs, Waiaria Ellis, Caitlyn Halse. Bench: Tania Naden, Bree-Anna Browne, Eva Karpani, Ashley Fernandez, Piper Duck, Samantha Wood, Cecilia Smith, Lori Cramer.


Perth Now
7 days ago
- Sport
- Perth Now
'Superpower' shift as Wallaroos absorb double blow
Emily Chancellor doesn't claim to have the ball-running "superpower" of the back-rower and captain she's replacing. But the new Wallaroos skipper and No.6 hopes to bring one of her own in a side she reckons has switched to selfless, big-picture thinking ahead of the World Cup. With Siokapesi Palu (foot) recovering from surgery, veteran ruck menace Chancellor will lead Australia for the first time, against Wales at Brisbane's Ballymore on Saturday. Converted rugby sevens star Charlotte Caslick (ankle) was also injured in the side's last outing in New Zealand, where she wore the No.13. Both are hopeful of returning during the World Cup in late August. With just two Tests - they meet Wales again in Sydney next weekend - before their Cup opener against Samoa on August 23, coach Jo Yapp has also made unforced changes to her front row, second row and backline. But with Georgina Friedrichs an obvious replacement in the centres and Chancellor teaming with Ashley Marsters in the back row, there is no panic. "Yes, I'm playing No.6 but that's not my superpower, that's hers," Chancellor told AAP of Palu's ball-carrying prowess. "It's going to rely on us to share that load. "But you bring G-Fred back in ... she has one of the best workrates in the team, so we have that superpower back and we've suddenly got two players who can get over the ball in myself and Ash. "There's no-one brought in that you wonder if they can step up." Chancellor, 33 and vice-captain this year, is a ready-made leader after winning Test player of the year in her rookie 2018 season, enjoying stints in the UK and Japan and then missing the 2024 season with an anterior cruciate ligament tear. "I played against many of these (Welsh) girls," Chancellor said of her Premiership Women's Rugby stint with Harlequins. "And injury teaches you a lot about yourself; it makes you reflect and you can get to that point where you ask, 'Why am I doing this?'. "And that never crossed my mind. I've come back into this squad with a lot more perspective and it increases your team-first mentality." She's noticed that mindset elsewhere too as the women's program benefits from extra investment that includes the support of designated high performance manager Jaime Fernandez. "She's pushing our case to Rugby Australia and we've now got some girls who are full-time," Chancellor said. "Who have made the decision we're earning just about enough, never enough, but enough to survive and fully commit to this game." Sevens stars Sharni Williams and Shannon Parry were the only squad members operating on a full-time capacity for the Wallaroos in their 2021 Cup campaign. "The mental strength, willingness to dig deep and, to be honest, response to selections, shows a massive growth," Chancellor said of the differences since then. "It shows it's not just about you getting picked or not, or wanting to play a certain position. "It's understanding the role in a big squad. It's not personal." In seven World Cups Australia have a sole third-placed finish and otherwise finished no higher than fifth. Canada and New Zealand, who the Wallaroos challenged for 40 minutes before losing 37-12 a fortnight ago, remain the clear women's powerhouse sides. But the Wallaroos lead Wales 7-1 in head-to-head battles and are among the next rung of challengers. "The scoreboard matters and winning's important for the emotions," Chancellor said of the significance of Saturday's result. "But we're on the edge of a new way of playing and you regress to go forward again. We've been dabbling on the tipping point of playing nice, exciting, fast rugby." WALLAROOS SQUAD TO FACE WALES: Lydia Kavoa, Katalina Amosa, Bridie O'Gorman, Kaitlan Leaney, Annabelle Codey, Emily Chancellor (capt), Ashley Marsters, Tabua Tuinakauvadra, Layne Morgan, Tia Hinds, Desiree Miller, Trilleen Pomare, Georgina Friedrichs, Waiaria Ellis, Caitlyn Halse. Bench: Tania Naden, Bree-Anna Browne, Eva Karpani, Ashley Fernandez, Piper Duck, Samantha Wood, Cecilia Smith, Lori Cramer.


The Guardian
25-04-2025
- Sport
- The Guardian
Ilona Maher mania helps US women's rugby set attendance records
Promoters for Saturday's men's and women's rugby double-header in Los Angeles are offering 'VIP Courtside' seats, hailed as a chance to 'feel the heart-pounding action like never before'. 'With courtside seats,' the blurb goes, 'you're not just watching the game – you're in the middle of the intensity. Every … moment of pure adrenaline is right in front of you.' Rugby is played on a pitch or a field. It has courts, but they are more usually staged on tour, rituals used to foster team unity. Nonetheless, the WNBA-esque adjacent language of the LA hard-sell is appropriate for the occasion at hand, not just because of the intimate surrounds of Wallis Annenberg Stadium, on the UCLA campus, but also given the Caitlin Clark adjacent star power of its main attraction. Ilona Maher, the stratospheric star of the women's game, reality TV, swimwear shoots, social media and podcasts, is in the US squad to face Japan in the second match of the day, after the men of Rugby FC Los Angeles and the San Diego Legion play a Major League Rugby fixture. The Eagles have a nucleus of seriously experienced star players – led by Kate Zackary, who plays No8 for Ealing in England, and Alev Kelter, a center for the Loughborough Lightning – but when it comes to ticket sales, Maher works wonders. In January, she helped Bristol set a record for Premiership Women's Rugby. Back home, she has helped set such a mark for any women's game in the US, for the second game on the Eagles' spring schedule, against Canada in Kansas City next week. 'This is a landmark moment for women's rugby in the US,' said Bill Goren, chief executive of USA Rugby, announcing a sales success seen in Kansas City at least as a sign that World Cup games could land in Missouri in 2031 (men) and 2033 (women). 'The excitement … shows that the sport is reaching new heights, and we're thrilled that the Women's Eagles' journey to the Rugby World Cup [in England in August] will kick-off in front of such a massive crowd.' All things are relative, massiveness included. USA Rugby said more than 7,500 tickets had been sold for the Canada game, which will be played at CPKC Stadium, which holds 11,500. The previous best crowd for a women's game in the US is closer to the capacity at the Wallis Annenberg: 2,145. On the other hand, the Kansas City record will not last long, as the Maher factor is driving another double-header – US men v England and US women v Fiji at Audi Field in Washington DC on 19 July – rapidly towards a 20,000 full house. It's possible most of those fans have booked for a chance to see England coach Steve Borthwick in the tracksuited, taciturn flesh. It's probable they are out for a chance to see Maher. This being rugby, a sport subject to excruciating politics and logistical challenges wherever it is played, the women's Eagles schedule is not without points of contention. On 3-4 May, as the 15-a-side team faces Canada in Kansas City, their sevens counterparts will compete back west in LA in the final event on the HSBC world sevens circuit. Maher had made her name – and plenty of other players had made their mark – before she and the Eagles won Olympic bronze in Paris last summer but that sevens success supercharged the sense of possibility that now surrounds the women's game. Having the sevens and 15s Eagles playing at the same time on different sides of the country is therefore frustrating to many. Come to that, the weekends of 25-26 April and 3-4 May also see games in Women's Elite Rugby, the semi-professional 15s league now halfway through its inaugural season, making the New York Times, and home to Eagles talent. This weekend, the women's 15s game against Japan in Los Angeles also coincides with 64 women's sevens teams (and 80 men's teams) descending on Boyds, Maryland, for the Collegiate Rugby Championships, a three-day extravaganza in its 15th year, billed as the biggest college rugby tournament anywhere in the oval world. Call it glorious profusion. Wade Smith, chief operating officer of National Collegiate Rugby, which runs the CRCs, said that though it was 'difficult to quantify' the effect of Maher mania, 'there's a lot of anecdotal evidence that suggests that we're getting a really big surge in interest within women's college rugby'. Heralding CRC guest appearances from Olympic sevens stars Naya Tapper, Perry Baker and Kevon Williams, and a Hall of Fame intake including stars of past women's champions from Life in Georgia and Lindenwood in Missouri, Smith added: 'There will be future men's and women's Eagles playing on Saturday and Sunday.' Identifying such new talent, and channeling it to the national teams, remains the great challenge for all US rugby. Maher herself has discussed the need to find more stars. 'Right now it seems like just Ilona Maher, we need to get her in this and this,' she said in January, after her debut for Bristol. 'That is where I would love to bring these teammates up … I've seen the power of people connecting with the individual and then going to a sport. People connect with Caitlin Clark and go see a [WNBA] game and that brings more fans in. 'So if we could have more people connect with [leading women's players], that brings them in. That is my goal. I love being a superstar, people call me the superstar of rugby but that's not enough for the sport. We can't just have one superstar.' Martin Pengelly writes on Substack at The National Maul, on rugby in the US


BBC News
21-02-2025
- Sport
- BBC News
PWR's regular season finale: What's on the line?
The 2024-25 regular Premiership Women's season comes to a conclusion on Friday night with the placement of the top four clubs yet to be fully Premiership champions Gloucester-Hartpury will enter the post-season play-offs as regular season winners and will complete their campaign with a home match against third-placed are still in the hunt for a second-placed finish but will need help from elsewhere if they are to guarantee a home draw in their play-off semi-final, which is guaranteed to be a London derby against Quins beat Gloucester-Hartpury and Saracens lose to bottom placed Sale Sharks, the west Londoners will claim themselves a home draw - a win for Saracens on Friday, however, and they will play as hosts on Saturday 1 March."I think it's just been a build-up of excitement throughout the season, and the strides we've made have been unbelievable," Harlequins back Beth Wilcock told BBC Radio London."I've never felt more connected within a team environment in my life, so, its quite easy to bring the excitement when you know how each other work - it's all building for Friday."England international scrum-half Ella Wyrwas, who is currently in her second spell at Saracens, is looking forward to the post-season run-in."We've got an amazing fan base at StoneX, so a home semi-final would be great," Wyrwas told BBC Radio London."Home is where we come alive and where we play our best, so we're super excited for that opportunity."Meanwhile, Bristol Bears have already wrapped up fourth place for this season, and they will take the trip to Gloucester-Hartpury on 2 March before the final two weeks later at Saracens' StoneX Stadium. 2024-25 Premiership Women's final round of fixtures: Gloucester-Hartpury Women v Harlequins WomenLeicester Tigers Women v Exeter Chiefs WomenLoughborough Lightning Women v Trailfinders WomenSaracens Women v Sale Sharks Women(All matches set to kick-off at 19:45 on 21 February). Play-off schedule: Semi-finals:Saracens/Harlequins v Harlequins/Saracens - 1 March, TBC, TBDGloucester-Hartpury v Bristol Bears - 2 March, 15:00, KingsholmFinal:Semi-final winner 1 v Semi-final winner 2 - 16 March, 14:00, StoneX Stadium.