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Power pip Suns to cement finals spot

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 17 Agustus 2013 | 16.42

Captain ... Travis Boak hauled his team over the line on Saturday. Source: Morne de Klerk / Getty Images

PORT Adelaide midfielder Hamish Hartlett is in double-trouble for the finals after the Power pipped Gold Coast by 17 points on Saturday.

Hartlett knocked out Gold Coast's Sep Tape with a brutal bump and also suffered an apparent serious shoulder injury in Port's 16.17 (113) to 14.12 (96) victory.

The key Power on-baller was helped from AAMI Stadium in the final term clutching his left shoulder - the same body part which knocked Tape out in a second quarter shepherd.

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Hartlett's crunching bump will be scrutinised by the match review panel after Port moved closer to a return to the finals by banking their 12th win of the season.

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The Power remain eighth, two wins ahead of ninth-placed Carlton with two games remaining before finals.

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Port were nine points down at three quarter-time but young gun Chad Wingard booted two goals in 90 seconds to take back the lead.

The Power kicked six goals to two in the last term to over-run a tiring Suns outfit but Hartlett's season could be over - through injury, suspension, or both.

Hartlett caught an unsuspecting Tape with a shepherd which instantly knocked the Gold Coast player out in the 14th minute of the second term.

The Port star indicated there was a clash of heads but replays showed head-high contact with his shoulder.

Hartlett's game ended when he hurt the same shoulder when tackled by two Suns players. The 23-year-old has already had shoulders reconstructed twice.

The spotlight on Hartlett came after Port produced their highest-scoring opening quarter of the season, kicking 7.5 to 3.5.

The Power then seemingly went out as Gold Coast rallied, the visitors taking the lead in the third term of a match watched in part by campaigning Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.

But the Suns, who were inspired by a brilliant 28-possession, three-goal game by Harley Bennell, were headed early in the last when the 20-year-old Wingard confirmed his growing status as a player for a crisis.

Wingard booted two rapid last term goals before captain Travis Boak later capped his best-afield 35-disposal display by sealing the result with his third goal.

Port's Kane Cornes shaded Suns superstar Gary Ablett, whose 22 disposals had limited impact, while Gold Coast forward Andrew Boston potted three goals.


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Is Bolt now greatest-ever athlete?

Jamaica's Usain Bolt (L) sprints to win the men's 200 metres semi-final. Source: AFP

ANOTHER major championships. Another amazing Usain Bolt performance. Another body of evidence.

Is it now time to declare the Jamaican superstar the greatest sports person of this generation?

And while we're at it, how close is he to sporting immortality? 

Bolt's work in Moscow confirmed his greatness in a sport that is under siege. He once again shone at a world championships that was desperately needing a saviour following recent drug scandals.

There is no debate about him being the greatest track and field athlete of all-time. 

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Bolt has six Olympic gold medals and six world titles with a couple more to be added before his time is finished in Russia.

He owns the 100m and 200m world records and has only ever lost one global 100m title and that was only through his false start disqualification at the Daegu world championships two years ago.

His record is a thing of wonder. In the past four years, only four men have ever beaten him in 39 100m finals all over the world.

That quartet of Yohan Blake, Tyson Gay, Asafa Powell and Justin Gatlin have all failed drugs tests. Nobody with a clean record has done it.

Putting Bolt at the top of the tree means he goes past some legends of the sport such as Jesse Owens, Michael Johnson, Sergey Bubka and Carl Lewis.

But it's not just his deeds on the track which sets him apart.

Bolt is not only universally admired but loved. In an era where many sports stars are renowned for their diva qualities, the laid back Jamaican is respectful of his sport, his opponents, his fans and never forgets where he comes from.

"I know a lot of kids look up to me. When I came home from Jamaica even the girls were saying, 'I want to be the next Usain Bolt'," he said recently. 

"I know I inspire a lot of kids. I always encourage them to work hard. I get a lot of messages on Facebook from kids who ask me about coaching. 

"I try to give them inspiring messages. I push myself hard because I know they want to see me run fast and do good. There will be rough times. It's all about how you focus and how much you want it." 

So who are Bolt's rivals in the modern era?

In tennis Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Serena Williams have been dominate. Tiger Woods before his scandal was widely regarded as the best ever while Kelly Slater has taken surfing to another level as did Michael Phelps in the pool.

After his victory at last year's London Olympics, Bolt moved his sights to the immortals he admired - Muhammad Ali, Pele and Michael Jordan.

There are others worthy of being in that discussion such as Don Bradman, Babe Ruth, Rod Laver and Wayne Gretzky. 

"I can't say if I have the status of Ali or Pele. I've really set myself high in track and field," he said.

"Michael Jordan was the greatest in his sport and I'm the greatest in mine. Ali was the greatest in his. I'm guessing I am in that category but I'll let other people decide that. I just know I'm a legend."

Bolt, who turns 27 on Wednesday, has his eyes set on defending his titles at the 2016 Rio Olympics. If he does that, there will be no further debate. Immortality awaits.


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Has Bartoli truly retired?: Peacock

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 15 Agustus 2013 | 16.42

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MARION Bartoli has retired. We think.

One of tennis's unique personalities, Bartoli today walked off the court after a second round defeat in Cincinnati and promptly declared she was giving the game away. And this barely a month after she claimed her first Wimbledon title.

Bartoli's announcement may have come as a surprise to the casual tennis observer, but those on tour might think otherwise. The world No.7 has long been regarded as an eccentric and unpredictable force. Convention isn't her thing.

Wimbledon champion Marion Bartoli shocks tennis world by announcing her immediate retirement

And that leads us to the big issue: is this really the last time we will see her on court? Personally, I'm not convinced this is the end. Given what we know of her, I'd say there is every chance we will see the Frenchwoman on court again once the disappointment subsides and the red mist clears.

Watching Bartoli train was like watching an episode of Ripley's Believe It Or Not. Strange implements, curious routines and odd experiments were often the order of the day. While most of her counterparts were hitting up with each other, Marion and her father were trying all manner of tricks.

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Her dad dropped off the scene less than a year ago and, after burning through a few coaches in quick succession, she formed an excellent partnership with compatriot Amelie Mauresmo.

She had previously earned a reputation for being emotional and getting down on herself, but she was completely serene throughout her charge to the Wimbledon crown this year.

She would take naps before matches. She greeted me by name during our interviews (even though I hadn't spoken to her in four years). And within hours of defeating Sabine Lisicki, I watched her walk into Wimbledon village and quietly slip into CafĂ© Rouge – dead across from the masses at the Dog and Fox pub – for dinner without any sign of an entourage.

No three hat restaurant for our Marion.

It will be interesting to see how the story of Bartoli's retirement plays out over the coming weeks and months. If, indeed, this is a retirement, tennis will have lost one of its more entertaining personalities.

But if this was a statement made in the heat of the moment, we could well see her on court again. And that would be a good thing for tennis.


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Hodge, Franklin in for Hawks

Luke Hodge is back for the Hawks. Source: News Limited

HAWTHORN has named a star-studded line up for Friday night's blockbuster against Collingwood recalling Lance Franklin, Luke Hodge and Grant Birchall.

Hodge sat out last week with a thumb problem, while Birchall has not played since injuring his knee in Round 13.

Franklin is also back in the team after sitting out with hamstring soreness last week.

Hawks Matt Spangher, Sam Grimley and Jonathan Simpkin have all been omitted.

COLLINGWOOD on the other hand goes into the blockbuster, expected to attract about 90,000 people to the MCG, unchanged for the second consecutive week.

The Magpies midfield dismantled reigning premiers Sydney last week at ANZ Stadium.

RICHMOND veteran Chris Newman (ankle) will miss the Tigers match against Carlton.

The defender who holds the record for the most number of games without a final tweaked his ankle last week.

Ricky Petterd and Dylan Grimes return for the Tigers.

CARLTON has made five changes recalling Mitch Robinson and versatile big man Levi Casboult.

The Blues were forced to leave out Chris Judd (knee), Jeff Garlett (glute) and Matthew Watson (foot).

Hard-nosed midfielder Jarryd Cachia and Sam Rowe have been left out.

ESSENDON forward Joe Daniher is set to return for Saturday's twilight match against North Melbourne along with Stewart Crameri and Leroy Jetta.

Speedster Luke Dalgleish will also make his debut for the Bombers.

NORTH Melbourne recalled Nathan Grima and silky ball user Brad McKenzie for the match at Etihad Stadium.

Tagger Taylor Hine and debutant Taylor Garner have been omitted.

SYDNEY pulled a surprise move with Gary Rohan returning after almost 18 months on the sidelines with a broken leg.

Rohan has played several matches in the NEAFL providing a target up forward as well as dash in the midfield.

The Swans also added Jed Lamb and Harry Cunningham to their 25-man squad to be finalised on Friday.

REPLAY THE ROUND 21 TEAMS AND SUPERCOACH CHAT BELOW:
 


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Hughes eyeing Ashes re-call, again

Phil Hughes is hoping to reclaim the contentious No.3 spot for Australia. Picture: Matthew Horwood. Source: Matthew Horwood / News Limited

WHEN Phil Hughes was dropped from the Australian Test team after a two poor performances against New Zealand in 2011, it took him a year to regain his place.

It says something about the disastrous state of Australia's batting that, this time, it might take Hughes just a month to go back through the team's revolving door.

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Hughes is one of a handful of players hoping for a good performance against the England Lions in the two day tour match in Northampton to put themselves in contention for the team for the fifth Test at The Oval starting next Wednesday.

After scoring 81 and featuring in a record 163-run last wicket partnership with Ashton Agar at Trent Bridge, Hughes subsequently made 1,1 and 2 and was dropped for the fourth Test at Old Trafford.

Yet, with Usman Khawaja failing to seize his chance at No.3, and Shane Watson suffering a minor groin injury, the situations vacant sign is again nailed to the dressing room door.

"A couple of weeks back when I missed out on selection, it's obviously a disappointing thing," says Hughes. "But I totally and respect where the selectors were coming from.

"It's happened a couple of times. Hopefully I can get back in the side sooner rather than later, but the feedback I've had from Rod (Marsh) and obviously Boof's (coach Darren Lehmann) been very good."

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Hughes believes that, unlike when he was dropped during the 2011 New Zealand series, he is still in good form.

"It's never easy to be dropped but I feel that one (New Zealand) was tougher than this one," he says. "And I'm being really honest about that.

"I feel this one, it was only three bats (after) I probably scored one of my better Test innings, so it's something I'm not overly concerned about.

"I feel my game is in a really good place ... I feel like I'm hitting the ball well, but I did miss out and had a real poor game at Lord's and the selectors, I suppose, they're trying to find the best combination and I wasn't in that for the last two games."

Hughes has batted in every position from opening to No.6 on this tour, unsettling for a player who has made his three Test centuries at the top of the order.

Number three remains Australia's most troublesome spot. Nine players have batted at three since Shaun Marsh scored the last century at that position against Sri Lanka in 2011. Ed Cowan, for one Test, and Khawaja have filled the role in this series.

"A lot of people have had a go at it over the last couple of years, I'd love another go," says Hughes. "Anyone would. I suppose in the Australian summer if I came in and slotted into number three in the Test match form, and the one-day form, I'd enjoy that.

"But, as I said, it doesn't matter. Usman is there now and I'm sure he'll do a good job there. And that's just how it is. It's just the combinations (the selectors) want."

Hughes was running drinks on the boundary when Australia collapsed dramatically after tea on the fourth day of the fourth Test at Chester-le-street. He realises the team must learn to stop losing "clumps" of wickets if it is to take advantage of some otherwise good performances.

"You have to get through the 20 or 30 balls and stop their momentum," he says. "When the crowd gets behind them, they gets their tails up.

"There was a couple of positives for us in the last game in Ryan Harris and Chris Rogers and Davy (Warner) up the top, but it was disappointing to lose that game from the position we were in. Hopefully one day, sooner rather than later, I'll get another crack."


Watch the fifth Ashes Test LIVE and in HIGH DEFINITION from 7.30pm (EST) Wednesday on Fox Sports 2.


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Geale hungry to down Barker

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 13 Agustus 2013 | 16.41

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Daniel Geale works out during a training session for his middleweight bout against Darren Barker. Source: ELSA / News Limited

THERE are 13 restaurants inside the plush Revel resort in Atlantic City, New Jersey but Daniel Geale is still hungry.

He defends his IBF middleweight title against Englishman Darren Barker there on Sunday afternoon (Australian time) and says his huge appetite for success will make all the difference against a slick, clever and well-schooled challenger.

"I still have so many more goals," Geale said. 

"There are many more big fights out there for me and more world titles that I want to win. I've only just started the journey and Darren Barker is going to face a very hungry fighter this weekend."

The Launceston boxer (29-1, 15 KOs) and Londoner Barker (25-1, 16 KOs) have been on a collision course since 2002 when they both won gold medals at the Manchester Commonwealth Games in different weight classes. 

The two boxers held a media workout on Monday at the Mendez Boxing Gym in New York City and Geale could not contain his enthusiasm.

"I'm excited because I know it's going to be a great fight," Geale said. 

"I'm feeling good as I'm starting to get fresher every day. 

"Barker is going to come out hard.

"I want to be pushed and I know Barker is going to do that which is going to make for an exciting fight. 

"To all my fans please tune in because I'm going to bring that title home."

Barker, 31, the No.3 contender for the IBF title, stressed that he does not underestimate Geale but feels that it is his time to reign as world champ.

"I feel extremely confident going into this fight," Barker said.

"This is what I worked for all my life.  After 19 years as a boxer from a kid to a man, it's all led to this moment.  

"It's my time.  Training has been fantastic.  Mentally I've been in superb condition and now it's about executing my game plan."

Barker's only defeat was an 11th round stoppage against Argentina's WBC champ Sergio Martinez in Atlantic City two years ago.

Geale's only loss was a close decision against Anthony Mundine in Brisbane in 2009 which he reversed in emphatic fashion in his last fight in January.

Promoter Gary Shaw said Geale, 32, would not be fazed by making his American debut.

"People must not forget that Daniel went overseas and fought two different fighters and came out on top, both of them from Germany," Shaw said in reference to Geale's world title wins over Sebastian Sylvester and Felix Sturm. 

"Daniel Geale doesn't fight scared.  He's an offensive fighter and a great counter puncher."


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No hiding from abject failure

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Australia's Usman Khawaja walks from the pitch after an insipid second innings effort. Source: SCOTT HEPPELL / AP

ASKED what the feeling was like in the Australian rooms as the latest collapse became an avalanche, captain Michael Clarke said it was hard to tell.

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"There were batsmen putting pads on, batsmen taking pads off." Tasks completed with apparent success. Proving there is at least one aspect of batting the Australians have fully mastered.

But as wickets tumbled at a rate usually only associated with broken election promises, other signs of batting competency were much harder to come by.

Indeed, the latest catastrophe happened in such a blur of flying bails and screamed appeals it was hard to know what to make of it all.

Although, if you had Australia's second innings in scorecard form, the best thing to make was a ball scrunched tightly enough to throw with violent force at the nearest waste paper basket.

Abject, pitiful, humiliating. Just some of the words that fail to do justice to an afternoon when Australia managed to turn, in one session, the makings of a famous victory into yet another embarrassing capitulation.

Yes, Stuart Broad bowled brilliantly. Yes, the conditions were difficult. Yes, the target of 299 was, for Australia in England, historically immense.

But when a team plunges from 1-120 at tea, to all-out 224 in the next elongated session, even the best reasons can sound as hollow as a cheap easter egg.

Particularly when the rump of the batting order loses, in 56 startlingly inept balls, 5-13.

So, as the apparent revival at Old Trafford leads only to a 3-0 drubbing, and the Australians suffer a seventh defeat in the eight Tests, how to view the latest debacle?

Do we face the bleeding obvious? That, even allowing for the skilled and merciless nature of the opposition, Australia's batting line-up remains sadly lacking in talent, dedication, application or all of the above.

In that regard, it seems cruel to choose a scapegoat from such a large herd. But Usman Khawaja's insipid half shuffle that had him trapped LBW by Graeme Swann was symptomatic of Australia's malaise.

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Australia was 1-147 at the time, and Khawaja needed only to support David Warner. Instead, yet another young player given his chance failed to seize the moment, or even to play his role.

Or do we keep rummaging through the charred remains of a failed campaign, looking for reasons to convince ourselves that, with just a bit of time and experience, this team will have England's measure? Even by next summer.

Warner's accomplished  71, in partnership with the worthy Rogers, was the latest small mercy. In his composure, and his relative orthodoxy, Warner finally inflicted some truly painful blows on England.

Otherwise, you have to again fall back on the opportunities Australia has created – but not exploited - to find consolation.

A narrow loss in Trent Bridge, the chance of victory at Old Trafford ruined by rain and, twice, a winning position at Chester-le-Street that could, and possibly should, have been exploited.

First when they had England 3-49 in the second innings, effectively 3/17 given Australia's first innings lead. Then at 1-147, when Khawaja shuffled when he should have moved decisively.

But, as England captain Alastair Cook said: "We've learnt to not to get beaten when we're up against it...and we take it by the scruff of the neck when we have a chance."

An example. Australia had resumed at 5-222 on the third day and England rolled them for just 270. The next day, England resumed at 5-234 and bunted then bashed their way to 330.

The difference was not overwhelming, but significant. Almost, it turned out, the final margin between the two teams.
England squeezed every drop out of its innings. Australia could not maintain its grip.

You can study the numbers and believe the gap between these teams is not great. But, until Australia learns how to seize their chances, the gap between their achievements will remain immense.


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Boof threatens floundering batsmen

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Darren Lehmann has sent a stern warning to his underperforming batsmen. Source:Getty Images

DARREN Lehmann has taken aim at Australia's floundering middle order, warning that careers are on the line in the last Test at the Oval, beginning next Wednesday.

The Australia coach and selector is exasperated by another batting collapse which handed England the fourth Test at Chester-le-Street and a 3-0 series victory.

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This team is now facing the prospect of becoming the only side in history to lose four Tests on an Ashes tour.

"From our point of view the blokes have got to learn. If they don't learn we will find blokes that will," Lehmann said after Australia collapsed from 0-109 to be all out 224, losing by 74.

With another batting failure and a groin injury to Shane Watson which has him in doubt for the last Test, selection is wide open. Bowling all-rounder James Faulkner is a chance to make his debut, which would make him the 17th player used in the series.

Of the eight batsmen given an opportunity, only three have managed to average 30 or better, Michael Clarke (49), Chris Rogers (43) and David Warner (30).

"To play for Australia you've actually got to perform at a level that is acceptable for everyone in our team and also for the Australian public," Lehmann said.

"At the moment we're not doing that. Blokes have got to perform at a level that we expect ... and the public expect back home.

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"They've fought really hard and shown glimpses of challenging a really good side but we haven't done that consistently enough.

"We've backed them and we will continue to back them but performances count."

Lehmann believes the side threw away a golden opportunity for victory after moving comfortably to 1-147 in pursuit of 299.

"That really hurts, that one, we should get them quite comfortably," he said.

"Credit to them, they bowled well. We batted really badly in the middle and lower order. That hurts.

"We didn't learn from Trent Bridge when we got bowled out in similar circumstances.

"We were cruising … some of their shot selection was poor.

"I thought we would get them comfortably two or three down, hopefully one down.

"We've lost clumps of wickets, which has really hurt us full stop.

"I think the bowlers have done a really good job throughout the series to get the wickets we needed to get but on the batting side simply we've lost clumps of wickets and haven't played the way we want to play.

"Blokes are missing straight ones. That doesn't help."

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Lehmann believes that most batsmen got themselves out with poor shot selection.

"I thought Warner got a good ball, to be fair, Clarke got a ripper and probably Rogers got a decent ball. The rest should have played a lot straighter and they know that," said Lehmann.

He claims that when players were preparing to bat amid Australia's worsening collapse he was telling them to play straight.

"It's a pretty simple game complicated by too many people," Lehmann said.

He believes Australia has the talent but players are failing to respond.

"It's actually learning the game quickly and knowing what to do and when to do it," Lehmann said.

"We're not doing that in short bursts, which is really hurting us. If you look at the whole Test series, there are key moments in every Test match where we're well in front of the game and we've let it slip.

"We need to learn that. Winning becomes a habit. We need to start winning and creating that."


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New scrum laws will help game flow

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 11 Agustus 2013 | 16.41

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Crouch-bind-set ... The referee's commands at scrums change for the first Bledisloe match. Source:AAP

LONGER scrums, leg burn and hookers actually hooking again.

That's the best guess of the Wallabies on the impact of new scrum laws, which will be used for the first time at Test level in Saturday's opening Bledisloe Cup Test in Sydney.

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The old referee's call of "crouch, touch, engage" will be replaced by "crouch, bind, set", which will see props hold the bind with their outside arm until the referee calls set.

With frontrowers no longer bashing into each other from a metre apart, it will see the massive collision of the hit majorly reduced and, it is hoped, cut down on infuriating scrum collapses.

Halfbacks will also be policed on feeding the ball straight, with the referee calling when the no.9 can feed it.

The revised sequence is so new, however, the Bledisloe Cup will be the first major game to use it and no Australian players have ever played under the new call.

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Law trials were held during the IRB Pacific Rugby Cup in, but otherwise only the early games of the ITM Cup and pre-season friendlies in Europe in the past month have used it.

Wallabies captain James Horwill said his squad had had to dig up Japanese footage and training footage to see the sequence in action, and they'd spent a lot of time at training last week practising under the new call.

"It's going to be one of those things you have to do and see how it goes, and what works and doesn't work. It will almost be a suck it and see philosophy and see how we go in that first game," Horwill said.

"The good scrummagers are still going to prosper. The guys who get in good shapes, and be able to use the ways they like to scrummage, will still be at advantage.

"It certainly takes out the hit, and the referee controls when the ball comes in, so the scrums are going to be a lot longer than what we've seen in Super Rugby. They'll be four, five, six seconds longer scrums.

"That will be interesting, there'll be a bit of leg burn going on. That might come into play in the back end of games."

The ambition of the changes is to have fewer collapses, and the absence of the hit should help. Evidence so far suggests the return to an older-school style of engagement between front rows leads to more stability.

"It just changes the whole dynamic," said coach Ewen McKenzie.

"You have to crouch and bind, so the whole thing is much closer. The advantage of a big hit and some of those things are not such an advantage. There are subtle technical things that come into play, so it's a whole different look and feel. It has an impact on a lot of things."

With referees also controlling the feed - and cracking down on modern halfbacks bowling off-spin into the tunnel - hooking will once again be required. Horwill said Stephen Moore was old enough to still know the art, but younger hookers might require training.

"He's done a bit but there are a couple of guys ... it hasn't been a huge part of the game. They've had to work on it. That's another thing we have to get right," Horwill said.

Both Horwill and McKenzie urged referees in the Rugby Championship to not whistle up a storm of pedantry at the scrum, given all parties are feeling their way.

"You want the game to flow. Players and fans want that, you don't want to bogged down with re-sets and scrum infringements," Horwill said.

"But that seems to be the reason they're bringing it in, to stop wasting time at the scrum, to have a contest and then get on with the game."

NEW IRB scrummaging laws will take effect in the opening Bledisloe Cup game, with the new call set to reduce scrums collapsing.


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Geale ready for IBF title defence

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Daniel Geale I.B.F. Middleweight world champion. Source: Mark Evans / News Limited

AUSSIE Daniel Geale has landed in America and is fighting fit to defend his IBF middleweight title against England's Darren Barker in Atlantic City on Sunday August 19.

I was in Atlantic City 24 years ago with Jeff 'Hitman' Harding when he staged one of the great comebacks of all time to beat Dennis Andries for the WBC light-heavyweight title.

It was one of the most savage fights I've seen with Harding down in round five only to swarm back and behind on points, stop Andries in the last round.

I caught up with 'The Hitman' again last week when I was a guest speaker at the Australian Boxing hall of Fame awards night at Crown Casino in Melbourne.

It was great to see him healthy and happy after years of doing it tough.

This is my Courier-Mail report on the big night and the stars who made it such a memorable evening.

XXXXX

SLUGGERS COP HITS ON ROAD TO REDEMPTION

BOXER Nigel Benn cheated on his wife for 16 years and hardly batted an eyelid after he left an opponent blind, deaf and crippled.

The former world middleweight and super-middleweight champion confessed this to new soul mate Jeff Fenech in the Palladium Room at Melbourne's Crown Casino on Friday night, outlining a life of violence and debauchery.

Labelled the 'Dark Destroyer' by the British press, he once drew 42,000 people to Manchester's Old Trafford for a fight with Chris Eubank, making a million pounds but still feeling destitute inside.

"That was my life then," he says. 

"It was full of hurt and pain. I don't recognise that guy anymore. It was like he was demon possessed."

Almost 100 years ago, David Belasco, the Broadway impresario, described boxing as show business with blood and here's Benn as a guest at the Australian Boxing Hall of Fame awards, surrounded by all the drama and passion of a surreal sport and characters unique to a business of blood, guts, glory and grief.

Benn and his long-suffering wife, now both devout Christians, live in Sydney, helping troubled youth and spreading the message of their faith. 

As Benn talks about his turbulent life, Guy Waters nods sagely.

Another devout Christian, Waters is here with his wife Sharon, who has stuck by him for more than 20 years even though she hates the brutality of boxing, and even though his family was embroiled in a cold-blooded killing.

Together with younger brother Troy, the Waters brothers engaged in six world title fights but are probably better known for the court victory of older brother Dean, a former Australian heavyweight champion, who walked free despite shooting a man dead at point-blank range on the orders of his mad, tyrannical, sex-deviant father.

Guy says he managed to come through the fires of a hellish childhood and years of hard fights and now, with white hair and glasses, has found his faith and his peace. At this revelation, Johnny Famechon is all ears.

Fleet of foot and fast of hand, the artful dodger won the world featherweight title in London in 1969, but has had to fight even harder every day since 1991 when he was sent cartwheeling by a car that hit him outside Sydney's Warwick Farm racetrack and left him with speech and movement difficulties.

In the days when he was still as nimble as Nureyev, Famechon refereed two of Australia's best in a fierce fight on Ash Wednesday, 1983 when smoke from bushfires around Melbourne choked fans packed into the Town Hall.

Thirty years later, the victor, Barry Michael, and the vanquished, Frank Ropis, are at the next table to Famechon's with their arms around each other, reveling in the unique friendship of fighters bonded by blood.

Benn says it is only in the past few years that he's been able to still his inner turmoil.

Some years ago, Benn donated his world championship belts to charity and in 2007 he helped raise $250,000 for the stricken Gerald McClellan, a lead-fisted American he knocked out in London in 1995.

Benn had been punched clean out of the ring in the first round but clubbed McClellan into submission in the 10th, turning a superb, finely honed athlete into a deaf and blind paraplegic. 

It was not until he went looking for God that Benn felt true remorse.

As Benn and Fenech discuss their roller-coaster lives, Jeff Harding, seated nearby, recognises an old friend, leaps from his perch and throws his arms around the widow of Lionel Rose.

Like Rose, Harding has done it tough in the years after boxing. He has known fanfare and failure and lived rough on park benches. But now declaring himself sober, 'the Hitman' has dragged himself back from life's abyss.

Harding is fighting back in the manner he hauled himself off the canvas to win the world light-heavyweight title in Atlantic City in 1989 despite a broken nose and two closing eyes.

With all its traps and temptations, life has often proved to be a more dangerous opponent than Dennis Andries, the rugged Englishman he stopped in the last round of that furious battle as the cold Atlantic Ocean lapped the boardwalk outside.

On Friday night, Australian boxing's greatest champs gathered to celebrate the courage of everyone who ever laced on a glove.

And it was a moving sight to see Jeff Harding winning his greatest comeback of all.

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BRUNKER'S MESSAGE TO DIB

AUSSIE featherweight Joel Brunker hopes to upstage former world champ Billy Dib with a big victory over Mike Oliver on the Geale-Barker undercard on Sunday.

Fighting before his hometown crowd in Hartford, Connecticut on July 5 Oliver pushed Dib to a majority decision and Brunker (unbeaten in 26 fights) hopes to score a more emphatic victory over the American.

"We really want to send a message to the world," Brunker's manager Angelo Di Carlo said.

"That Joel Brunker is a future world champ.

"He's No.4 in the WBO now and we are chasing a title shot with everything we've got."

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LEAPAI V BROWNE LOOMS LARGE

AUSTRALIA'S biggest heavyweight fight in 100 years has moved a step closer after Brisbane's Alex Leapai crushed Mexican Felipe Romero in China on August 9. He is now focused on fighting Perth's world class Lucas Browne.

Leapai, the No.8 ranked heavyweight in the world, is now set to fight Perth's world-class Lucas Browne, after stopping Romero in nine rounds in Hengyang.

Romero was down in the first round and on the canvas again twice in the ninth when New Zealand referee Bruce McTavish stopped the fight.

It was Leapai's 29th win against four losses and his 24th KO.

Romero is best known for two wins over former world light-heavyweight champ Julio Cesar Gonzalez, a boxer who broke two of Danny Green's vertebrae in a furious sparring session in Los Angeles in 2006.

There could be a late push to match Leapai with Nigerian giant Franklin Egobi in Brisbane on August 29 after Egobi's original opponent Nathan Briggs withdrew.

The card, at the plush Eaton's Hill Tavern, will be topped by Craig Hill's challenge to Australian junior-middleweight champ Shannon 'Shaggy' King.

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CESAIRE CUT BY SHARP HORN

A SICKENING clash of heads ruined a thrilling battle between Brisbane Olympian Jeff Horn and Melbourne's Rivan Cesaire in the third round at the Southport RSL on August 8.

The welterweight (67kg) bout was declared a technical draw after the head clash left a deep cut on Cesaire's left eyebrow. The ringside doctor immediately stopped the fight.

It was an absorbing contest while it lasted with the powerful Horn, a Brisbane primary school teacher, set some tough tests by the fleet-footed Melbourne Commonwealth Games representative.

Horn now has three wins (all by KO) and a technical draw in his four pro fights. He wore an armband in tribute to Olympic team-mate Billy Ward who took his own life on August 4 aged just 20.

Cesaire is 11-3-1 (3 KOs).

Horn's London Olympic team-mate, light-heavyweight (79kg) Damien Hooper stopped Togasilimai Letoa in round five.

It was Hooper's fourth KO in four fights.

On the same card, slick Cairns fighter Fred 'The General' Mundraby won the Australia super-bantaweight (55.5kg) title with a unanimous decision over come-backing Emmett Gazzard.

Scores were 97-93, 96-94 and 99-91.

Mundraby has previously held the Australian bantamweight and super-flyweight titles.

Sydney light-heavyweight Renold Quinlan won a close six-round majority decision over Tim Kanofski from Ipswich.

Jeff Horn's multi-millionaire trainer, Glenn Rushton told me: ``Rivan was thrashing his head around all over the place and I had warned Jeff before the fight to be very careful of head clashes, due to Rivan's style of boxing.

"It was very frustrating for us, as after Jeff won the first round, I asked him to increase the pressure a little going into the second round and Jeff easily won the second. When he came back to the corner after the second, I knew we had him and it was only a matter of time. I thought we'd get him between rounds 3-5. Jeff was simply too strong and too skilful for Rivan."

Rushton hopes to match Horn with Sam Colomban in Melbourne on September 12.

"Many pundits will now be saying that we have bitten off more than we can chew," Rushton said. 

"But I have lived by the motto all my life to, 'Bite off more than I can chew and then chew like mad.'

"Colomban will be a very tough fight but we're up for it."

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FLANAGAN FIRES BACK

TOWNSVILLE light-heavyweight Mark Flanagan (13-4, 8 KOs) scored a second round knockout over Ofisa Vili (6-3) at Moranbah on August 3.

Good to see him putting some wins together after his point's loss to slick Kiwi Daniel Mackinnon in February.

Flanagan has victories over tough Aussies Kariz Kariuki, Tyrone Jones and Philip Maley.

On the same Moranbah card, welterweight Cain Oldfield went to 3-0 (3 KOs) by stopping Jason Mac Gura in round one.

On the same night at the Fortitude Gym in Brisbane, unbeaten Irishman Dennis Hogan (13-0-1, 6 KOs) scored a first round knockout over Thai junior-middleweight Petchsuriya Looksakkongdin (5-9, 2 KOs).

Beijing Olympian Todd Kidd scored a third-round KO over another outgunned Thai, welterweight Dennapa Bigshotcamp (12-27).

Keep your eye on Brisbane-based French super-middleweight Faris Chevalier (2-1, 2 KOs) who stopped Kerwin Buckley (0-1) in round three.

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JACKSON ALL ACTION

LUKE Jackson, Australia's boxing team captain at the London Olympics, tells me he loves flying up from Hobart to Sydney to train with Billy Hussein.

Action Jackson, who also fought at the 2006 and 2010 Commonwealth Games and has a bronze medal to show for it, is now 2-0 as a pro and looks to have an exciting future.

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WILDER WARNS KLITSCHKO BROTHERS

UNDEFEATED American heavyweight Deontay Wilder might just be the man to take the heavyweight power play away from the German-based Klitschko brothers.

The 2m Wilder went to 29-0, with all 29 wins by KO, as he belted former WBO heavyweight champion Sergei 'White Wolf' Liakhovich (25-6, 16 KOs) in the first round on August 9 in Indio, California. 

Liakhovich was left writhing on the canvas from a big right hand.

The fight lasted just 103 seconds.

TWITTER: @GrantleeKieza


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Live: fourth Ashes Test, day three

Stuart Broad will be hoping for more wickets early on day three at Chester-le-Street. Source: Getty Images

CAN Australia capitalise on their strong position on day three of the fourth Ashes Test, or will England launch a fightback?

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