Teen sensations Braxton Sorenson-McGee, Danii Mafoe debut at Dubai Sevens

Source: Radio New Zealand

Braxton Sorenson-McGee scores a try for the Black Ferns. www.photosport.nz

Black Ferns superstar Braxton Sorensen McGee will become a dual international at the Dubai Sevens, with a familiar face alongside her.

McGee has lit up the 15-a-side code in her professional debut year, winning a Super Rugby Aupiki title and starring in an unsuccessful World Cup bid with the NZ women.

She will now debut in the Black Ferns Sevens jersey, with another teenage sensation and childhood friend, Danii Mafoe, also playing in her first tournament.

“I was injury cover in LA last season, but this is my proper first season with the team,” Mafoe, 19, said. “I’m still coming to terms with being here and knowing that I get to run out in a black jersey.

“I think I’m still buzzing out at that.”

Mafoe has enjoyed a similar trajectory to Sorensen-McGee in their first year out of high school, where they both made several age grade sides.

“I started my rugby journey the same as Braxton in high school,” she said. “We both started as league players, but converted to rugby union and, from there, went to play for the Auckland Storm in our last year of school.

“We also got picked up for the Blues and I’ve made my way to sevens now.”

Auckland Storm’s Danii Mafoe in action against Counties Manukau. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Mafoe said the UAE reunion had been special.

“It’s been unreal, having her here, having a little familiar face. She’s been an unreal talent in the team.

“Her skill that she brings to the team, as well as her young energy, it made such an impact on the team, both onfield and off-field.”

As both Olympic and world series champions, Mafoe admitted the Black Ferns Sevens felt the weight of expectation.

“There is definitely that pressure, but I think it’s been a focus that we just look at ourselves and ground ourselves,” she said. “This is the start of the world series and, while those accolades have been made, it’s all starting over again.

“We need to keep going.”

Also a quality 15s player, Mafoe said her future may lie in either game.

“For now, the sevens journey is somewhere where my heart is, but I still have a lot of love for the 15s code.”

Another first for the Ferns this weekend will be the official trial of size 4.5 balls, slightly smaller than the standard, a move criticised by some players.

“We had our first time using the smaller balls,” Mafoe said. “It was definitely different.

“I think that my team-mates take it more as an ego thing. I don’t think really anyone noticed a difference, until it was said.

“I can’t speak on behalf of the team, but I feel like, for me and gripwise, the 4.5 size ball is good.”

After a series win last season, Mafoe said the Black Ferns Sevens won’t complicate the formula.

“Be simple, but be strong in what we do,” she said. “Whether a right or wrong, just being strong in our minds and just committing.”

The Black Ferns Sevens kick off their campaign against France just before 8pm Saturday NZT, while the men meet Great Britain at 9.26pm.

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Australia’s Kyra Cooney-Cross scores stunning long range goal as Matildas down Football Ferns 5-0

Source: Radio New Zealand

A spectacular long range effort from Kyra Cooney-Cross has helped Australia’s Matildas to a dominant 5-0 win over the Football Ferns in Gosford.

Cooney-Cross, who was incisive and creative all night in central midfield, lobbed New Zealand goalkeeper Anna Leat from near to halfway in an effort reminiscent of her similarly audacious strike against Germany in October last year.

The Arsenal star’s second international goal came in the 71st minute and only moments after Ellie Carpenter had put the Matildas 3-0 up.

Playing their penultimate game before hosting the Asian Cup in March, the Matildas were dangerous from the first whistle on Friday night, pushing high and circulating the ball confidently against a Kiwi outfit still stinging from a 6-0 loss to the US in late October.

Attacking midfielder Amy Sayer opened the scoring in the 13th minute, side-footing from the left hand side of the penalty area after a deft pass from the excellent Katrina Gorry.

Eleven minutes later, Hayley Raso, playing in a fluid forward three alongside Sayer and Caitlin Foord, doubled Australia’s lead with an opportunistic curler from outside the box.

New Zealand’s Maya Hahn, who was industrious in central midfield but culpable for a number of errors on the edge of her own penalty area, gave the ball to Raso, whose left-footed effort snuck in off the foot of the post with Leat well off her line.

The Football Ferns were better to begin the second half, forcing Australian goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold into action and muddying the contest in midfield.

However, New Zealand’s good work was all undone by the Carpenter/Cooney-Cross sucker punch and the result made even more emphatic when Gorry poked home from close range after a deft give and go with substitute Holly McNamara.

Captain Steph Catley had a late penalty saved after the lively McNamara was brought down by a desperate Leat in stoppage time.

Sam Kerr, still easing back to full fitness after a 20-month injury lay-off, was an unused substitute and made to wait further for her first appearance on Australian soil since 2023.

The sides conclude their two match friendly series in Adelaide on Tuesday, in what will be Australia’s final hit-out before the Asian Cup in March.

See how it all unfolded in our liveblog:

– ABC

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Football Ferns celebrate a goal against Venezuela. Photosport

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Australia’s Matildas dominate Football Ferns

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Football Ferns have been beaten in a convincing 5-0 win by the Matildas.

The 33rd-ranked Ferns took on the 15th-ranked Matildas at Polytec Stadium in Gosford, Australia, on Friday night.

They faced an Australian side brimming with stars and a nation they had not beaten in more than 30 years.

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Football Ferns celebrate a goal against Venezuela. Photosport

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Live: Football Ferns v Australia

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Football Ferns will end the year against an Australian side brimming with stars and a nation that they have not beaten in more than 30 years.

The 33rd-ranked Ferns take on the 15th-ranked Matildas at Polytec Stadium in Gosford, Australia, on Friday night.

Kickoff is at 9.30pm NZT.

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Football Ferns celebrate a goal against Venezuela. Photosport

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Spear gun used in carjacking in South Auckland’s Papatoetoe

Source: Radio New Zealand

The inicident unfolded on Friday. (File photo) RNZ / REECE BAKER

A man has been arrested for allegedly stealing a car from an elderly man while armed with a spear gun in South Auckland.

Police said the 42-year-old approached an elderly man’s car on Hillcrest Rd in Papatoetoe and demanded his keys on Friday.

“The driver was demanded to hand over his keys, which escalated when the spear gun was allegedly pointed at the frightened man,” Senior Sergeant Steve Albrey said.

He then fled in the elderly man’s car, heading towards Manukau.

“Our staff arrived on scene and began taking details of what occurred, which was in turn relayed to other police staff,” Albrey said.

“The police Eagle helicopter responded and soon located the freshly stolen vehicle on Cavendish Drive.”

Police followed the vehicle to Manurewa, where they spiked its tyres on Beatty Ave.

The man was arrested on the spot.

“I acknowledge our staff for their work today, preventing any further harm being inflicted on the public by this man’s actions,” Albrey said.

Police claim the same man had earlier also attempted to enter a house on Wyllie Rd in Papatoetoe, and had pointed his spear gun at a woman driving nearby.

“He walked towards a neighbouring driveway where a woman was driving out in her vehicle,” Albrey said.

“The man allegedly pointed a spear gun at the woman but fortunately she locked her doors and quickly drove away from the scene.”

The man was due to appear in the Manukau District Court on Saturday, where he was facing charges of aggravated robbery and attempts at aggravated robbery.

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Hotspots forming in unusually dry conditions

Source: Radio New Zealand

A hotspot can point to where drought may be developing (File image). RNZ / Liz Garton

Unusually dry conditions forming hotspots are affecting eastern areas of both the North and South Islands following a period of hot, dry winds.

Earth Sciences New Zealand has identified the hotspots – areas where soils are severely drier than normal – in lower coastal Wairarapa, coastal Hawke’s Bay, North Otago, South Canterbury and North Canterbury.

The hotspots in both North Otago and South Canterbury have grown over the past week, while in coastal Hawke’s Bay, the hotspot has weakened during the week, but could grow stronger in the days ahead.

Earth Sciences New Zealand metereologist Chester Lampkin said hotspots can point to where drought may be developing.

“It tells the story that ‘hey this is a very unusually dry spot’, and this is an area where we need to watch for continued dryness or the potential for drought to develop.”

The New Zealand Drought Index has shown abnormally dry conditions are being found in coastal Hawke’s Bay, Gisborne, and the Wairarapa, and coastal North Canterbury, and very dry conditions found in Southern Hawke’s Bay and the Mahia Peninsula, according to Earth Sciences Hotspot Report.

In the North Island, rainfall amounts of less than 30 millimetres fell across most of the island in the past week, apart from in the Coromandel, Bay of Plenty ranges, and foothills of Hawke’s Bay.

Parts of Canterbury, Otago and Marlborough recorded under 15 mm of rain.

Sweltering temperatures have swept through parts of the country in recent days, with Christchurch Airport exceeding 30°C, and Hastings hitting 33.0°C on Thursday.

Lampkin said the dry conditions have been caused by persistent westerlies over September, October and a few in November.

“We’re getting those down-sloping winds, those westerlies, and a westerly – not only does it contain dry air, it also heats up as the air descends or moves down the mountain.

“As it slopes downward, it gets stronger, and it gets hotter.”

Australia has also experienced a prolonged heatwave from the outback to the East Coast leading to the highest November temperatures in years, including in both Sydney and Brisbane.

Will the dry conditions continue?

Lampkin said a wetter week was expected with an easterly flow moving across the North Island, and across the top of the south island, including down to North Canterbury.

Rain and cooler temperatures were going to move in between Tuesday and Thursday.

He said it’s looking like the hotspot in North Canterbury could weaken and potentially dissipate, but in the North Island, the dryness was more entrenched.

“Overall the North Island as a whole will see wetter weather than what we’ve seen over the past week, the question is how much will get into the east of the North Island, and right now it’s very questionable.

“Unfortunately I don’t think Hawke’s Bay is going to see a lot of rain.”

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New cost-cutting measures for wasterwater standards announced

Source: Radio New Zealand

Local Government Minister Simon Watts made the announcement on Friday. (File photo) RNZ/Mark Papalii

The Local Government Minister has announced cost cutting measures for wastewater aimed at boosting savings for ratepayers.

New national wastewater environmental performances standards hope to save up to $830 million over the next 35 years by streamlining wastewater consents.

Minister Simon Watts said 60 percent of treatment plants needed new consents within the next decade, and many were already operating on expired consents.

“These standards that we’re announcing today will make sure consenting keeps pace with the needs for upgrades, avoids wasteful spending, and reduces the risk of wastewater overflows into rivers, lakes, and the sea,” he said.

Watts said the change removes unnecessary delays and costly over-engineering.

Councils would have a nationally consistent framework for renewing wastewater consents for the first time, Watts said.

The standards applied to over 330 publicly owned treatment plants across the country, and would immediately reduce the need for expensive, duplicated technical assessments.

Watts described the standards as a major step forward.

Reducing consenting costs by up to 40 percent per plant meant a potential saving of $300,000 to $600,000, and up to 60 percent for smaller plants, he said.

Speaking to media, Watts said the nationally consistent standards meant there was now a national minimum standard to uphold.

“There’s been a significant process of engagement across the broad sectors, as I outlined, in order to set these standards,” he said.

“The Water Services Authority is taking a leadership in regards to this, to ensure that we balance the needs in regards to environmental protection.”

The new standards come into effect on 19 December.

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Health NZ fails to get Employment Relations Authority to force senior doctors into contract amid pay dispute deadlock

Source: Radio New Zealand

Executive director for the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists, Sarah Dalton, pictured here with loud speaker, says while Finance Minister Nicola Willis has declined to meet striking doctors today, the government needs to hear their message on what under-funding is doing to the public health system.

A senior doctors picket line in September. (File photo) RNZ / Ruth Hill

Health NZ has failed in bid to get the Employment Relations Authority to force senior doctors into a contract and end repeated strike action.

Health NZ asked the authority in September to “fix” the terms of the collective contract after collective negotiation with the senior doctors’ union repeatedly broke down.

That would effectively imposed a contract on both sides.

But the authority said on Friday it would not do that.

In its decision, authority member Nicola Craig said that would have required a high bar – and there had been no serious and sustained breaches of good faith.

“The parties are a distance apart but it is not unusual in bargaining for a lot of progress to be made in a short time, even after a long period of little progress,” she said.

The union, the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists, had provided a list of subjects that it considered were still up for negotiation, she said.

There was still room for more bargaining.

“The parties are encouraged to participate fully, openly and in good faith to work together to reach a resolution,” Craig said.

In response to the decision, the union’s executive director Sarah Dalton said the litigation had been “a waste of money” and Health NZ should never have taken it.

It was time to get back to bargaining, she said.

“We are at serious risk of losing significant numbers of senior doctors and dentists due to HNZ’s intractable approach to recruitment, retention and remuneration. In the end it will be patients who continue to miss out on healthcare.”

Dalton said they had lost ten weeks of negotiation waiting for the finding.

Association of Salaried Medical Specialists executive director Sarah Dalton, pictured in 2024.

Association of Salaried Medical Specialists executive director Sarah Dalton. (File photo) LANCE LAWSON PHOTOGRAPHY / Supplied

She hoped it helped other unions when it came to having good faith negotiations with public sector employers.

Health NZ’s executive national director of people and culture, Robyn Shearer, said Health NZ acknowledged the ERA’s decision and were committed to resuming negotiations as soon as possible.

“Our focus remains on reaching a fair and affordable agreement for senior medical staff and for the wider health system.

“Our application to fix was made in recognition of our desire to settle the agreement and avoid disruption to patients.”

Shearer said Health NZ remained committed to avoiding disruption and reaching a settlement.

“We will continue to work with ASMS in good faith with the goal of reaching a swift resolution.”

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Unbeaten Auckland FC rethink training before last-place A-League game

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland FC assistant coach Danny Hay putting the players through their paces before the game. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Auckland FC coach Steve Corica reduced the number of training days this week before a clash with last-placed Newcastle Jets in the A-League on Sunday.

Disappointed that the players looked “flat” in last week’s 1-all draw against Brisbane Roar, Corica said he may have “overcooked them” in training the previous week and opted for three days on the training pitch, rather than five.

“Definitely should be going into the game fresher, but I think the boys have taken responsibility as well,” he said. “We all have.

“I didn’t enjoy the performance – I think we’ve got to do a lot better.

“The real positive coming out of it, though, is we’re still unbeaten. We’re the only team unbeaten in the competition at the moment and we’ve got a real chance to pick up three points against Newcastle.”

While Corica did not like what he saw at Go Media Stadium last Sunday, he did like the way the players responded.

“I can see from what we’ve done at training, they’re switched on, they’re ready. Maybe we lost a little bit of focus in the international window, so there is no excuse this week.

“It’s a massive game for us. It doesn’t matter that they’re down the bottom, they’re still a very good attacking team.

“They’ve scored nine goals, they’ve conceded 14, so there’s areas that we think we can score goals and we want to be at our best to do that.”

Auckland’s goal against the Roar came from Lachlan Brook, who scored for the first time for his third A-League club.

The goal was one he would put on a highlights reel and, for all the jubilation he felt from scoring, he agreed with Corica’s disappointment over the team’s overall performance.

“That wasn’t our best performance,” Brook said. “Everyone was a little bit behind what their usual self is.

“Sometimes a player can have a bad day, but if 11 players are having a bad day, it’s just not ideal.

“Even as a group, we went into that changingroom and it felt like a loss. I think that just says a lot about how we are as a team.

“You can sort of turn that into a positive and say we drew a game we weren’t happy with. We felt like we got spanked 6-0, so I think, going forward, we’ve won a lot of games, we’re not far off the top of the table, so it’s more motivation to get one up again.”

Brook said, each week, Auckland were confident they could win.

“When you’re high in confidence, you’ve already got an advantage, when we look around the room and… we know that we’ve got the team that can win everything. For us, it’s about going out every week and just proving it.”

Francis de Vries took the captain’s armband against the Brisbane Roar. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

In the absence of the injured Hiroki Sakai and Jake Brimmer, defender Francis de Vries captained Auckland against the Roar. He started the game after arriving back from All Whites duty in the United States, where he played 167 minutes of football, two days before the game.

“The body is OK,” he said. “Obviously, physically, you’re always playing with some sort of fatigue, when you’re a professional footballer.

“The last couple of weeks, the fatigue has been a little bit more than normal, but amazing experiences.

“Mentally, I’d say I’m in a very good space, enjoying the process of working hard and improving, and taking those next steps, both here with Auckland and away with New Zealand.”

De Vries said there was a lot of expectation on Auckland, after last season’s run to the Premiers Plate, and despite their good place on the points ladder, they wanted to do better, so he could understand Corica’s reaction.

“As a football player, it’s part of your job to accept criticism and learn from feedback.”

While the Jets, who won the pre-season Australia Cup, have had one win and four losses this season, compared to Auckland’s three wins and two draws, de Vries said it was too early in the season to read much into the standings.

“Teams go through patches of form and you don’t really know what to expect in the first 10 games. It’s not as if they’re in bad form.

“They maybe haven’t picked up the results yet, but their performances have been good, so we’re taking nothing for granted and we’ll treat it like a game that we usually do.”

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Backyard Gang Wars: Thuggery or a way to heal, doco asks

Source: Radio New Zealand

Participants at one of Dan Hooker’s fight events. youtube

Organised backyard fights are nothing new, having returned to the spotlight in recent months since UFC star Dan “The Hangman” Hooker hosted the inaugural “King of the Streets”.

The 32-man, one minute fist-fight tournament in Auckland prompted New Zealand’s Boxing Coaches Association president Billy Meehan to call the event “straight-out thuggery”.

But during production of her TVNZ series Backyard Gang Wars, 1 News In Depth reporter Indira Stewart says what she found at most backyard fight events were police being actively engaged by organisers, medics, referees, nurses on hand – and a clear effort to make sure they were as safe as possible.

The two-part series is an investigation into the many fight clubs that have occurred across the country, often involving gang members and mired by controversy.

Speaking to Checkpoint earlier this year on one of Hooker’s backyard fights, Police Minister Mark Mitchell said, “gang members tend to be violent, and they tend to not want to stick to the rules”.

But Jon Paul “Fight Dog” Te Rito – known as JP – had organised his own event called Fight for Life and said they were actually about healing, connecting, and role modelling a better way for the following generations.

“If we keep doing what we’ve always done we’re always going to keep getting what we’ve got, which is prison and a cycle of negativity. So the only thing we can do is roll more positive change,” he told RNZ’s Nine to Noon.

Ngā Kete Wānanga

The seed was planted after Stewart was invited to visit a tikanga Māori-based rehab programme by Matilda Kahotea, someone she had interviewed for a previous series Gang Mums and the person behind Ngā Kete Wānanga Solutions.

“I went over there. They welcomed me over to their rehabilitation programme centre with a powhiri. I sat down, they gave us food.

“I was just blown away … there were so many elements of surprise when I first met them.”

She said she felt totally safe, and despite the preconceptions people might have given their criminal past, described the men as “soft gentlemen”.

“The way they communicated their stories, their journeys, their paths, was surprising to me, and the types of things they said in terms of practising mindfulness. I didn’t think I would ever sit with a gang member who would talk to me about the practice of mindfulness.

“You try and go into these spaces with an open mind. You know the narratives that exist everywhere and … it’s not a community that I’ve always been around, but you go in with an open mind to learn, and try and understand the perspectives and experiences of people in worlds that are different to yours.”

JP said the rehabilitation programme had helped to make him more self-aware and more mindful.

“Since I’ve been at Ngā Kete I’ve actually started doing a whole lot of soul searching and realigning myself with my whakapapa, which has been really empowering – especially with the guidance of our rangatira, Whaea Matilda Kahotea, just helping me … reconnect with my tikanga.

“Being gifted this space, this safe space to be able to heal and realign has been a gift in itself at Ngā Kete Wānanga.”

Indira Stewart RNZ

‘Keep it in the ring’

Backyard fights between gang members were not a recent thing, tracing their heritage back to the Far North in 2017, Stewart said.

There had been several gang killings in the region, and rival gang members came together for a hui to try to work out how to keep their whānau safe, she said.

“One member, Herbert Rata – who is in the documentary – said, ‘why don’t we have a fight night and just, keep it in the ring’.

“And so that’s what it became, Keep it in the Ring, and it evolved over the years into Backyard Wars, and lots of other people began doing their own fight clubs too.”

Through the documentary process, it became clear to her that the kaupapa of the backyard fights “was healing some of those relationships and healing in communities”.

“One of the things that, I suppose, was surprising to us, was seeing rival gang members, gangs that have been historically rivals for generations, in the same room, cheering for their different opponents, but also cheering for each other.

“There are hugs, fist bumps, high fives between Head Hunters, Black Powers, Mongrel Mobs, it’s such a different story to what we’ve known and heard for so many years.”

There was never any indication that the fights could have spilled out of the ring, she said.

‘We still carry him with mana’

The name of his competition, Fight for Light, was inspired by a brother of his, who took his own life earlier in the year, JP said.

“He was a real nurturing brother, he was a rangatira of our whānau.

“He was once there in my life where he helped me fight for my light, and because I wasn’t able to be there to help him fight for his light, you know, we still carry him with mana.”

Police Minister Mark Mitchell said gang members tended not to stick to the rules. RNZ / Mark Papalii

JP said he was inspired to start organising his own backyard fights after he was invited to one of Herbert Rata’s fights up in Takahiwai.

“To be a part of it, and then to feel the empowered by it, and then to take the connection element of it, bring it back down to Ngā Kete, and then create our own healing environment through way of expression.”

The fact that gang members had to live side by side when they were in prison showed them all that perhaps they could get along after all, JP said.

“We’re connected in prison, and so because we’ve lived with each other in prison for long periods of time, now we’ve come out and, you know, if we can do it in there, we can do it out here.”

However, it was important to break that cycle, he said.

“If we want our kids to do it out here, live out here, rather than going in there and having to connect, we have to role model that.”

Dan “The Hangman” Hooker’s One Minute Scraps event had a $50,000 cash prize for the winner. youtube

Beyond the connection, fighting also helped with mental heath, JP said.

“My normal is totally different to to, you know, maybe your normal … what I think is normal, you might think is outrageous.

“And because I’m trying to stick to what, you know, your normal may be, it’s actually quite hard for me. So, that’s the built-up energy that I’m talking about.

“It’s a positive thing, you know, because if it doesn’t challenge you, it won’t change you.”

Waking up each day to those challenges was a beautiful thing, and he was trying to role model that for his rangatahi, he said.

Even after her documentary was complete, there were still questions and concerns with the safety of some events, Stewart said.

“There was one particular event that we filmed out in South Auckland and there were quite a few knockouts in those rounds. And, some of the pairings of particular fighters, some were very, very experienced with someone that was not experienced or, 15 kgs heavier with someone that was, a lot lighter and not, not as fit.”

Hooker’s events could be particularly dangerous because of the high prize money, she said.

Heimuli is a 10 time world champion MMA coach. And one thing he said is that when you put a carrot like that in front of some of these people, you might get some people who are just not ready to be in that space, and it can be very dangerous.”

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