New Zealand Olympic bosses weigh up major sporting merger

Source: Radio New Zealand

Track and field star Anna Grimaldi celebrates after winning bronze in the women’s 100m T47 final at the 2024 Paralympics. GETTY IMAGES

New Zealand’s Olympic and Paralympic movements could be on the brink of a historic shift, with the two organising bodies formally exploring the possibility of becoming a single organisation.

The New Zealand Olympic Committee (NZOC) and Paralympics New Zealand (PNZ) have launched a “Synergy Review” – a feasibility project that could pave the way for a merger and a new era of inclusive representation in elite sport.

The review is being led by organisational strategy specialist Susan Strawbridge, with oversight from a governance group that includes delegates from both boards and executives, and Sport NZ.

Representatives from the NZOC and PNZ declined to be interviewed about the review while it was still in the early stages, but in a joint statement said the decision to explore a merger was based on increasingly close cooperation and a growing sense that a more formal alliance could amplify their collective impact.

“NZOC and PNZ share a common purpose of supporting athletes and inspiring Aotearoa New Zealand through sport. We already work closely together, and this process is about exploring if there is an opportunity to build on that strong foundation to improve the possible impact for athletes and the sector,” the statement said.

While speculation about a merger had been bubbling within the sector, officials stressed that nothing had been decided.

“There is no pre-determined outcome,” the statement said. “It is a proactive step to explore potential opportunities to create greater impact, guided by each organisation’s kaupapa and strategic plans.”

NZOC chief executive Nicki Nicol. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

The early phase of the project has involved consultation with staff of each of the organisations, national sporting bodies, athletes’ commissions, and major sector stakeholders. Their feedback would now be weighed by both boards over the coming weeks.

The statement said any final decision would be made jointly by both boards, and only if they agreed it was in the best interests of athletes and the sporting community.

The review would also likely consider optics. While the NZOC and PNZ operated as separate entities, many New Zealanders assumed the Olympic and Paralympic teams fell under the same organisation.

That confusion had often led to criticism of the NZOC and its partners during Paralympic campaigns, with the public mistakenly believing the Olympic body was failing to support disabled athletes. A unified structure could reduce that friction and present a clearer message about how athletes were funded and supported.

Internationally, Olympic and Paralympic structures varied widely. Most countries maintained separate bodies, but several – including Team USA, one of the largest and most influential teams in world sport – operated under a single organisational umbrella.

A number of other nations were currently weighing similar options, although NZOC and PNZ noted that national context was always the deciding factor.

It is not yet known if any merger would result in job losses. The NZOC is the larger, more well-resourced of the two organisations, with more than 30 fulltime employees and an annual turnover of nearly $23 million, according to its 2024 annual report.

PNZ’s total revenue for 2024 was $5.4 million.

Should the two organisations elect to join forces, it was likely a formal merger would not take place until after the LA 2028 Olympic cycle due to existing broadcast and commercial arrangements.

Last month Sky announced a long-term partnership with the International Olympic Committee for the broadcast rights to the Olympic Games from next year’s Winter Olympics through to Brisbane 2032.

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Fans frustrated as tense Tall Blacks loss to Australia cuts out on screen

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tall Blacks Flynn Cameron (L) with Australia Jaylin Galloway during the FIBA World Cup Qualifier – New Zealand Tall Blacks v Australia Boomers at TSB Arena, Wellington, on 1 December 2025. Marty Melville / Photosport

A buzzer beater finish by the Boomers has left the Tall Blacks heartbroken, but a technical issue meant some fans missed out on the tense final moments.

Australia beat New Zealand 79-77 in the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2027 Asian Qualifiers on Monday night at the TSB Bank Arena.

A last minute play by 26-year-old guard Davo Hickey banked in a tough trifecta from the wing just before time expired, helping the Boomers complete the escape after finding themselves staring at a 67-57 deficit early in the final period.

However, some fans on the edge of their seats missed the exhilarating final moments.

Viewers reported coverage cut out on ESPN channel 60, Sky and Disney+, with one commenting on social media the live stream on Sky Sport went to ads, “then to some guys in a boat”.

On its TikTok channel, ESPN Australia/NZ acknowledged the mishap: “We are aware that due to a technical issue at the end of the game was not seen for some viewers. We are investigating the cause and deeply apologise for the issue.”

But as one fan put it, the blunder “saved us from watching NZ choke again”.

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Football Fern Annalie Longo to sign off against Matildas

Source: Radio New Zealand

Football Fern Annalie Longo will end her international career against the Matildas in Adelaide. www.photosport.nz

Football Ferns legend Annalie Longo knew the end of a career spanning nearly 20 years at the top was coming this year and she is thankful to walk away on her own terms.

Longo will retire from international football after Tuesday’s match against Australia’s Matildas at Coopers Stadium in Adelaide.

The midfielder will finish her Football Ferns career on 144 caps, the fifth-highest total in the team’s history, and 15 goals.

Longo made her senior international debut as a teenager, before appearing at five FIFA Women’s World Cups, including the home tournament in 2023, and four Olympic Games.

Scoring her first goal against Japan to level the game in 2013, the 2012 Olympics where the Football Ferns won their first match at a Games and winning the opening game of the 2023 Football World Cup in Auckland, were among the highlights from a senior career which began in 2006.

The decision to hang up her boots follows her retirement from professional club football with Wellington Phoenix in April.

“It comes with mixed emotions. I can proudly say I have given everything for the Fern and this team,” she said.

“Football has shaped who I am.”

Longo said entering the senior national team as a 15-year-old she was “full of dreams and hopes that I would get to represent my country”.

“The journey it has given me and the memories and experiences and the rollercoasters its given me, it’s been part of my life for so long so obviously a tough decision but when I look at the future of the team and what they need going forward I think it’s the right time to step away.”

Longo was “tempted” to stay with the national team with the 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup on the horizon but said there were several reasons why it would be better if she did not.

“When I look at my heart, I think if I’m still around playing in 2027 we’ve got a bit of a disservice to the system we’re growing in New Zealand. So, I have to look at it both ways and what’s best for the team and if I continued to stay around, just with my age and the toughness that it is to play professional football and the stage of my career, also where my body is at, a number of factors that kind of play into the decision I think the best thing for the team is that they get ready and work towards that 2027 campaign.”

Football Ferns head coach Michael Mayne was not ready for Longo to retire when she stepped away from the Phoenix so he asked her to fill a role with the national team this year.

“It’s been a challenge to work hard and not have a professional team but I try, as I have always done throughout my career, to keep my standards high and do whatever I can to be on that pitch,” Longo said.

“Timing-wise it felt right being able to build and create some structures in the way we want to move forward under Mayne so it was a privilege and I’m grateful to have that opportunity.”

Longo was emotional in recognising the likes of former captain, Ali Riley, who did not get to leave football on their own terms.

Riley retired in October after a prolonged battle with a chronic nerve injury.

“I know not everybody who has been part of the Ferns has had the perfect send-off… I hope [her experience] is set in stone of what it should be and when players retire, who have committed so much to the Ferns, that we can celebrate the amazing legacy that past Ferns previously maybe didn’t get the opportunity to do.”

Football will still be a big part of Longo’s life. She is already in a player development role with New Zealand Football and she was looking forward to dedicating more time to “inspiring and growing” the next generation.

She said coaching was a route she wanted to pursue.

Mayne said the link to former Ferns was important and he planned to keep in touch with Longo into the future.

“You can see everything you need to know about her by looking at her journey in the shirt. She has seen and experienced it all, but throughout her career she has always played her role, put the team first, and promoted excellence for herself and the side,” Mayne said

“Having seen Annalie come through the coaching pathway and where she is at in that, I think between her role, the coaching, there is no doubt in my mind the character she is and belief in our country, the drive for things to be better – all those things line-up to someone who can have a massive impact in the next phase of her career and life and that’s what we need more of going forward.

“That’s probably a gap I’ve seen for different reasons where we can do a lot better.

“That’s part of my belief system in this role is how do we put things in place to make sure we’re retaining good people and people that can shift the game because we need more than what we’ve got at the moment. So, I will be definitely be a regular still talking to her and picking her brain because you can’t just let experience and knowledge disappear in our system we don’t have the luxury to be able to do that.”

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Black Caps coach Rob Walter prepares for his first home Test series

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand Blackcaps coach Rob Walter Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Black Caps coach Rob Walter doesn’t expect his side to have any problems slipping back into Test match mode in the first Test against West Indies starting in Christchurch on Tuesday.

Walter is preparing for his first home Test series since taking over the role in January.

New Zealand has played just two Test matches so far in 2025, beating Zimbabwe 2-0 in Bulawayo in August.

Since then they’ve played 17 white-ball games against Australia, England and West Indies.

“The team is clear in their test match identity, they’ve done incredibly well as a unit, so just to fall back into that,” Walter said on the eve of the three match series.

New Zealand is ranked fifth in the World Test rankings, with West Indies eighth.

Kane Williamson returns to the side for the Test series.

The Black Caps beat West Indies 3-1 in the T20 series and 3-0 in the ODI series.

While those results may have looked convincing, Walter admits they were close and expects even more from the tourists in the longest version of the game.

“They’ve got a really good seam attack, some dangerous batters and can bat for long periods of time so from a team point of view [we have to] respect the game of cricket and be prepared for the contest.”

New Zealand’s Kane Williamson celebrates his century against England, Hamilton, 2024. PHOTOSPORT

Walter said the key is to play the game they want to play.

Of the 14 Tests played at Hagley Oval only once has the side winning the toss decided to bat first.

“Traditionally Hagley plays a certain way and so while we have a strong idea of most likely how it will play I still think our best skill is our adaptability.

“We’ll prepare with something in mind but we know the game of cricket can easily throw something at you that you’re not ready for so we need to be ready and adapt to that.”

This series also marks the start of the Black Caps cycle in the latest World Test Championship.

“Winning at home is important, but it is not the be all and end all because we have started to see how teams can win away from home.

“If there are any conditions you do understand you trust it to be your own so we’ll be looking to start strong and lay down an marker early in the World Test Championship.”

BLACKCAPS squad for Test Series v West Indies

Tom Latham (c) Canterbury

Tom Blundell (wk) Wellington Firebirds

Michael Bracewell Wellington Firebirds

Devon Conway Wellington Firebirds

Jacob Duffy Otago Volts

Zak Foulkes Canterbury

Matt Henry Canterbury

Daryl Mitchell Canterbury

Rachin Ravindra Wellington Firebirds

Mitchell Santner Northern Districts

Nathan Smith Wellington Firebirds

Blair Tickner Central Stags

Kane Williamson Northern Districts

Will Young Central Stags

1st Test NZ v West Indies, Hagley Oval, 2-6 Dec

2nd Test NZ v West Indies, Basin Reserve, 10-14 Dec

3rd Test NZ v West Indies, Bay Oval, 18-22 Dec

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All Blacks Sevens end title drought, Black Ferns Sevens get revenge

Source: Radio New Zealand

All Blacks Sevens player Brady Rush. Photosport

New Zealand has swept the Dubai round of the Sevens World Series with the Black Ferns Sevens and All Blacks Sevens beating Australia in their respective finals.

The Black Ferns Sevens thumped their arch-rivals 29-14 before the All Blacks Sevens held on the beat a fast finishing Australian side 26-22 in the men’s title match.

It’s the All Black Sevens first title since Singapore in 2024. They failed to win a single title last season, with the win in Dubai ending their title drought.

The Black Ferns Sevens gained some revenge over Australia after losing to them in last season’s Dubai final.

It’s the New Zealand women’s first Dubai title since 2019.

Jorja Miller. Photosport

Jorja Miller bagged a brace of tries to be named player of the women’s final and she said it was nice to get one back over Australia.

“It means everything. Dubai is probably the favourite stop of the series, so to get the win here over a really strong Australian side, I’m so proud of the girls,” Miller said.

“We knew that if we let them get an inch that they would take it, so we just knew we had to come out there and play our game and start strong and let the rest follow.”

Brady Rush made a superb try saving tackle just before halftime to stop Australia scoring in the men’s final to be named player of the match.

He said it was nice to win put an end to their title struggles.

“Pretty stoked with that. It’s obviously been a while, but I’m pretty happy to get it done for our captain Tone [Ng Shiu] in his 50th tourney.

“It shows all the hard work we’ve put up in preseason, so we’re looking forward to the rest of the season.”

Brady Rush. Photosport/Iain McGregor

Captain Ng Shiu believes they can keep getting better.

“It’s a great start. But, just from here, if we can be consistent with the little things, it’ll make a great difference in the big picture.”

The next round of the World Series is in Cape Town this weekend.

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Hometown heroes anticipating Christchurch Special Olympics

Source: Radio New Zealand

Penny Towns celebrating a medal at the Special Olympics World Summer Games Athens 2011 SUPPLIED / SPECIAL OLYMPICS

High levels of anticipation and excitement have been expressed by some of the Special Olympics’ hometown heroes ahead of its return to Ōtautahi.

The national summer games open in Christchurch next week, the first time in 20 years the city had hosted the pinnacle event.

Held every four years, the games was a major high point for athletes with an intellectual disability.

This year’s edition would see 1205 participants from around the country converge on the Garden City across five days from 10 December.

They would be competing in a total of 10 sporting codes including athletics, basketball, bocce, equestrian, football, golf, indoor bowls, power-lifting, swimming and tenpin bowling.

Christchurch swimmer Caitlin Roy was set to compete in her first national event having taken the sport up three years ago.

Christchurch swimmer Caitlin Roy is set to compete at this year’s Special Olympics event. RNZ / Adam Burns

The 26-year-old, who has dyspraxia, said she had been putting in the hard yards ahead of the games.

“It’s incredible. Just to be, not quite on the world stage, but to be out there and just displaying what we can do as people with disabilities, that we’re not just in one small bubble, but thousands of us competing against each other in a brand new facility,” she said.

“It’s pretty great.”

Fellow local Andrew Oswin had more games’ experience to call upon ahead of his fifth national summer games appearance.

Andrew Oswin will be co-presenting at the opening ceremony of the Special Olympics RNZ / Adam Burns

Now 36, he competed at the Special Olympics as a teenager the last time it was held in Christchurch back in 2005,

“I have met and made friends throughout Special Olympics, at every National Summer Games,” he said.

Although he was gunning for a medal, Oswin explained the Special Olympics was about much more than winning, referencing the “athletes oath”.

The oath reads: Let me win. But if I cannot win, Let me be brave in the attempt.

“The oath means to be determined, to do your best. And whatever you do, get out there and do your team proud,” Oswin said.

Oswin was also handling presenting duties during both opening and closing ceremonies.

Hosting proceedings alongside him would be New Zealand media personality Jason Gunn and fellow athlete Georgia List.

Heading into the games, the 25-year-old swimmer said she was feeling a mix of excitement and nerves.

List was competing in the 100 metre breast-stroke, 50 metre freestyle, 50 metre back-stroke and the mixed medley relay events.

Swimmer Georgia List will be competing in her third national event at the Special Olympics RNZ / Adam Burns

“I started swimming when I was nine. So this is my third nationals that I’m going to,” she said.

“I’ve done many ribbon days and a couple of regionals. I’ve always loved swimming and of course growing up I’ve gotten better and better.”

This year’s games would be spread across six venues throughout Christchurch, including the brand-new and long awaited Parakiore recreation and sports centre.

In recent weeks, athletes had participated in a “test-run” of Parakiore’s pristine facilities.

The throng of participants would also be supported by family and about 700 event volunteers, in what was set to be a multi-million dollar economic boost for the local economy.

Special Olympics’ New Zealand chief executive Fran Scholey said it was a rare opportunity for both athletes and their families.

“[For most people] we participate for our school, maybe in athletics, and we then go to a regional athletics (competition). Our community don’t get that same opportunity,” she said.

“So we get family members that are seeing their son, their daughter, their brother, their sister, aunty, uncle competing for the very first time.

“Everyone should be able to be given the opportunity to represent their club or their school in such an environment.”

The Special Olympics would also serve as a post-quake showcase for Christchurch, in what was being touted as the biggest sporting event in the city this year.

More than 1700 people would be pouring into Christchurch specifically for the Special Olympics, Scholey said.

The opening ceremony for this year’s games would be held on 10 December at Christchurch’s Wolfbrook Arena.

The games close on 14 December with the closing ceremony to be followed by a dinner and disco event for athletes.

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One-man show as Black Sticks claim bronze medal

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sam Lane of New Zealand Black Sticks. Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz

The Black Sticks men have finished third at the Sultan Azlan Shah Cup in Malaysia.

New Zealand beat the hosts 6-1 in the play-off for third.

Sam Lane opened the scoring with two field goals in the opening quarter.

James Hickton added a third with a superb solo effort that included a 60 metre run and a reverse-stick shot to score his first international goal.

The rest of the game then belonged to Lane who added another three goals in the space of 15 minutes.

It included a penalty corner finish, a field goal and a penalty stroke.

The win capped an outstanding tournament for Lane, who finished the match with five goals and moved to the top of the tournament goal-scoring chart with nine.

It was also a special night for two players reaching major milestones. Malachi Buschl brought up his 50th cap for the Black Sticks, and Sam Lane’s five-goal haul lifted him to 51 international goals.

Belgium beat India 1-0 in the final.

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A one man show as Black Sticks claim bronze medal

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sam Lane of New Zealand Black Sticks. Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz

The Black Sticks men have finished third at the Sultan Azlan Shah Cup in Malaysia.

New Zealand beat the hosts 6-1 in the play-off for third.

Sam Lane opened the scoring with two field goals in the opening quarter.

James Hickton added a third with a superb solo effort that included a 60 metre run and a reverse-stick shot to score his first international goal.

The rest of the game then belonged to Lane who added another three goals in the space of 15 minutes.

It included a penalty corner finish, a field goal and a penalty stroke.

The win capped an outstanding tournament for Lane, who finished the match with five goals and moved to the top of the tournament goal-scoring chart with nine.

It was also a special night for two players reaching major milestones. Malachi Buschl brought up his 50th cap for the Black Sticks, and Sam Lane’s five-goal haul lifted him to 51 international goals.

Belgium beat India 1-0 in the final.

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Kiwi surgeon Dr Rowan Schouten behind international cricketers’ returns

Source: Radio New Zealand

Orthopaedic spine surgeon Dr Rowan Schouten performs a back proceedure. Supplied/Dr Rowan Schouten

Season-ending and sometimes career-threatening, a serious stress fracture can lead athletes from around the world to call on a Christchurch-based surgeon to get them back playing.

Referrals from some of cricket’s biggest names and a successful track record has made orthopaedic spine surgeon Dr Rowan Schouten a trusted ‘go-to guy’, when the careers of not only Black Caps, but Australian, Indian or European athletes are on the line.

Operating on cricketers’ backs is a minor part of Schouten’s public and private surgical role at St George’s Hospital, but it can have major consequences for a player’s livelihood.

Schouten operates on 2-3 cricketers a year.

“When you think we do 200-300 operations a year, it’s a very small niche market as far as our workload goes, but it’s been an interesting role that’s sort of built up over the last 10 years or so.”

While mostly involved with cricket, Schouten has contributed to other sports.

“We know the spine struggles to tolerate hyperextension loading in a lot of sports,” he said. “Stress fractures are not something that are isolated to cricket.

“We see it in dancers, we see it in other sports, like gymnastics and tennis and volleyball, basketball, but certainly cricketers, they’re probably the highest incidence of stress fractures among all athletes.”

Patient zero: Shane Bond

NZ bowler Shane Bond in action during his man of the match performance against Australia. PHOTOSPORT

Former Black Cap Shane Bond started it all and continues to be a big supporter of the surgeon’s work.

After years off the field with stress fractures in the middle of his international career, Bond was faced with early retirement or surgery.

The fast-bowler turned to Schouten’s mentor, Dr Grahame Inglis, who successfully pioneered a surgical technique, involving cables and screws, that got Bond back on the park.

Before Inglis retired, he sat Schouten down and shared his technique, and the reasons and indications why he would consider surgery.

Together, Inglis and Schouten operated on “a bunch of New Zealand cricketers in the same setting and then things started to go international, just before he retired”.

Former Black Cap Shane Bond, right, sends injured cricketers like Kyle Jamieson to Dr Rowan Schouten. Photosport

The Australians were the first overseas athletes to be “open to the idea of surgery for some of their trouble making fractures” and from there, others were on board.

“A lot of the cricketers around the world, when they have an injury, they reach out to others that have had similar,” Shouten said. “Shane is highly regarded, highly respected, coached throughout the world, so a lot of them contact Shane and then he brings that connection through to us.

“We’ve operated on over 25 professional cricketers worldwide now and it’s not an operation that’s done by a lot of people.

“Technically, it’s not a challenging operation, but it’s having that track record that is appealing and encourages people to come from other parts of the world to do it.

“There are other people around the world that were doing the surgery, in fact, but a lot of them all at the same time, they either retired or they were injured, and couldn’t operate.

“Out of sheer luck, we became the go-to for the world and, as a result, we’ve got some results that are now encouraging enough for other people to take the trip.”

Jasprit Bumrah of India. photosport

While Schouten does not talk about individuals, Indian fast bowlers Jasprit Bumrah, Prasidh Krishna and Mayank Yadav, as well as Australians Jason Behrendorff, James Pattinson, Cameron Green and Lance Morris, are among those publicly linked by their national body to the New Zealand doctors.

Black Caps Matt Henry and Kyle Jamieson are also on the list.

Australian tennis players and UK rugby players have sought Schouten out, as did an ice hockey player who did not require surgery, but wanted advice about how to manage load.

Treating an athlete is a team effort and Schouten said imaging from Pacific Radiology allowed him to make decisions about whether to operate or not.

NZ Cricket high performance physiotherapist Dayle Shackel helps manage rehab and recovery of all the international players, who spend two weeks in Christchurch afterwards, before check-ups become virtual.

Schouten has slowly modified and “tweaked” the technique over time, but the “essence of it is still the same”.

“Technology has changed quite a lot, even in the last 5-10 years,” he said. “We have computer navigation in theatre that helps us put everything that we need to insert accurately.

“There’s also a few other elements of the surgery that we’ve added in more recent years that I think are important for its success and to make sure that we deload that part of the spine that is so vulnerable to stress fractures.

“When players get back, not only do they have a fracture that’s a bit more robust from all the surgery, but also the loads that are going through that spine are not as significant.”

Bodies not made for cricket

Bowlers at all levels put their bodies through stress of varying degrees. John Davidson / www.photosport.nz

“It’s a tough gig, being a fast bowler, certainly from a spine perspective. When you think of each of these injuries taking 6-9 months to get back, it can be quite a big burden on these cricketers and their careers.”

A survey of New Zealand male fast-bowlers in domestic cricket a few years ago found “45 percent of them said they’d had a lumbar stress injury at one part of their career”.

“I was talking to Cricket Australia recently as well and they have good data on all their contracted players over the last 12-plus years. When you single out the male fast-bowlers that they have been looking after, they said 39 percent of them had had a lumbar stress injury over that time.”

A stress fracture does not happen out of the blue.

“They’re not one-off traumatic events,” Schouten said. “What happens is you load your spine and you get almost like a bruising of the bone to begin with.

“Then, if you continue to load it, that bruising then accumulates and builds up, and then you get some micro damage and eventually the micro damage, if you continue to load the spine, results in a full fracture.

“It’s a cumulative problem. Often, though, you don’t get symptoms until the very end of that sequence, but you can often see that the stress is brewing on MRI scans.”

As a preventative measure, some cricket governing bodies around the world, like the England & Wales Cricket Board, have their fast-bowlers get Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans at intervals throughout their season to see whether any stress is building up.

“Then you can make decisions about whether you select them for a particular tour or whether you ask them to rest for a particular period.

“The key risk factor for stress fractures is how much bowling the players do.

“These days, when you see the amount of cricket that’s being played, and the number of series and the number of formats being played, then quite quickly your workload can escalate significantly into dangerous territory.”

Schouten said overseas bowling loads were mapped out to make sure players did not reach dangerous levels “or they don’t have big spikes in workload”.

“They know that certain types of bowling actions puts people at risk of stress factors, so there’s even thoughts and analysis goes into bowling action, and how that can be improved to reduce the risks.”

Surgery is not for everyone

The “vast majority” of cricketers, playing at all levels of the game, who have stress fractures, do not require surgery, Schouten said.

“A 16-year-old playing schoolboy cricket is a different scenario than an international whose career is on the line and the timing’s important. When they’ve got big contracts coming up or World Cups to play, it’s a slightly different scenario.

“The need to operate on a professional cricketer for stress fractures is very limited and it is normally resolved non-operatively to start with, through a six-month rehab period.

“It’s only the ones that re-occur that we start to consider surgery, those trouble-making ones that keep people sidelined repeatedly for sequential 6-9 month periods.

“[With] surgery, we’ve had some success, but it’s not bulletproof and we need to recognise some of those players who, even post-surgery, have had recurrences.”

Schouten said those players were not completely healed by surgery were a reminder that the bowling action was stressful for the lumbar spine and that surgery was not the only part of the solution, as it “still requires a whole lot of effort from the players to keep themselves conditioned and to manage their workloads appropriately”.

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Puddle ball: Auckland FC lose unbeaten A-League tag

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rain-soaked Auckland FC captain Francis De Vries gestures during his side’s loss to Newcastle Jets. Photosport

Auckland’s unbeaten run in this year’s A-League season has ended with a 2-1 loss to Newcastle Jets in farcical conditions at Go Media Stadium.

A huge downpour with 20 minutes to go saw players frequently overrunning the ball, which was stopping in huge puddles, with Auckland FC goalkeeper Michael Woud pleading with officials for the game to be halted, because of the amount of water in his goal area.

Referee Alireza Faghani consulted with the captains in the 83rd minute, but then waved play on. There were no further goals and bottom-placed Newcastle took a shock victory over last year’s premiership plate winners.

Auckland FC were the only unbeaten team heading into the match, but they were outgunned on the day by the visitors, who shocked the locals, with Will Dobson smacking in a goal in just the third minute.

The Aucklanders levelled the score, with Louis Verstraete slamming the ball past goalkeeper James Delianov in the 14th minute, but the Auckland fans were silenced in the 42nd minute, when Lachlan Rose latched onto a pass from Dobson and scored to make it 2-1.

Auckland FC fans brave the rain during the A-League match against Newcastle Jets. PHOTOSPORT

The rain started to fall about the 30-minute mark, but halfway through the second half, it became a downpour and visibility was low, as players struggled to control the sodden ball.

Auckland had plenty of scoring chances, including Jesse Randall’s near equaliser in the 73rd minute, but they couldn’t capitalise on them.

Coming off a 1-1 draw with Brisbane last week and now a loss, the Aucklanders will face a buoyant Wellington Phoenix in the second New Zealand derby, after their 2-1 win over Adelaide United on Saturday. The Phoenix are yet beat Auckland FC.

Auckland captain Jake Brimmer said the conditions did not cost his side victory, it was their own effort.

“I think that one hurts the most out of everything,” he told Sky Sport. “I think we generally played well tonight, but didn’t take our chances and that cost us.”

Brimmer said it was difficult with the ball just stopping on the wet pitch.

“That’s no excuse, both teams had to deal with it and unfortunately we were second best on the night.”

Jets captain Kosta Grozos did not mind playing during the downpour.

“In the weather, the boys certainly enjoyed that one, it was fun.”

He said his team were a tightknit group and deserved the win.

“It means the world. Coming off some bad losses, this just makes up for it.”

The Jets move up from 12th to 10th after their win, while Auckland are in third place and the Phoenix sixth.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand