Live rugby: All Blacks v England updates, commentary, analysis

Source: Radio New Zealand

The All Blacks take on England at Allianz Stadium in London’s Twickenham.

Recent history is on the visitors’ side, with the All Blacks winning the last five games against England at the London ground. The hosts’ last victory over New Zealand at Twickenham was in 2012.

The All Blacks are coming off the back of a shaky win over Scotland, in which they almost blew a 17-0 halftime lead.

Kickoff is at 4am NZT.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Billy Proctor Kerry Marshall / www.photosport.nz

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

Governor-General Dame Cindy Kio visits Antarctica’s Scott Base

Source: Radio New Zealand

Antarctica NZ chief executive Jordy Hendrikx said hosting the Governor-General was an honour. Antactica NZ/ Anthony Powell

The Governor-General has travelled to Antarctica’s Scott Base to see the work happening on the ice.

During the visit, Dame Cindy Kiro and husband Dr Richard Davies also visited Scott’s Hut and Shackleton’s Hut, and saw the Antarctic Heritage Trust’s preservation work.

Antarctica New Zealand chief executive Jordy Hendrikx said it was an honour to host the pair, who arrived on Friday.

“The main purpose of the visit is for them to come and see what we do here in Antarctica, and understand the variety of tasks that we have from science to environmental protection, to heritage, and also the operations of the base, and how we maintain the operations and run all those services from a small footprint here in Antarctica,” he said.

Dame Cindy was the first Governor-General to visit Antarctica since 2003.

One of the most notable projects was the redevelopment of Scott Base.

“A number of these facilities are getting to end of life, and we’re in the process of building a new and fit-for-purpose facility for the next generation of scientists, and to ensure our continued presence here in Antarctica on behalf of New Zealand,” Hendrikx said.

Dame Cindy was the first Governor-General to visit Antarctica since 2003. BC Photography / David Rowland

The redevelopment plan was revised last year, after the budget blew out to $498 million from $250m.

Hendrikx said the team was working on a detailed business case to be taken to Cabinet in mid-2026. It proposed a three-stage redevelopment of Scott Base over the next 20-50 years, starting with the oldest and most dilapidated facilities.

“This year, in terms of physical work, we have a number of enabling works underway,” he said. “We have some civil works underway, so that’s preparing the platform for next year, placing of the piles and then moving forward into the main construction in subsequent years.”

Several science projects were also happening on the base.

“This is our peak science period, where the majority of our scientists are coming through the base, and heading out into the field to collect samples, set out instruments or pick up instruments, and download years or months of data collection in Antarctica,” Hendrikx said.

“We have a team looking at the health of the Ross Sea ecosystem. They’re doing that by understanding the behaviour and patterns of foraging of both the emperor penguins and weddell seals.

“The idea here is, if we can better understand the behaviours of these large mesopredators, we get a proxy for the overall health and vitality of the Ross Sea ecosystem, and how that might be responding to climate change.”

Other projects included looking at how sea ice was changing in response to climate change, he said.

“It’s a very busy base, and a real buzzing atmosphere of excitement, enthusiasm and new discovery happening at the moment.”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Quarter of all trucks tested in blitz fail brake test

Source: Radio New Zealand

Authorities tested the brakes of 58 vehicles and 15 of them were faulty. siwakorn / 123RF

The brakes on more than a quarter of trucks tested in a recent police operation on central North Island roads were found to be faulty.

Between 3-6 November, the police inspected 910 “heavy vehicles and trailers” at checkpoints on State Highway Five between Napier and Taupō, State Highway One at Turangi and State Highway 3 at Te Kuiti.

Of those, 165 had defects that included not being up to certificate of fitness standards, road user charges compliance, speeding, logbook problems and insecure loading.

The police said some were easy-to-fix problems that could be spotted by daily “walk around” checks, like faulty lights, brakes and wheels needing attention.

Authorities tested the brakes of 58 vehicles and 15 of them – 26 percent – were faulty.

“Nobody wants a heavy motor vehicle, often weighing over 50000kg, coming towards you with defective brakes,” said Senior Sergeant Lex Soepnel, from the police commercial vehicle safety team.

The police were focused on preventing crashes and not “picking up the pieces” afterwards, he said.

“What we’re asking for is simple. We have rules in place to keep all road users safe and we’re asking heavy vehicle operators to meet those standards.”

The police issued 141 infringement notices after the operation.

“We need everyone to ensure that their vehicles are maintained to a safe and compliant standard, and that drivers are well rested and not fatigued,” said Soepnel.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Multiple dead in Manawatū house fire that closed section of State Highway One

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sanson is at the juncture of SH1 and SH3, between Palmerston North and Whanganui. Google Maps/Screenshot

Police have confirmed several fatalities at the scene of a house fire in Sanson on Saturday afternoon.

RNZ understands three children were missing after the fire.

Emergency services were called to the property southwest of the town about 2.30pm.

Fire and Emergency NZ have now handed the scene to police, who will commence an investigation into the circumstances of the fire, said Manawatū Area Commander Inspector Ross Grantham.

Police confirmed they were not seeking anyone else in relation to the fire.

State Highway One was expected to re-open by about 8pm Saturday.

A police scene guard will remain in place overnight, with officers to return on Sunday morning.

Flames engulfed the home, closing the highway between Phillips Street and Speedy Road.

Fire and Emergency said the fire was now extinguished.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

State Highway 30 shut near Whakatāne following crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ/Reece Baker

A two-vehicle crash has closed a section of State Highway 30 in the Bay of Plenty. RNZ / REECE BAKER

State Highway 30, inland from Whakatāne, is shut following a serious crash on Saturday evening.

Police were called to the two-vehicle crash near the Kawerau Road intersection, close to the township of Te Teko, just before 5pm.

They said it appeared people have been seriously injured and the road was expected to be blocked for some time.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Fatalities at scene of fire, Sanson

Source: New Zealand Police

Attributable to Inspector Ross Grantham, Manawatu Area Commander:

Police can confirm there have been several fatalities at the scene of a house fire in Sanson today.

Emergency services were called to the property southwest of the town about 2:30pm.

Fire and Emergency NZ have now handed the scene to Police, who will commence an investigation phase in relation to the circumstances of the fire.

Police can confirm we are not seeking anyone else in relation to the fire.

State Highway 1 is expected to reopen by around 8pm.

A Police scene guard will remain in place overnight, with officers to return tomorrow.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre

All Whites need to learn ‘dark arts’ before Football World Cup

Source: Radio New Zealand

All Whites coach Darren Bazeley. Photosport

All Whites v Colombia

Sunday, 16 November

Kickoff 1pm

Chase Stadium, Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Live blog updates on RNZ Sport

Much separates New Zealand and Colombia on a football field.

Not only are the two nations 72 places apart in the FIFA world rankings, the approach to the game differs in South America, compared to Oceania.

Their flair and goalscoring is something the All Whites can’t easily replicate, and would be foolish to try, but the region’s reputation for football’s “dark arts” and “playing on the edge” is of interest to All Whites coach Darren Bazeley.

“It’s something that we probably need to keep developing ourselves,” he said. “That sort of street game, street knowledge, game intelligence at times, but we’re also really happy with a group of honest, hardworking players that we have in the squad.”

Bazeley does not want the his players caught up in incidents that can lead to ill-discipline, when they play Colombia in Florida on Sunday.

“We’ve got real good discipline throughout the squad, but there’s going to be some challenging moments, and players at times need to get involved and look after themselves, look after each other and get through those tough moments.

“We don’t want to be losing players [to red cards], that’s for sure. That would make things really difficult for us.”

Michael Boxall is aware of the “crafty” Colombian players. www.photosport.nz

Defender Michael Boxall is a senior player in the All Whites side and, playing in Major League Soccer in the United States, he has come up against players similar to those New Zealand will encounter across the November international window against Colombia and Ecuador.

“It’s one of those things where you can give advice, but in the heat of the moment, you could find players who could be crafty and get under your skin,” Boxall said.

“I think this is just a good opportunity to experience this in a friendly match, as opposed to at a World Cup that could have massive consequences on the team.

“We’ll all have words with the whole squad about how to approach it, but until you’re really in it and experience it firsthand, we won’t really find out how you deal with it.”

Aside from the niggle, the All Whites will also face attacking threats from Colombia that will challenge the defensive structure.

Luis Díaz of Colombia could cause the All Whites problems. Photosport

“The past handful of games that I’ve played with the like of Finn Surman, Tyler [Bindon] Franny [Francis de Vries] as well on my left side, everyone has worked their arses off as a group to make it easier on each other.

“I think, against top players like these, it’s never an individual performance that’s going to shut down, for example Luis Díaz. I think it’s the whole collective, not just the back four and goalkeeper.

“We understand what we have to do. It’s the whole 11 guys keeping things as compact as we can that’s going to make things more difficult than expecting one player to just pocket one of the more inform players in the world.”

Bazeley had to make late changes to the squad and they will look to find new ways to score goals without leading goalscorer and English Premier League striker Chris Wood.

“We’ve got some players that are runners,” he said. “They run in behind really well, the timing of their runs is really good.

“We’ve got into a position over the last year, where we’re putting a lot of balls into the box for Woodsy, and trying to feed him and replicate some of the service he gets at his club, and that’s hard to replace.

“We’ve definitely talked around the type of balls that we feed into the box for these different strikers, because they are different. We’re going to look to try and get into different type of areas, and maybe provide some different type of delivery for whoever.

“We’ve got a style of play that we don’t tweak too much away from. We’re obviously aware of a lot of [Colombia’s] strengths, and we’ve raised them and we’ve looked at how we can help defend them.

“We need everybody to be at the top of their game and to work together, help each other. There’s going to be some tough moments, they’ve got some good players, but if everybody’s in that frame of mind to work together and to work hard, we can deal with that.”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

House fire closes section of State Highway One in Manawatū

Source: Radio New Zealand

Emergency services were called to a house fire in Sanson on Saturday afternoon. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

A house fire has closed a section of State Highway One in Manawatū on Saturday afternoon.

Emergency services were called to the property southwest of Sanson at about 2.30pm.

Flames engulfed a home, closing the highway between Phillips Street and Speedy Road.

Motorists were advised to follow diversions.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Two more yellow-legged hornet queens found in Aukland’s Glenfield brings total to nine

Source: Radio New Zealand

Yellow-legged hornets are an invasive species, and a danger to local honey and wild bees. Biosecurity NZ

Several more predator yellow-legged hornets have been found in Auckland, including two queens.

A further two nests have been located – one the size of a cricket ball and the other the size of a golf ball.

One of them had a queen, two worker hornets and two adults about to emerge, while the other was less developed and contained only a single queen.

Both nests, found in Glenfield about 100m apart in the same area as earlier finds, were spotted during intensifying search efforts.

Yellow-legged hornets are an invasive species, and a danger to local honey and wild bees.

The number of confirmed queen hornets found rises to nine.

The Ministry for Primary Industries said it was stepping up the number of people on the ground.

“This week, we introduced additional teams to methodically check common nesting areas close to where hornets have been detected in Glenfield and Birkdale,” Biosecurity New Zealand north commissioner Mike Inglis said.

“We are stepping up our numbers on the ground to widen the search as required, and have more than 20 focused on enhanced searches and more than 100 staff across MPI involved in this response.”

Traps were being checked each day, but as of Friday, no hornets have been found in them.

MPI said its response included:

  • Setting more than 180 traps in targeted areas where females have been found. Every trap is checked daily. No hornets have been found in traps to date. Additional traps are being added in areas where queen hornets are found, so the number of traps will continue to increase.
  • Introducing protein bait traps alongside existing traps.
  • Establishing a Technical Advisory Group (TAG) of independent scientific experts with expertise in the biology, ecology, and management of social wasps. The TAG has been considering options for ongoing work.
  • Encouraging public surveillance, including sending staff into the community to raise awareness. This weekend, staff will again be at local markets to share information about the hornet.
  • The public are begin urged to report suspected hornets or nests but only if they have a specimen, or a clear photo, or have spotted a possible nest.

How to make a report

  • By going to report.mpi.govt.nz
  • By calling Biosecurity New Zealand’s exotic pest and disease hotline on 0800 809 966.
  • Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Road blocked, SH 30, Te Teko, Whakatāne

Source: New Zealand Police

State Highway 30, Te Teko, Whakatāne is blocked following a serious crash this evening.

Police were called to the crash, near the Kawerau Road intersection, around 4:50pm.

It appears there were two vehicles involved and initial indicators are that there are serious injuries.

The Serious Crash Unit has been advised and the road is expected to be blocked for some time while emergency services work at the scene.

Motorists are advised to avoid the area where possible and to expect delays.

ENDS