• 6 months ago
The Examiner's Rob Shaw, Josh Partridge, Ben Hann and Brian Allen unpack and discuss sports news from across Northern Tasmania. Video by Aaron Smith, Paul Scambler and Phillip Biggs (28/5/2024)
Transcript
00:00 Welcome to episode 54 of the Press Boxing Examiner's weekly sportscast.
00:11 We've got loads to get through this week.
00:13 We're going to begin with a huge weekend of footy.
00:16 Josh, I was at Windsor Park at the soccer, but I could hear stuff going on over at the
00:21 footy.
00:22 What happened?
00:23 Yeah, well, Launceston were leading by 12 points with 89 seconds to go against Kingborough.
00:28 So obviously they won.
00:29 Nah.
00:30 Oh dear.
00:31 That was very similar to the Hawthorne Port Adelaide game a couple of weeks ago.
00:35 Yeah, so Kingborough needed to score three times within those 89 seconds and they did.
00:39 So they kicked a goal.
00:40 There was a point and then Lonnie kicked it out.
00:43 Needed, thought be said, about three inches away from the boundary line.
00:47 Didn't get across and Kingborough obviously came back and second gamer Ryan Bradburn kicked
00:53 the goal, which would have been fantastic on his second game.
00:56 The atmosphere was crazy.
00:58 How many seconds were left when he kicked it?
01:00 I reckon it would have had to have been one or two because when they went back to the
01:03 middle and threw the ball up, the siren went when the ball was in midair.
01:06 So yeah, it was truly last second stuff.
01:10 So I heard the roar and the siren.
01:13 Well, it was virtually the winning goal, wasn't it?
01:15 Yeah, it was.
01:16 Absolutely.
01:17 There was no time left at all.
01:20 And NTFA, big weekend for NTFA footy.
01:23 Talk us through Meander Valley then.
01:26 Yeah, it was probably slightly happier scenes out at Westbury than it was for Launceston.
01:34 Meander Valley won their first game in just over a thousand days, so pretty much three
01:38 years.
01:39 It's been a lot of tough losses in that period as well, not losing by small margins, a lot
01:43 of really big losses in that time.
01:46 It was a really great scene out there.
01:48 There was a lot of really passionate support.
01:50 Will Stoltenberg was celebrating on the sidelines with every moment, with every kick pretty
01:55 much and I just want to touch on an emotional moment after the game.
01:58 Caleb Williams, who's one of their players, appears to have broken his pelvis halfway
02:02 through the game and it was a really great emotional moment between him and Will as the
02:08 siren went.
02:09 They were hugging, it was on the back page of the Sunday Examiner.
02:12 Yeah, it was great to be a part of and it's sort of what country footy is all about, seeing
02:17 community wrap around a club like that.
02:19 I also saw a video on social media of one of the Meander Suns players getting this final
02:23 score tattooed on their leg.
02:25 So it's fair to say that the Meander Valley players enjoyed their night and enjoyed breaking
02:31 their drought.
02:32 Yeah, the President sort of said, "This is not where we want to stop.
02:37 This is just the start of hopefully what's to come."
02:40 But breaking that drought and getting that win is really massive for the club.
02:45 So it's, from a neutral perspective, great to see.
02:48 And speaking of drought-breaking results, Brian, what happened at Longford?
02:53 So Longford were beaten at home for the first time since late 2021 and they were beaten
02:59 by Bridge North by about three goals.
03:01 But it came after Longford scored their first victory at Rotorilie in about five years,
03:08 just the week before.
03:09 So we've got a couple of statistical quirks in consecutive weeks and I think that this
03:17 has got you thinking, mate, about bringing back a certain segment.
03:20 Oh no, here we go.
03:22 Get ready for the sting that I hope is going to come up here.
03:24 No pressure, Aaron.
03:25 [Storm]
03:26 Pandy's Hard Hitters is making its hard-hitting return and our question this week, everyone,
03:35 is what is the toughest challenge in sport?
03:38 I'm going to start off with you, Josh.
03:40 Well, my mind went to Tiger Woods at major golf championships.
03:45 So from 1998 to 2005, he made 142 consecutive cuts just on the PGA Tour alone.
03:52 But at major championships from 1997 to 2003, he was 126 under par and the next best was
04:01 251 shots behind him.
04:04 So Tiger went alright.
04:06 He goad alright.
04:07 Wow.
04:08 What about you, Rob?
04:10 Coming from my soccer background, I can't stand them, but I'll have to say Manchester
04:13 City at home.
04:14 They last lost at home in December 2022 and they didn't lose with Rodri playing since
04:22 February last year until the cup final at the weekend.
04:25 And he ground.
04:26 Yes.
04:27 If Rodri played, they did not lose and he played nearly every game.
04:31 And he wears his shorts so high up, he really is a Harry Hypanx.
04:35 So I think if you can get away wearing shorts like that and never losing, that's pretty
04:38 impressive.
04:39 And for you, Brian?
04:40 Yeah, I'll go with tennis for something different.
04:43 Like obviously Novak Djokovic at the Australian Open over the last 15 years has been almost
04:50 unbeatable.
04:51 And I'm going to go on a similar theme.
04:52 Rafael Nadal has 112 to 4 record now after last night at Roland Garros since he first
04:59 started in 2005, I want to say.
05:01 It's pretty remarkable.
05:02 And a quick shout out to the All Blacks as well, who didn't lose at Eden Park for three
05:06 decades.
05:07 Fair point.
05:08 Speaking of tennis, you boys have been working on the latest development at the Regional
05:12 Tennis Centre.
05:13 They've finally got their clubhouse.
05:14 Can you just give us a summary of what's happened there?
05:16 Yeah, it's been a really long winded project.
05:19 You would know, Rob.
05:21 It's been more than a decade in the making.
05:23 So effectively on Friday, it was announced to the tennis club members that the people,
05:31 the contract effectively been handed out to Fair Brothers Group and construction is actually
05:35 meant to start Monday just gone, the 26th I think that might be.
05:40 And yeah, it's a huge moment for the club.
05:44 It's been waiting on this now single story clubhouse for obviously such a long time and
05:50 it's going to bring back the Launceston International, which obviously has been played in Burnie
05:53 the last couple of years.
05:54 So it's genuinely really good news for the tennis community up here in Launceston.
05:58 Yeah, it's been so long in the making.
06:01 I remember when it opened, I can't remember what year it was, but Sam Stozer came and
06:05 it was meant to be the next big thing in regional tennis in Australia.
06:09 And then basically since then there hasn't been anything done to the court.
06:13 And if anything, they've lost courts because they had the indoor centre at that time as
06:16 well.
06:17 So this will finally give tennis, I think, the shot in the arm that it possibly needs
06:22 in Tasmania and Northern Tasmania especially.
06:25 I think you're spot on.
06:26 I remember interviewing Sam Stozer that day.
06:28 I can't remember what year it was either.
06:29 But everyone thought this is Launceston's tennis problem solved at last.
06:34 And a few years later, we lose a major international tournament because we haven't got good enough
06:37 facilities.
06:38 So it all comes down to this clubhouse.
06:39 Yeah, I think it all comes down to you can't be what you can't see.
06:43 It's a bit of a cliche phrase, but I think it's true.
06:45 Launceston tennis has really suffered because you don't have this high end tournament coming
06:49 through where kids can come and watch and see what tennis can be.
06:54 And I think that's why we find the sport where it is at the moment.
06:57 We're just going to end with an Olympic update as well.
07:00 It's that time of year in an Olympic year where the squads are being named for Paris
07:05 at the moment.
07:06 And we've got lots of Tasmanians in relation to it.
07:08 I did a story this week.
07:09 I interviewed Jacob Despard, who's a Hobart sprinter, and he's doing very well this year.
07:14 He's actually the fastest Australian this year.
07:17 And so he was part of the team that qualified a 4x100 relay for Paris.
07:23 But it's one thing to qualify it.
07:25 It's another thing to then be selected for it.
07:26 And it's quite a complicated process.
07:28 Yeah.
07:29 Tell me a bit more about it.
07:30 I suppose there's one group that qualifies for them, but there's probably a fifth elephant
07:34 in the room, I suppose, that's been called.
07:36 That is exactly the expression that Jacob used.
07:39 So the four that qualified for the team were Jacob, Caleb Law, Sebastian Sultana, and Josh
07:45 Azapati.
07:46 And they went to the Bahamas for the World Relay Championships.
07:49 And they had to finish first or second, and they finished second in their race.
07:52 So they qualified a team.
07:53 The complication now comes in who makes the final make-up.
07:57 And to quote Jacob, "The elephant in the room here is Rowan Browning, but he does not come
08:01 to relay training."
08:02 So there's a bit of controversy, obviously, involved in this.
08:06 And Browning was the one who was part of the 4x1 team at the last Commonwealth Games and
08:12 stumbled as he started the anchor leg, and so they didn't finish.
08:16 I think there's a concern that the same might happen again because he doesn't go to relay
08:19 training.
08:20 He's undoubtedly one of the fastest sprinters, but the point that Despold was making was
08:24 that the fastest four runners aren't necessarily the best four relay runners.
08:28 Yeah, to read your piece, Rob, it's pretty interesting just looking beyond the characters
08:35 involved.
08:36 I think there's, in Australia, our culture around sport.
08:40 Obviously, we interview that many athletes almost every time.
08:44 So look, I know it's hard to talk about yourself, so we'll ask them about the team aspect.
08:49 And right down to that stuff, culturally in Australia, we are about, in cricket, the XR,
08:56 all 11 players and what they can contribute.
08:59 And we're looking at the very end of the last tail end that can do something for the Aussie
09:05 team.
09:06 And we're not really about Messiahs in sport.
09:10 And so when I read this, I was like, "Oh, I think this taps into that Aussie culture
09:17 of like, "Hang on a minute, these guys are the best team.
09:19 They're the best four.
09:20 They've trained together.
09:21 It's specific training."
09:23 So yeah, that was just my take on it.
09:26 Pardo, did you have any thoughts?
09:27 I was just going to say, this is truly the biggest story in Australian athletics at the
09:31 moment, and possibly even Australian sport going into the Olympics.
09:34 So congratulations, Rob.
09:35 I don't want to blow it up yet, but no, that's a really good story.
09:39 And to get Jacob's point of view on it, especially considering Rowan and Rowan's status in Australian
09:46 athletics as well, it's massive.
09:47 I think you touched on it just quickly.
09:51 They know each other really well, which means their baton passing is really smooth.
09:56 That's faster, or perhaps more valuable than a slightly faster runner in and of itself.
10:01 And that's another sort of Australian phrase that comes to mind is a team of champions
10:06 is not as good as a champion team.
10:08 I think that's probably fitting for this occasion.
10:10 Yeah, that's spot on.
10:11 It'll be interesting to see which way they go.
10:14 All the other sports are also on the verge of announcing Olympic squads in the next month
10:17 or two, and the games kick off, I think, on July 24th.
10:20 Let's watch this space and we'll see what happens.
10:23 Thanks for tuning in.
10:24 We'll see you next week.
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