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Tag: backs

  • Alison Shanks backs Zwift as legitimate Olympic Esport as new event takes centre stage

    Alison Shanks backs Zwift as legitimate Olympic Esport as new event takes centre stage

    “The legitimacy of Zwift and of Esports has been confirmed by the IOC [International Olympic Committee]. Any sport that is being sanctioned by the Olympics is legitimised in that sense.”

    Easily set up in your living room, bedroom, or garage, Zwift offers amateur and professional athletes a convenient way to achieve their workout goals from home.

    It has revolutionised cycling by providing immersive and interactive ways to work out. Instead of staring at a wall, you can cycle with a smart device in front of you and connect with millions of other athletes worldwide through the Zwift app.

    Amateur and expert cyclists can enter events, complete workouts, race against others, collect PowerUps, and study tactics to improve their fitness.

    Athletes warm up prior to the Zwift cycling finals on day two of the Olympic Esports Week at Suntec Singapore Convention & Exhibition Centre in Singapore last June. Photo / Getty Images
    Athletes warm up prior to the Zwift cycling finals on day two of the Olympic Esports Week at Suntec Singapore Convention & Exhibition Centre in Singapore last June. Photo / Getty Images

    Shanks, who is a committee member at the New Zealand Esports Federation, said a lot of her work revolves around trying to break down the perception that Esport is just video gaming.

    “When we think about Esports as a real continuum from gaming on one end, but then we come back to simulators and then virtual sports – which is essentially where the likes of Zwift stand and there’s a real physical component to it still … For me, like that’s absolutely why Zwift belongs in the Olympics.”

    Shanks likened virtual biking to her early career experience in 2012, when she was part of the first women’s team pursuit. What was once groundbreaking has now become the norm.

    “Where everyone is always slightly averse to change, but when you look back and actually we’re always evolving and [Zwift today] is just another aspect of the evolution.”

    Zwift will be an event at the 2025 inaugural Olympic Esports Games. Photo / Zwift
    Zwift will be an event at the 2025 inaugural Olympic Esports Games. Photo / Zwift

    Wes Sulzberger, a former pro cyclist turned Australia and New Zealand manager for virtual cycling platform Zwift, explained the concept as “an opportunity to engage people into sport from any age”.

    “From grassroots to anyone keeping active and trying to live a healthy lifestyle. My father’s 73 and with my mum, they both jump on Zwift.”

    Indoor cycling involves attaching a road bike frame to a smart trainer. By connecting a smart device, cyclists can access various modes through platforms like Zwift. These modes include global racing events, structured workouts and casual rides, offering diverse options for indoor training.

    Sulzberger described how screen time gets a whole new meaning when it’s helping people get active.

    “For younger generations [indoor cycling] may be something you enjoy more or maybe more used to with the digital side of things, online and social – which may lead to them to grabbing a bike [outside] as well as riding with Zwift.”

    Conor English, president of the New Zealand Esports Federation, told the Herald they are currently working through what qualifying for the Olympic Esport Games will look like, but regardless he’s excited to see the E Blacks finally compete on the world’s biggest stage.

    “The Olympic Committee have said that it’s a legitimate sport to the extent that we’re going to have its own Olympic Games. There’s been discussion for a few years about ‘is digital competition a legitimate sport or not?’” English questioned.

    “It absolutely is, the Olympic committee have said it is.”

    The safety of cycling indoors was what attracted Kiwi Commonwealth Games athlete Ella Harris to Zwift.

    Harris won the Zwift global stationary trainer competition in 2018, which earned her a contract with Women’s World Tour’s Canyon-SRAM team.

    The Christchurch-born athlete went on to have a competitive road cycling career, including winning the national Under-23 time trial in 2020 and competing at the 2022 Birmingham Games.

    However, after a career riddled with injury, Harris told the Herald she’s considering a move back to Zwift racing.

    Reporter Bonnie Jansen tries Zwift. Photo / Ben Dickens
    Reporter Bonnie Jansen tries Zwift. Photo / Ben Dickens

    “[E-biking] is just simple and it’s safe and you know what you’re going to get with Zwift because any situation when you’re riding your bike outside, there are so many different variables and things that you can’t control,” Harris said.

    Whereas when you’re riding indoors, you don’t have the possibility of distracted drivers crashing, or other people doing things that cause you harm, she said.

    “You’re in control of your own destiny.”

    With high-performance competition experience, Harris confirmed racing on a stationary bike isn’t easy.

    “There are so many in-game features that you need to learn and these aren’t features that don’t require any physical exertion.

    “It’s an extreme physical test and it’s exhausting. It’s brutal. The physiology of people who compete on Zwift is insane because you basically have nowhere to hide.

    “It’s almost like your physical ability is amplified because you are taking out of the equation many other variables that you might have on the road, like being able to position yourself in the peloton, and being able to physically handle your bike.

    “Overall, the discipline is a lot more weighted towards your physical ability. You can’t necessarily just take a rider from the road and expect them to do well because you have to know the little, subtle nuances of the game … And learn the actual craft.”

    Bonnie Jansen is a multimedia journalist in the NZME sports team. She’s a football commentator and co-host of the Football Fever podcast, and was part of the Te Rito cadetship scheme before becoming a fulltime journalist.

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  • Australian father of teen sextortion victim backs banning young children from social media

    Australian father of teen sextortion victim backs banning young children from social media

    MELBOURNE, Australia — Wayne Holdsworth became an advocate for banning Australian children younger than 16 from social media because his son took his own life after falling victim to an online sextortion scam.

    Mac Holdsworth died last year at his Melbourne family home at the age of 17 after a 47-year-old Sydney man who purported to be an 18-year-old woman demanded money for an intimate image the boy had shared.

    Since then, the grieving father has taken his tragic story to around 20 schools to warn students of the risks of social media.

    “I saw firsthand the damage that social media could do. I saw Mac, my son, get sexually extorted on social media,” Holdsworth said. “His mental health deteriorated at a rapid rate.”

    Online predators began approaching the teenager before his 16th birthday and his father believes such a ban could have saved his life.

    Australia’s House of Representatives on Wednesday voted for such a ban and the Senate is expected to make it law soon.

    Holdsworth said most of the 3,000 students he’s spoken to, from age 12 to 17, agree with a ban on children under the age of 16.

    “They come up to me and they say, ‘I’m so glad that this is going to be implemented,’” Holdsworth said. “Even the kids see it now that they’re going to be protected from those predators outside that are preying on them.”

    He said three girls approached him after a school address on Monday to tell him that they were being subjected to sextortion. One had already handed over 2,500 Australian dollars ($1,600) of her parents’ money to a blackmailer.

    Holdsworth said he was the first adult they had confided in.

    “The parent won’t know until the credit card statement comes out,” he said.

    “So it’s prevalent. It happened last night and it’ll happen tonight,” he added.

    Holdsworth described the government plan to ban children younger than 16 from social media as “absolutely essential for the safety of our children.”

    But not all parents are convinced that banning young children from social media is the answer.

    Critics say the legislation was rushed through Parliament without adequate scrutiny, would not work, would create privacy risks for users of all ages and would take away parents’ authority to decide what’s best for their children.

    They also argue the ban would isolate children, deprive them of positive aspects of social media, drive children to the dark web, make children too young for social media reluctant to report harms they encounter, and take away incentives for platforms to make online spaces safer.

    Independent Sydney lawmaker Kylea Tink on Tuesday became the first member of the House of Representatives to speak publicly against the bill, which would make platforms including TikTok, Facebook, Snapchat, Reddit, X and Instagram liable for fines of up to 50 million Australian dollars ($33 million) for systemic failures to prevent young children from holding accounts.

    “As a mom of three young adults … I’m very aware of the negative impacts of social media and the challenges of parenting in this digital world,” Tink told Parliament. “I also recognize, however, that my children are digital natives and are very literate about how these platforms work. For this reason, I encourage everyone involved in this debate to ensure they are listening to the voices of young Australians when it comes to this decision-making process rather than assuming that the grownups in the room know best.”

    Tink was among 13 lawmakers who voted against the bill in the House on Wednesday. They were overwhelmed by 102 legislators who voted for it.

    The platforms have urged a Senate committee that examined the legislation on Monday to delay a vote until after a government-commissioned evaluation of age assurance technologies is completed next June.

    The four-hour committee meeting on Monday attracted 15,000 written submissions.

    X Corp. told the committee that billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk’s platform had “serious concerns as to the lawfulness of the bill,” including its compatibility with the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

    “There is no evidence that banning young people from social media will work and to make it law in the form proposed is highly problematic,” X said.

    Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, said the legislation was “inconsistent with what Australian parents have told us that they want, which is a simple and effective way for them to set controls and manage their teens’ online experience.”

    Under the bill, parental consent for children to use social media does not override the ban.

    Lizzie O’Shea, chair of the Digital Rights Watch charity, which aims to uphold the digital rights of Australians, said she was appalled by the process and limited timeframe the government used to pass such significant and contentious legislation.

    She said she was very aware of the serious risks posed by social media platforms, “but I do not support a ban personally because I understand both the limits of that particular policy and the expert evidence that is coming out from people who work in this space about the problems for young people being excluded from those spaces,” O’Shea said.

    Her concerns centered on privacy, negative mental health impacts on excluded children and the possibility that young children would find ways to access social media spaces that would become even less child friendly as a result of the ban.

    “I’m profoundly aware of the dangers of large social media platforms running a certain kind of business model that prioritizes data extraction and exploitation of vulnerability over the public interest or the building of community and the protection of democracy,” she said.

    Swinburne University digital media expert Belinda Barnet, who supports the ban, feels she is part of a minority among professionals in the digital field.

    “I like it mainly because I think many of the social media platforms as they exist right now are not suitable environments for young children,” she said.

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  • Ex-Football Ferns coach Tom Sermanni backs Beverley Priestman as new New Zealand coach after Fifa ban

    Ex-Football Ferns coach Tom Sermanni backs Beverley Priestman as new New Zealand coach after Fifa ban

    Earlier this month, following an independent review commissioned by Canada Soccer, the national governing body said Priestman and the other two individuals currently suspended by Fifa would not return. In July, Priestman apologised and accepted accountability.

    Beverly Priestman. Photo / Getty Images
    Beverly Priestman. Photo / Getty Images

    Experienced Scottish mentor Sermanni, who is the current interim coach for the Australian Matildas, believes Priestman’s punishment for the act was extreme.

    “It just happened to be the wrong thing at the wrong time in the wrong tournament,” he continued.

    “Had that happened somewhere else at some [other] time, it probably wouldn’t have created the hysteria that it did. [I’m] not condoning those things but I think the punishment exceeded the crime in this case.”

    He hoped New Zealand Football (NZF) could look past the recent incident and seriously consider the British national for the Ferns head coach role.

    “Bev is a very good person and she’s an excellent coach. She runs good programmes. She’s been dedicated to the women’s game, I’d be very disappointed if the drone thing doesn’t go away and she [doesn’t] get herself back in the game.”

    Tom Sermanni, former Football Ferns coach. Photo / Getty Images
    Tom Sermanni, former Football Ferns coach. Photo / Getty Images

    Priestman led the Canada women’s national team to gold at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. She is also a former assistant of England’s Lionesses.

    Sermanni said the British coach is suitable for the Ferns given her strong Kiwi ties as NZF’s former head of football between 2009-2013. She’s also married to Emma Humphries, a former Football Ferns midfielder.

    “It’s helpful if someone comes and understands how the Kiwis work. I see a lot of connection between the Kiwis, the Canadians and the Australians – there are all very similar characteristics within those teams. Whoever comes in and takes over, it’s important to be able to tap into the things that make it work best with the actual Kiwi players.”

    Michael Mayne current New Zealand interim head coach. Photo / Getty Images
    Michael Mayne current New Zealand interim head coach. Photo / Getty Images

    The New Zealand senior women’s national team is on the hunt for a new coach after Jitka Klimkova resigned as the Football Ferns head coach in September, leaving her seven-year contract early following a third-party independent employment investigation.

    Eleven players told the Herald last month about issues within the group that had been ongoing for more than two years. They also expressed concerns to the sport’s national body over allegations of inappropriate behaviour towards a player by outgoing coach Klimkova.

    Sermanni, who took on the role in 2018, understands the challenges any new coach will face succeeding Klimkova. The Scot replaced Andreas Heraf (2017-18), who was suspended following player complaints about the environment and culture.

    His advice to whoever succeeded Klimkova should address from the get-go how the team would operate moving forward.

    “One of the first things to say to the players is … How you’re going to manage and what your expectations are within that. Then the key thing, as with any management, is being consistent in those things.

    Sermanni said New Zealand assistant and current interim coach Michael Mayne should also be a top candidate.

    “Michael’s been in the system, he knows the players and he did very well at the Olympics. He seems to have a good relationship with the players.

    “He certainly should be somebody that comes very much into consideration. Often countries make a mistake by overlooking domestic options.”

    Meanwhile, Sermanni ruled out former Australian coach Tony Gustavsson – who led the Matildas to the World Cup semifinals in 2023 – as the next Ferns gaffer.

    “Tony’s not going to take a job in New Zealand.

    “I think it’d be a mistake just to go and bring in a perceived name coach who just comes in and works with the national team and does nothing else. They have to be invested in the game and in the country.”

    Tony Gustavsson, former Matildas coach. Photo / Getty Images
    Tony Gustavsson, former Matildas coach. Photo / Getty Images

    70-year-old Sermanni said he won’t be putting his hand up for the role given he’s at the end of his career.

    “It needs someone probably a bit younger and a bit more dynamic at this stage.”

    Regardless of who gets the job, Sermanni is confident the Ferns will bounce back after this recent turbulent cycle.

    “I think most teams are quite resilient and particularly teams like the Ferns, they tend to get over things quite quickly .. .Even at the Olympics, I thought they performed really well.”

    The Herald understands NZF will look to replace Klimkova in the New Year. The team haven’t played since the Paris Games and won’t again until 2025.

    Following Klimkova’s resignation in September, NZF chief executive Andrew Pragnell told Newstalk ZB’s Jason Pine it wanted someone to fit the current structures.

    “What I’m not keen to do is throw the baby out with the bath water and that’s what – to be quite frank – we’ve got a history of doing,” Pragnell said.

    When asked by the Herald about the potential candidates for the full-time role of Football Ferns head coach, a spokesperson said: “New Zealand Football are undertaking campaign planning toward the Fifa Women’s World Cup 2027 for the Football Ferns to put the team in the best place to qualify for, win games, and progress out of the group in 2027.”

    They said recruitment would be finalised once this campaign planning process is complete and could not comment on potential candidates for the head coach role.

    Scheduling for 2025 fixtures is also under way.

    Bonnie Jansen is a multimedia journalist in the NZME sports team. She’s a football commentator and co-host of the Football Fever podcast, and was part of the Te Rito cadetship scheme before becoming a fulltime journalist.

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  • ACC’s Jim Phillips backs conference amid college athletics chaos

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — No matter where you find Jim Phillips, the Atlantic Coast Conference’s perpetually buoyant commissioner, and no matter what storm he’s navigating at any given moment, his weather forecast seems to be the same. 

    It’s always sunny in Phillipsdelphia.

    “I feel great about the league,” he told USA TODAY Sports. “I feel great about its future.”

    Not everyone around the country shares his optimism. Once considered an equal partner among the power conferences, the 71-year old ACC finds itself in a strange position.

    Despite continuing to win across the board —it had three Elite Eight teams in the most recent NCAA men’s basketball tournament, a women’s Final Four team, robust success in Olympic sports and two of the top 11 teams in the football poll — the narrative that surrounds the ACC these days centers largely on the bruising legal fight with Florida State and Clemson, two prominent members who are suing to break the contract that binds them to the conference until 2036. 

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  • Luis Suarez backs Darwin Nunez to ‘show the kind of player he is’ as the Liverpool star awaits his return to international football after being handed a five-match ban

    Luis Suarez backs Darwin Nunez to ‘show the kind of player he is’ as the Liverpool star awaits his return to international football after being handed a five-match ban

    Luis Suarez has backed Darwin Nunez to bounce back from his international ban and demonstrate his ability for Uruguay.

    After Marcelo Bielsa’s side were knocked out of this summer’s Copa America by Colombia Nunez was one of several players to race into the stands after trouble broke out between supporters.

    He could be seen throwing punches towards supporters as the unsavory scenes unfolded close the players’ families after the full-time whistle.

    The Liverpool forward was seen consoling his baby son on the pitch after the fight.

    Nunez was subsequently handed a five-match ban from international football by CONMEBOL for his involvement in the incident, the lengthiest of any handed out to those involved.

    Luis Suarez has backed Darwin Nunez to come back stronger as the Liverpool forward serves a five-match ban from international football

    Luis Suarez has backed Darwin Nunez to come back stronger as the Liverpool forward serves a five-match ban from international football

    Nunez was one of several players sanctioned by CONMEBOL after a brawl broke out following Uruguay's Copa America exit

    Nunez was one of several players sanctioned by CONMEBOL after a brawl broke out following Uruguay’s Copa America exit

    The suspension meant Nunez was not part of the squad as Suarez called time on his international career in a 0-0 draw with Paraguay on Friday.

    Speaking following the game Suarez insisted his compatriot has what it takes to bounce back.

    ‘I already spoke with Darwin when he was sanctioned in England. Sometimes people enjoy it more when you are on the ground and fall, but people feel more pain when you get back up.

    ‘And that is what he has to do: get up and continue to show the kind of player that he is. 

    ‘That is where you see the great players and the mental strength he has to have to show those people that they like to see him on the ground.’

    With the country’s two most prolific goalscorers, Suarez and Edinson Cavani, calling time on their international careers in the time since the last World Cup, Nunez will be expected to take the mantle heading into the 2026 tournament.

    The ban meant Nunez was absent as Suarez called time on his international career on Friday

    The ban meant Nunez was absent as Suarez called time on his international career on Friday

    Nunez has yet to start a game for Liverpool under new boss Arne Slot this season

    Nunez has yet to start a game for Liverpool under new boss Arne Slot this season

    Since making his debut for La Celeste in 2019, Nunez has netted 13 times in his 29 caps.

    However, following Arne Slot’s arrival as new Liverpool boss the forward has seen his opportunities limited so far this season.

    After remaining on the bench for the entirety of the Reds’ opening weekend victory over Ipswich, Nunez has been restricted to cameo appearances in their wins against Brentford and Manchester United. 

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