Talent will only take you far enough without a sickening work ethic. Through the vivid world of sports, there have been several athletes with infinite potential who have waned due to this. At the same time, there are the improbable ones, those who rise through consistency. Such is the case of Stephen Curry. His love for shooting the ball as a little kid, going to practice with his father Dell Curry. Now, even at the pinnacle of basketball and among the most celebrated, his life remains consistent.
When speaking of his shooting, the Chef often underscores the role of “balance”. With everything aligned, it doesn’t matter where or how he shoots, “I feel like I’m never going to miss”. The confidence stems from his strenuous preparations, a routine that had Eric Spoelstra dumbfounded in Paris.
“If you label him as the best shooter of all time, that there has to be some level of unreasonable OCD level of work. And I can say that firsthand, even out of his, at that age, his routine after practice, every single day, was so consistent,”the Heat coach detailed on the Five on The Floor podcast.
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Paris 2024 Olympics – Basketball – Men’s Gold Medal Game – France vs United States – Bercy Arena, Paris, France – August 10, 2024. Stephen Curry of United States reacts during the gold medal game. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Curry is now 36 years old, still that his regime remains the same. And it’s meticulous. One of the rules that he seems to follow is to never leave on a miss. Additionally, if he can’t finish the workout in the model way, he isn’t finished. “And then if he didn’t finish it the way he wanted to, it would be another, start over, it would be another 20 minutes” Spo revealed.
These exact preparations ultimately helped him on the biggest of stages.
How Stephen Curry used consistency to win over Paris
Through his illustrious career, the Baby Face Assassin never had the chance to play in the Olympics until he joined the ‘Avengers’. The riveting three-point shooter though saw far from an ideal start. In the first four games, he shot only 25% from three and couldn’t click into his dangerous rhythm.
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Still, nobody seemed worried when it came to his slump. Curry himself knew it was only a matter of time before the “floodgates open”. The four-time champion continued his routine. The same pregame routine and the same tendency to “shoot shots you think you can make”. In the case of Stephen Curry, that spectrum is vast.
And soon, he let the world know just why he is revered as the most feared presence on the court.
Against Serbia in the semifinals, the entire Team USA collapsed for three quarters. The Nikola Jokic-led Serbs on the contrary couldn’t miss. The man who kept the USA within hitting range to eventually turn their fortunes? Stephen Curry. He made 9 threes en route to his game-high 36 points to help the star-studded contingent see a gold medal game.
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Article continues below this ad
There in the final moments, reality struck. LeBron James and Kevin Durant, two of the most decorated scorers in NBA history were on the floor. Yet, the double team by France was solely focused on shutting down Curry. His final nail in the coffin came over exactly two people, shooting what seemed to be a hail mary while off balance.
It was followed by the iconic ‘night night’ to secure the ultimate prize for Team USA. Without his persistence, none of it would have been possible. And it goes back to his regular, monotonous routine that helped his become the most lethal shooter in NBA history.
Talent will only take you far enough without a sickening work ethic. Through the vivid world of sports, there have been several athletes with infinite potential who have waned due to this. At the same time, there are the improbable ones, those who rise through consistency. Such is the case of Stephen Curry. His love for shooting the ball as a little kid, going to practice with his father Dell Curry. Now, even at the pinnacle of basketball and among the most celebrated, his life remains consistent.
When speaking of his shooting, the Chef often underscores the role of “balance”. With everything aligned, it doesn’t matter where or how he shoots, “I feel like I’m never going to miss”. The confidence stems from his strenuous preparations, a routine that had Eric Spoelstra dumbfounded in Paris.
“If you label him as the best shooter of all time, that there has to be some level of unreasonable OCD level of work. And I can say that firsthand, even out of his, at that age, his routine after practice, every single day, was so consistent,”the Heat coach detailed on the Five on The Floor podcast.
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Article continues below this ad
via Reuters
Paris 2024 Olympics – Basketball – Men’s Gold Medal Game – France vs United States – Bercy Arena, Paris, France – August 10, 2024. Stephen Curry of United States reacts during the gold medal game. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Curry is now 36 years old, still that his regime remains the same. And it’s meticulous. One of the rules that he seems to follow is to never leave on a miss. Additionally, if he can’t finish the workout in the model way, he isn’t finished. “And then if he didn’t finish it the way he wanted to, it would be another, start over, it would be another 20 minutes” Spo revealed.
These exact preparations ultimately helped him on the biggest of stages.
How Stephen Curry used consistency to win over Paris
Through his illustrious career, the Baby Face Assassin never had the chance to play in the Olympics until he joined the ‘Avengers’. The riveting three-point shooter though saw far from an ideal start. In the first four games, he shot only 25% from three and couldn’t click into his dangerous rhythm.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Still, nobody seemed worried when it came to his slump. Curry himself knew it was only a matter of time before the “floodgates open”. The four-time champion continued his routine. The same pregame routine and the same tendency to “shoot shots you think you can make”. In the case of Stephen Curry, that spectrum is vast.
And soon, he let the world know just why he is revered as the most feared presence on the court.
Against Serbia in the semifinals, the entire Team USA collapsed for three quarters. The Nikola Jokic-led Serbs on the contrary couldn’t miss. The man who kept the USA within hitting range to eventually turn their fortunes? Stephen Curry. He made 9 threes en route to his game-high 36 points to help the star-studded contingent see a gold medal game.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
There in the final moments, reality struck. LeBron James and Kevin Durant, two of the most decorated scorers in NBA history were on the floor. Yet, the double team by France was solely focused on shutting down Curry. His final nail in the coffin came over exactly two people, shooting what seemed to be a hail mary while off balance.
It was followed by the iconic ‘night night’ to secure the ultimate prize for Team USA. Without his persistence, none of it would have been possible. And it goes back to his regular, monotonous routine that helped his become the most lethal shooter in NBA history.
Talent will only take you far enough without a sickening work ethic. Through the vivid world of sports, there have been several athletes with infinite potential who have waned due to this. At the same time, there are the improbable ones, those who rise through consistency. Such is the case of Stephen Curry. His love for shooting the ball as a little kid, going to practice with his father Dell Curry. Now, even at the pinnacle of basketball and among the most celebrated, his life remains consistent.
When speaking of his shooting, the Chef often underscores the role of “balance”. With everything aligned, it doesn’t matter where or how he shoots, “I feel like I’m never going to miss”. The confidence stems from his strenuous preparations, a routine that had Eric Spoelstra dumbfounded in Paris.
“If you label him as the best shooter of all time, that there has to be some level of unreasonable OCD level of work. And I can say that firsthand, even out of his, at that age, his routine after practice, every single day, was so consistent,”the Heat coach detailed on the Five on The Floor podcast.
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Article continues below this ad
via Reuters
Paris 2024 Olympics – Basketball – Men’s Gold Medal Game – France vs United States – Bercy Arena, Paris, France – August 10, 2024. Stephen Curry of United States reacts during the gold medal game. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Curry is now 36 years old, still that his regime remains the same. And it’s meticulous. One of the rules that he seems to follow is to never leave on a miss. Additionally, if he can’t finish the workout in the model way, he isn’t finished. “And then if he didn’t finish it the way he wanted to, it would be another, start over, it would be another 20 minutes” Spo revealed.
These exact preparations ultimately helped him on the biggest of stages.
How Stephen Curry used consistency to win over Paris
Through his illustrious career, the Baby Face Assassin never had the chance to play in the Olympics until he joined the ‘Avengers’. The riveting three-point shooter though saw far from an ideal start. In the first four games, he shot only 25% from three and couldn’t click into his dangerous rhythm.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Still, nobody seemed worried when it came to his slump. Curry himself knew it was only a matter of time before the “floodgates open”. The four-time champion continued his routine. The same pregame routine and the same tendency to “shoot shots you think you can make”. In the case of Stephen Curry, that spectrum is vast.
And soon, he let the world know just why he is revered as the most feared presence on the court.
Against Serbia in the semifinals, the entire Team USA collapsed for three quarters. The Nikola Jokic-led Serbs on the contrary couldn’t miss. The man who kept the USA within hitting range to eventually turn their fortunes? Stephen Curry. He made 9 threes en route to his game-high 36 points to help the star-studded contingent see a gold medal game.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
There in the final moments, reality struck. LeBron James and Kevin Durant, two of the most decorated scorers in NBA history were on the floor. Yet, the double team by France was solely focused on shutting down Curry. His final nail in the coffin came over exactly two people, shooting what seemed to be a hail mary while off balance.
It was followed by the iconic ‘night night’ to secure the ultimate prize for Team USA. Without his persistence, none of it would have been possible. And it goes back to his regular, monotonous routine that helped his become the most lethal shooter in NBA history.
Talent will only take you far enough without a sickening work ethic. Through the vivid world of sports, there have been several athletes with infinite potential who have waned due to this. At the same time, there are the improbable ones, those who rise through consistency. Such is the case of Stephen Curry. His love for shooting the ball as a little kid, going to practice with his father Dell Curry. Now, even at the pinnacle of basketball and among the most celebrated, his life remains consistent.
When speaking of his shooting, the Chef often underscores the role of “balance”. With everything aligned, it doesn’t matter where or how he shoots, “I feel like I’m never going to miss”. The confidence stems from his strenuous preparations, a routine that had Eric Spoelstra dumbfounded in Paris.
“If you label him as the best shooter of all time, that there has to be some level of unreasonable OCD level of work. And I can say that firsthand, even out of his, at that age, his routine after practice, every single day, was so consistent,”the Heat coach detailed on the Five on The Floor podcast.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
via Reuters
Paris 2024 Olympics – Basketball – Men’s Gold Medal Game – France vs United States – Bercy Arena, Paris, France – August 10, 2024. Stephen Curry of United States reacts during the gold medal game. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Curry is now 36 years old, still that his regime remains the same. And it’s meticulous. One of the rules that he seems to follow is to never leave on a miss. Additionally, if he can’t finish the workout in the model way, he isn’t finished. “And then if he didn’t finish it the way he wanted to, it would be another, start over, it would be another 20 minutes” Spo revealed.
These exact preparations ultimately helped him on the biggest of stages.
How Stephen Curry used consistency to win over Paris
Through his illustrious career, the Baby Face Assassin never had the chance to play in the Olympics until he joined the ‘Avengers’. The riveting three-point shooter though saw far from an ideal start. In the first four games, he shot only 25% from three and couldn’t click into his dangerous rhythm.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Still, nobody seemed worried when it came to his slump. Curry himself knew it was only a matter of time before the “floodgates open”. The four-time champion continued his routine. The same pregame routine and the same tendency to “shoot shots you think you can make”. In the case of Stephen Curry, that spectrum is vast.
And soon, he let the world know just why he is revered as the most feared presence on the court.
Against Serbia in the semifinals, the entire Team USA collapsed for three quarters. The Nikola Jokic-led Serbs on the contrary couldn’t miss. The man who kept the USA within hitting range to eventually turn their fortunes? Stephen Curry. He made 9 threes en route to his game-high 36 points to help the star-studded contingent see a gold medal game.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
There in the final moments, reality struck. LeBron James and Kevin Durant, two of the most decorated scorers in NBA history were on the floor. Yet, the double team by France was solely focused on shutting down Curry. His final nail in the coffin came over exactly two people, shooting what seemed to be a hail mary while off balance.
It was followed by the iconic ‘night night’ to secure the ultimate prize for Team USA. Without his persistence, none of it would have been possible. And it goes back to his regular, monotonous routine that helped his become the most lethal shooter in NBA history.
Talent will only take you far enough without a sickening work ethic. Through the vivid world of sports, there have been several athletes with infinite potential who have waned due to this. At the same time, there are the improbable ones, those who rise through consistency. Such is the case of Stephen Curry. His love for shooting the ball as a little kid, going to practice with his father Dell Curry. Now, even at the pinnacle of basketball and among the most celebrated, his life remains consistent.
When speaking of his shooting, the Chef often underscores the role of “balance”. With everything aligned, it doesn’t matter where or how he shoots, “I feel like I’m never going to miss”. The confidence stems from his strenuous preparations, a routine that had Eric Spoelstra dumbfounded in Paris.
“If you label him as the best shooter of all time, that there has to be some level of unreasonable OCD level of work. And I can say that firsthand, even out of his, at that age, his routine after practice, every single day, was so consistent,”the Heat coach detailed on the Five on The Floor podcast.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
via Reuters
Paris 2024 Olympics – Basketball – Men’s Gold Medal Game – France vs United States – Bercy Arena, Paris, France – August 10, 2024. Stephen Curry of United States reacts during the gold medal game. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Curry is now 36 years old, still that his regime remains the same. And it’s meticulous. One of the rules that he seems to follow is to never leave on a miss. Additionally, if he can’t finish the workout in the model way, he isn’t finished. “And then if he didn’t finish it the way he wanted to, it would be another, start over, it would be another 20 minutes” Spo revealed.
These exact preparations ultimately helped him on the biggest of stages.
How Stephen Curry used consistency to win over Paris
Through his illustrious career, the Baby Face Assassin never had the chance to play in the Olympics until he joined the ‘Avengers’. The riveting three-point shooter though saw far from an ideal start. In the first four games, he shot only 25% from three and couldn’t click into his dangerous rhythm.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Still, nobody seemed worried when it came to his slump. Curry himself knew it was only a matter of time before the “floodgates open”. The four-time champion continued his routine. The same pregame routine and the same tendency to “shoot shots you think you can make”. In the case of Stephen Curry, that spectrum is vast.
And soon, he let the world know just why he is revered as the most feared presence on the court.
Against Serbia in the semifinals, the entire Team USA collapsed for three quarters. The Nikola Jokic-led Serbs on the contrary couldn’t miss. The man who kept the USA within hitting range to eventually turn their fortunes? Stephen Curry. He made 9 threes en route to his game-high 36 points to help the star-studded contingent see a gold medal game.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
There in the final moments, reality struck. LeBron James and Kevin Durant, two of the most decorated scorers in NBA history were on the floor. Yet, the double team by France was solely focused on shutting down Curry. His final nail in the coffin came over exactly two people, shooting what seemed to be a hail mary while off balance.
It was followed by the iconic ‘night night’ to secure the ultimate prize for Team USA. Without his persistence, none of it would have been possible. And it goes back to his regular, monotonous routine that helped his become the most lethal shooter in NBA history.
What Ellen DeGeneres says is her last comedy special landing on Netflix and George Clooney and Brad Pitt starring in a sleek, New York City caper are some of the new television, films, music and games headed to a device near you.
Also among the streaming offerings worth your time as selected by The Associated Press’ entertainment journalists: Serj Tankian, frontman of the Grammy-award winning Armenian-American nu-metal band System of a Down, releases a solo EP, we get two Ryan Murphy series — “Grotesquerie” on FX and the ABC medical drama “Doctor Odyssey” — and nearly 40 years after the debut of The Legend of Zelda, Nintendo is finally making the title character the star of her own game.
— Hard as this may be to believe, George Clooney and Brad Pitt are good together. Yes, stop the presses and all that. But it’s been a while since Clooney and Pitt, who first teamed up for “Ocean’s 11” had a movie built around their easy charisma. “Wolfs,” streaming Friday, Sept. 27, on Apple TV+, corrects that with a sleek New York caper about two fixers who have been hired for the same clean-up job. In my review of the film by writer-director Jon Watts (“Spider-Man: No Way Home”), I wrote that “Wolfs” is “designed to show you that they can still, without ever really breaking a sweat, get the job done.”
— Some Pixar fans have quibbled in the past when the digital animation studio has leaned too hard into sequels. But the box office for “Inside Out 2” is hard to refute. With nearly $1.7 billion in ticket sales, it’s the year’s biggest box-office hit. On Wednesday, “Inside Out 2” arrives on Disney+ to make one of the most anticipated streaming debuts of the year. In it, Riley has grown up a couple years but entered a new chapter in life: puberty, bringing with it a number of new emotions. In my review, I wrote that “the filmmakers of ‘Inside Out 2’ have managed again to filter complex psychological developments into a bright, entertaining head trip that in its finest moments packs an emotional wallop.”
— Will Ferrell and Harper Steele became friends and collaborators at “Saturday Night Live,” where Steele was head writer from 2004 to 2008. When Steele came out as transgender a few years ago, Ferrell, interested in reconnecting, proposed a road trip. In “Will & Harper,” streaming Friday, Sept. 27, on Netflix, the two embark on a cross-country expedition full of revelations about what this changes and doesn’t change in their relationship.
— Remember the first time you heard “Million Dollar Baby”? The rap record feels like it came out of nowhere — as so many TikTok smashes do — but continues to endure, moving from hit song of the spring to hit song of the summer to hit song of the fall and beyond. But now, fans of Tommy Richman will get to dive deeper into his musical abilities when he releases the full-length “Coyote,” on Friday, Sept. 27. Little is known about the 11-track release, but the lead singles “Whitney,” a disco-funk electro-detour, and “Thought You Were the One” – a hook-heavy R&B ballad – suggest range.
— Serj Tankian, frontman of the Grammy-award winning Armenian-American nu-metal band System of a Down, will release a short solo EP, “Foundations” on Friday, Sept. 27. The release maintains his band’s abrasion but experiments with different forms of audial rebellion. The single “A.F. Day,” for example, is a kind of psychedelic-punk treatise on the absurdity of everyday mundanity. And it sounds explosive.
— There is nothing predictable about the band Being Dead’s sophomore album, “EELS,” produced by Grammy-award winnerJohn Congleton. Across 16 tracks that move from asymmetrical egg punk, Devo-worship, a recording of a bus driver who has had enough, timeless, near-psychedelic harmonies and various other oddball sensibilities that make them the best college radio rock band in recent history – Being Dead’s organized chaos is future-seeking and familiar all at once.
— Ellen DeGeneres says her next comedy special coming to Netflix will be her last. “For Your Approval” drops Sept. 24 and the comedian is “going there,” by addressing reports that she was difficult to deal with behind the scenes of her daytime talk show, which ended its run in 2022 after 19 seasons. “I got kicked out of show business,” she says in the trailer.
— Ryan Murphy has a new series on FX called “Grotesquerie” premiering on Wednesday. Niecy Nash stars as a detective who agrees to help a nun and reporter (Micaela Diamond) with a Catholic newspaper to investigate a series of gruesome murders. Super Bowl-winning Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (otherwise known as Taylor Swift’s boyfriend), has a secret role in the show.
— If “Grotesquerie” isn’t your bag, there’s another Ryan Murphy series making its debut this week. A medical drama called “Doctor Odyssey” premieres Thursday on ABC. Joshua Jackson plays a doctor on board a luxury cruise ship called the Odyssey. Don Johnson, Philippa Soo and Sean Teale also star. The show also boasts a number of guest stars including John Stamos, Kelsea Ballerini, Shania Twain and Chord Overstreet. A trailer for the show had nearly 78 million views within 48 hours, making it the most-watched trailer for a new broadcast TV show. Episodes also stream on Hulu.
— One might assume a TV show called “Colin from Accounts” takes place in an office setting. Instead, it’s a modern day romantic comedy made in Australia. It’s created by and co-stars real-life husband and wife, Harriet Dyer and Patrick Brammel, who play two people who are brought together by an injured dog named Colin. All eight episodes of season two debut Sept. 26 on Paramount+.
— “The Walking Dead” characters Daryl and Carol, (played by Norman Reedus and Melissa McBride), make up one of the most popular platonic pairings on television. The two unlikely friends bond over similar pasts and share a deep trust. They next co-star in “The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon – The Book of Carol.” It premieres Sept. 29 on AMC and AMC+.
— Zachry Quinto is back on TV on Monday in a medical drama. But he’s not portraying any dour, by-the-rules doctor — he’s playing Dr. Oliver Sacks, the famed neurologist, path-breaking researcher and author once called the “poet laureate of medicine.” NBC’s “Brilliant Minds” takes Sack’s personality — a motorcycle-riding, fern-loving doctor who died in 2015 at 82 — and puts his career in the present day, where the creators theorize he would have no idea who Taylor Swift is or own a cell phone.
— Nearly 40 years after the debut of The Legend of Zelda, Nintendo is finally making the title character the star of her own game. As The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom begins, Link — our usual hero — has vanished, so it’s off to the rescue for Princess Z. She’s hardly a damsel in distress, armed with a “Tri Rod” that lets her duplicate objects she finds outside her castle. She can even make copies of monsters and have them fight on her side. The magical staff gives Zelda the improvisational skills that made last year’s Tears of the Kingdom a smash, while the top-down dungeon exploration will remind old-school fans of early games in the franchise. The Echoes begin reverberating Thursday, Sept. 26, on Switch.
One hundred years ago, the All Blacks embarked on their legendary 1924-25 tour, earning the moniker “The Invincibles” after winning all 32 matches across Britain, Ireland, France, and Canada. Among them was the fearless 19-year-old George Nepia, who played every minute of every game. Phil Gifford’s story delves into Nepia’s extraordinary journey from an unknown teenager to a rugby legend.
A hundred years ago this month a largely unknown 19-year-old All Black called George Nepia walked down the gangplank of the passenger ship, RMS Remuera, in Plymouth, stepping on to English soil after a seven-week voyage from New Zealand.
Six months later he’d be heading home a legend.
The fearless, hugely skilled teenager from Wairoa played the full 80 minutes of every one of the 32 unbeaten games the All Black team that became known as The Invincibles had on their 1924-25 tour of Britain, Ireland, France, and Canada.
At the time, weighing 83kg and 1.75m tall, Nepia was a big, powerfully built man for his position. He was the heaviest back in the squad and outweighed six of the 15 forwards.
How good was he? Four years after the tour the English captain, Wavell Wakefield, wrote that “one member of the team, Nepia, deserves special mention”.
“His perfect catching of the ball, his kicking, and his amazing power of whipping the ball off the ground, and charging into and through oncoming forwards, marked him out as a player of a generation”.
Fifty years ago, I had the huge good fortune to spend almost an hour with Nepia, and his teammate, a genius, will-of-the-wisp, 56kg midfielder, Bert Cooke, as the side assembled in Auckland for their golden jubilee reunion.
They were both humble and hugely likeable. A prime example of their mutual respect came when Cook headed off to the toilet. Nepia leaned in, almost whispering, and said, “See that man? He was so brilliant that sometimes in a game I’d have to remind myself that I wasn’t a spectator, and should stop staring in amazement at what he could do.”
The tour had the potential for disaster if the players hadn’t all got on, Nepia said. “But by the time we got to England after that huge boat trip we were like brothers, as tight as a club team. A club team where every player is very good.”
George Nepia leads the haka. Photo / Photosport / New Zealand All Blacks Archive
His stunning form on the ‘24-25 tour brought Nepia enduring fame in Britain and in New Zealand. In 1982, when he toured as a guest with the New Zealand Maori team, a packed crowd in Swansea stood and cheered him when he was introduced on the field.
After his death in 1986, TVNZ repeated a This Is Your Life programme on Nepia. The audience, of 1.6 million people, represented half our population at the time.
His story is as extraordinary as the talents that made him stand out, even in The Invincibles, a team packed with great players.
Bizarrely, two of his special strengths, a devastating head-on tackle, and a massive spiral punt, were coached into him by an American Mormon teacher, who had never played rugby.
At 13, Nepia had left Nuhaka Māori School to work on a farm and then joined a labouring gang building the railway to Gisborne. After a year working as an adult, he’d saved enough to pay his own secondary school fees.
George Nepia in action for the All Blacks. Photo / Photosport
He planned to go to Te Aute College, but a close friend persuaded him to instead go to the Māori Agricultural College, set up by the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints at Bridge Pa in 1913.
One of the teachers, Elder Erwin Moser, who had played American football before coming to New Zealand, coached MAC’s rugby team. “He didn’t know much about rugby tactics,” Nepia would say, “but we respected him a lot.”
After a school game, Moser took Nepia aside. “When you tackle,” he said, “keep your eyes open.” In his 1963 book written with Terry McLean, Nepia says, “It sounds funny, but that is the most important of all the bits that go into a good tackle.”
Moser soon got into more detail.
The first time he tackled an opponent, Moser said, Nepia had to speed up, “and crash into his stomach with your shoulder”.
“You’ll knock him backwards, and all the air will go out of his lungs. You might knock him out.”
For the second tackle, Moser changed the particulars. “Go below his knees. Move in from the same distance as before, and hit him hard. You’ll knock his legs from under him, and he’ll come down hard.”
What about the third tackle, asked Nepia? “There won’t be a third time. If you’ve made the first and second the right way, the third time he will kick.”
Nepia became fascinated by how far Moser, who seemed ancient to a schoolboy but was actually still in his 20s, could spiral pass a football.
“I started to think of the possibilities of imitating the way he could throw the ball 40 or 50 metres, sending it spinning like a top. I wanted to do the same with a punt. I used to stay after team training with a couple of teammates kicking to each other. One day, I fired off the perfect spiral punt. I was shocked and so excited I found it hard to sleep that night.”
Invincible they were, and the Invincibles they remain. This image is displayed at the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame in Dunedin, New Zealand. Photo / Sports Hall of Fame
It took weeks of determined practice, but at last Nepia could spiral punt 50 metres, with pinpoint accuracy, even under pressure. He called it “The Bullet”. It was “the cream on the coffee of good punting”.
After school, he made a star-studded Hawke’s Bay side, as a second five-eighths. But bizarrely, his debut in a first-class match as a fullback was the first All Blacks trial of 1924 in Auckland. It was only the second time in his life he’d played at fullback.
He performed so well in what was then the No 1 jersey, that when an All Black squad of 23 players was named for a four-game warm-up tour of Australia in July 1924, Nepia was the only fullback.
But before they headed for Britain, The Invincibles were roasted by Auckland media in a way Ian Foster or Scott Robertson might recognise.
Returning from Australia they were beaten, 14-3, by Auckland at Eden Park. The 1905 All Black George Tyler said in The New Zealand Herald they were the worst team to ever represent New Zealand. In the Auckland Star, a writer said “it is a disgrace Auckland are not being sent north, instead of the All Blacks”.
Fifty years later, Nepia was still irate about the comments. He told me in ‘74, “We’d got off the boat from Australia at two o’clock in the morning after the roughest sea trip you could imagine. We played Auckland that afternoon! We were all still swaying from the boat’s motion. I waited to catch one high ball, and started to rock so much I fell tail over head before the ball landed.”
By contrast, the tour of Britain and France was an unmitigated triumph.
After beating Ireland (6-0), the All Blacks swept past Wales (19-0), England (17-11), and France (30-6). (Not a single game was played in Scotland, because – I am not making this up – officials there were still sulking because they’d made a poor deal on gate receipts from the 1905 test with the All Blacks at Inverleith.)
As the tour went on, Nepia talked with his captain, Cliff Porter, about the strain of playing match after match. Porter’s solution? “On match nights,” he told Nepia, “drink yourself paralytic if you like.” Nepia took the advice. “I drank enough beer to help me sleep like a child. Porter knew how to get the best out of a man.”
After the glory days of The Invincibles, Nepia’s talent never faltered, but his sporting career took some unexpected turns.
At a time when the NZRU grovelled to South Africa’s racist rules, Nepia was one of several gifted Maori players left behind when New Zealand toured South Africa in 1928. His All Blacks career ended in 1930, when he played fullback in all four tests against the British Lions, New Zealand winning the series 30-1.
Nepia had married the love of his life, Huinga Kohere, in 1926. By the mid-1930s, in a world ravaged by the Great Depression, the couple and their young family were barely scraping by on their small farm in Rangitukia, on the East Coast.
In 1935, he accepted a £500 contract (“It was like a million pounds to us,” Nepia would say) to play league for two seasons for the Streatham and Mitcham club in London. He was a success, but the club owner’s attempt to introduce league to London didn’t work.
Back in New Zealand in 1938, Nepia’s last international game was at Carlaw Park, for the Kiwis’ league team against Australia. In a thrilling finish, the Kiwis won, 16-15.
It’s a measure of Nepia’s mana that, at a time when league was considered the work of the Devil by many rugby officials he was quietly welcomed back into rugby after World War II. As a 42-year-old, he played his last two first-class games for East Coast in 1947.
A revered British sportswriter and author of the 1950s, Denzil Batchelor, would sum up the rugby legacy left by Nepia. “It’s not a question of whether Nepia was the greatest fullback in history. It’s just a question of which of the others is fit to help him on with his Cotton Oxford boots.”
Phil Gifford has twice been judged New Zealand sportswriter of the year, has won nine New Zealand and two Australasian radio awards, and been judged New Zealand Sports Columnist of the year three times. In 2010 he was honoured with the SPARC lifetime achievement award for services to sports journalism.
WWE icon, Bill Goldberg, told Liam Harrison an inspiring story in the moments before his fight with Seksan at ONE 168.
The former wrestler hyped up the 8x Muay Thai world champion, while walking him to the cage for one of the biggest fights of his career.
Photo by Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Bill Goldberg gives Liam Harrison words of wisdom before fight with Seksan at ONE 168
On Friday evening, Liam Harrison went head-to-head with Seksan Or. Kwanmuang in a clash of two of the greatest Muay Thai fighters to have ever graced the sport.
And if the Brit wasn’t already fuelled for the bout, he was given an extra push by WWE Hall of Famer, Bill Goldberg.
Goldberg and Liam Harrison team up for a legendary session in Denver! 💪 Will Goldberg’s influence push “Hitman” to victory against Seksan this Friday at ONE 168: Denver? @LiamBadco@Goldberg#ONE168 | Sep 6 at 8PM ET/Sep 7 at 7AM ICT 🇺🇸🇨🇦 Watch Live on Prime 👉… pic.twitter.com/HDMnccoqTV
After watching Harrison defeat Malaipet Sasiprapa in Los Angeles in 2015, the wrestling icon went out of his way to introduce himself to the Leeds fighter, and the pair have remained close ever since.
The duo even engaged in some training during fight week for ONE 168, with Harrison teaching the powerhouse the ropes of Muay Thai.
Therefore, it only made sense for Goldberg to walk ‘The Hitman’ to the cage for his major bout inside the Ball Arena in Denver, Colorado.
While Harrison marched towards his rival, the 285lbs monster, delivered a powerful speech to motivate his friend to put on the performance of a lifetime.
He exclaimed: “I had doubt about myself one time before I walked in the ring. I picked up the phone and called a friend of mine, and he said, ‘You’re Bill f***ing Goldberg’. You’re Liam, motherf***ing Harrison. That’s all you need. Go out and bash his brains in. Do what you do.”
Despite not emerging victorious, Goldberg’s words clearly made an impact as Harrison produced one of the bravest performances ONE Championship has ever seen.
Even in the face of getting knocked down twice, he kept on swinging, doing everything in his power to land a knockout blow of his own, before ultimately hitting the canvas for a third time.
So, if that’s the final time we see him compete, he certainly went out with a bang.
Liam Harrison leaves his gloves in the center of the cage after brutal loss at ONE 168
As great fighters often do, following the end of the contest, the Englishman left his gloves in the cage, signaling a potential retirement from the sport.
Having set the world alight, and pioneered a new wave of British Muay Thai fighters, Harrison has undeniably carved his legacy in stone.
After 10 seasons in the NFL, Aaron Donald made a big announcement on March 15, 2024. “For 10 years, I have been fortunate enough to play the game at the highest level. Throughout my career, I have given my everything to football both mentally and physically — 365 days a year was dedicated to becoming the best possible player I could be.”
After this, he retired from the league, bidding goodbye to the Los Angeles Rams. But many still speculated that he might come back in the future seasons. However, now the 33-year-old former defensive lineman’s wife broke the silence on this, clearly hinting that Aaron Donald ain’t coming back.
2023 was the end for Aaron Donald?
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Aaron Donald’s wife, Erica Donald, recently shared a story on her official Instagram account on September 8, 2024. In the story video, the former NFL player can be seen sleeping on a couch, carefree. As Erica made the video while her husband was sleeping, she said, “For people are still asking if you’re coming back. Alright guys, hope that answers your question because he is not.”
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Now, many people think this rumor of him coming back started when he retired this year. But it is half true! Actually when Aaron Donald led the Rams to Super Bowl victory in 2022, many speculated this retirement scene for the athlete that time as well. However, the 33YO shocked them with a new three-year, $95 million extension that offseason. But then, despite the contract, he retired from the league. Hence, it is obvious for the fans to think about his return.
Nevertheless, this 2024 season is the first for the Rams without their star player, who posted eight sacks and 53 tackles in 2023. In order to help supplement the loss of Donald upfront, “the team selected pass rusher Jared Verse and defensive tackle Braden Fiske” in the 2024 NFL Draft. However, unfortunately, the first game of the season resulted in the team’s loss to the Lions 26-20.
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Why does Aaron Donald not want to come back to the NFL?
Aaron Donald’s NFL journey is nothing short of legendary. Drafted 13th overall in 2014, he became one of the most feared defensive players in the league. Ten Pro Bowl selections, three Defensive Player of the Year awards, and eight All-Pro selections – it’s hard to top that. But after 10 intense seasons, the toll of the game caught up with him. But why did he retire, despite his good form. Actually, Donald didn’t just retire because of age, but because the fire that once fueled him began to fade.
USA Today via Reuters
Nov 13, 2022; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Rams linebacker Bobby Wagner (45) celebrates with defensive tackle Aaron Donald (99) after a sack in the second half at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports
He admitted he felt “complete,” having accomplished everything he set out to do. But there are many who also speculate that it must be related to his health. Nevertheless, losing him left a massive hole in the Rams’ defense. They brought in Braden Fiske, but even the team knew you can’t just replace a force like Donald. And that’s why, the Rams shifted their strategy, relying more on their secondary angles.
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And now, Donald just sometimes spends time with the team in their training camps.
An English pop rock legend is set to release his first single in 12 years – after his smash-hit 1992 debut made him a household name.
Chesney Hawkes, 52, last released music in 2012 when he put out his third studio album, Real Life Love.
Son of Chip Hawkes, Chesney is best-known for his first single The One And Only, written by Nik Kershaw.
The One And Only featured, along with Chesney, in 1991 British comedy-drama Buddy’s Song.
The song was number one in the UK for five weeks and even reached the top-10 of the US charts.
An English pop rock legend is set to release his first single in 12 years – after his smash-hit 1992 debut made him a household name
Chesney Hawkes, 52, last released music in 2012 when he put out his third studio album, Real Life Love
Son of Chip Hawkes, Chesney is best-known for his first single The One And Only, written by Nik Kershaw
Now, Chesney is launching the ultimate comeback, in collaboration with Ed Sheeran and Lady Gaga producer Jake Gosling.
Get A Hold Of Yourself will be released on September 18 and is available for pre-sale now. It hopes to approach the success of The One And Only, unlike its predecessors.
Chesney told The Sun of the track, which will play on Radio 2 on the same day: ‘It’s really strange experiencing this all again – three decades later and with three decades worth of growing up.
‘It’s taken a long time to feel confident enough to really throw myself back into a project but growing up and feeling much more comfortable and freer within myself has allowed that to happen.
‘That’s what Get A Hold Of Yourself is about – getting hold of yourself and being free and not giving a f**k what people think. I think people are going to be surprised that this is a Chesney track. I can’t wait for people to hear it and think they will be surprised by the video for it!
In April, Chesney revealed that he squandered £8.2million after finding such huge success aged just 19.
Speaking on the My Dirty Laundry podcast, Chesney revealed he burned himself out with ‘utter exhaustion’ due to his ‘crazy’ lifestyle.
Admitting he can relate to fellow stars Harry Styles and Ed Sheeran, he urges young people in the industry to ‘be careful and make sure they don’t burn out like he did.’
Chesney’s new single Get A Hold Of Yourself will be released on September 18. It hopes to approach the success of The One And Only, unlike its predecessors
Chesney admitted: ‘I did that classic thing when I first made it of just blowing everything. I bought a state of the art studio. I bought everyone in my family a car. So yeah, we had fun.
‘My brother Jodie is my drummer and he was with me through the whole time. And yeah, we enjoyed it, because we were young. We were 19 and 17, and we toured all over the world – America, Japan, it was an amazing time.
‘It was like living in the eye of a storm. So I had my family and the people around me in this kind of bubble, you know?
‘I would be thrown into the hurricane and I’d be gone. And then I’m off to Sweden and then I’m off to New York. I never knew where I was waking up for that first year. It was mental. It was really crazy.’
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English pop legend is set to release his first single in 12 years – after his smash-hit 1992 debut made him a household name