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/ 7 October 2005

Laurie Mains accuses Oliver of ‘dumping’ on All Blacks

The tremors from Anton Oliver’s controversial biography continued on Friday with ex-coach Laurie Mains accusing the former All Black captain of dumping on his teammates. Oliver described the tensions in the Super 12 Otago Highlander team coached by Mains, saying there would have been a player revolt if the ”manipulative” and ”petty” Mains had not left at the end of the 2003 season.

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/ 2 October 2005

Boland victorious in nine-try thriller

Boland and the Leopards produced a spectacle seldom seen on a rugby field by playing suicide rugby that produced a nine-try thriller in their Currie Cup clash at Wellington on Saturday. Boland won the match 39-26. The two premier-division minnows made their intentions clear early on with a high-tempo exhibition of daring rugby.

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/ 1 October 2005

Ruling New Zealand party pursues minority govt

New Zealand’s ruling Labour Party seems set to form a new minority government after the Electoral Office confirmed on Saturday it has the biggest number of seats in the nation’s Parliament. Labour took 50 seats in the September 17 election, two more than the main opposition National Party, final election results show.

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/ 26 September 2005

Cairns dropped from New Zealand team to tour SA

Veteran all-rounder Chris Cairns has been dropped from the New Zealand one-day cricket team to tour South Africa next month, but has vowed to recapture his form to achieve his dream of playing in the 2007 World Cup. Coach John Bracewell said on Monday the 35-year-old Cairns was not chosen due to ”issues with his cricket fitness”.

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/ 23 September 2005

New Zealand’s sailors suffer genetic damage

New Zealand sailors suffered genetic damage from their exposure to radiation during nuclear tests held in the Pacific in the 1950s, a scientist leading a new research study said on Friday. A total of 551 New Zealand Navy sailors witnessed nine nuclear tests in 1957 and 1958 at close quarters, wearing only white cotton hoods and dark glasses to protect themselves from the blasts.

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/ 17 September 2005

Cheetahs fight for victory

The Free State Cheetahs had to fight for the spoils of victory at Wellington on Saturday to stay in the hunt for Currie Cup glory after coming from behind to beat Boland 29-21 in the final quarter of a lively premier-division contest. The Cheetahs looked a shadow of the side that beat the Sharks at King’s Park a fortnight ago.

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/ 28 August 2005

Collins banned for punching Jaco van der Westhuyzen

All Blacks flanker Jerry Collins will miss the Tri-Nations rugby decider against Australia after receiving a two-week ban on Sunday for punching in the crucial 31-27 Test win over South Africa. Collins was cited for punching replacement Springboks fly-half Jaco van der Westhuyzen after a brawl broke out following a scrum in Saturday night’s match in Dunedin.

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/ 24 August 2005

New Zealand mulls raising driving age from 15

What is the right age to start driving a car? The deaths of four teenagers in a horrific high-speed crash on a suburban street has revived the debate in New Zealand where 15-year-olds can legally take the wheel. It is one of the lowest minimum driving ages in the world, introduced 80 years ago when licensing began to ensure that youngsters living on farms could drive to and from work.

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/ 10 August 2005

Jonah Lomu given coaching role

Jonah Lomu’s rugby comeback has taken an unexpected detour with his appointment to the coaching staff of the New Zealand first division provincial team North Harbour. Lomu’s return to top play after a life-threatening kidney ailment began and ended in a benefit match for former England captain Martin Johnston at Twickenham in June.

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/ 25 July 2005

New Zealand cricketers leave for Zimbabwe

The New Zealand cricket team departed on Monday for Africa to prepare for its August series in Zimbabwe as lawmakers continued to press for the cancellation of the tour. The Parliamentary Green Party, which has rallied opposition to the tour in protest at human rights abuses in Zimbabwe, said it was not too late for the New Zealand government to intervene.

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/ 21 July 2005

Duh! Study shows TV really is an idiot box

That television set in the corner really is an idiot box, New Zealand researchers have found. A 30-year study of more than 1 000 children has found that those who watch the most TV are least likely to go to university and get a degree. The seven percent of children who watched the box for under an hour daily were the most qualified by the time they were aged 26.

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/ 6 July 2005

Ban Zim from cricket, asks New Zealand

The New Zealand government has formally asked the International Cricket Council to ban Zimbabwe from its touring schedule because of appalling human rights abuses taking place there, Minister of Foreign Affairs Phil Goff said on Wednesday. The New Zealand cricket team are scheduled to play a series in August in Zimbabwe.

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/ 2 July 2005

All Blacks trounce Lions

Flyhalf Daniel Carter scored two tries among 33 individual points to lead the All Blacks to a 48-18 win over the British and Irish Lions in the second rugby Test Saturday and a 2-0 victory in the three-Test series. Carter produced his most potent performance in the number 10 jersey for New Zealand, outshining his famous opposite Jonny Wilkinson who contributed only eight points before leaving the match with an injured shoulder.

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/ 30 June 2005

‘Don’t kiss yourself goodnight’

The All Blacks say they have adopted a ”we’re second, they’re first” mentality to avoid over-confidence going into the second rugby Test against the British and Irish Lions here on Saturday. After demolishing the Lions 21-3 in the first Test, the All Blacks have every reason to feel confident of wrapping up the three-Test series in the second match.

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/ 29 June 2005

Umaga ‘draws a line in the sand’

All Blacks captain Tana Umaga has been in touch with Lions opposite Brian O’Driscoll after the first Test incident on Saturday which left the Irish centre with a dislocated shoulder, ending his rugby tour of New Zealand. O’Driscoll had previously accused Umaga of causing his injury in an off-the-ball spear tackle which, he said, was ”unnecessary and outside the rules and regulations of the game”.

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/ 27 June 2005

Woodward overhauls team ahead of Test

British and Irish Lions rugby coach Clive Woodward has lost faith in his first XV, that was trounced 21-3 by the All Blacks, and said on Monday there will be changes for the second Test. Two whose positions appear in jeopardy are Jason Robinson and Neil Back, both of whom played in Saturday’s first Test and have been selected to play again against Manawatu on Tuesday.

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/ 26 June 2005

New Zealand mulls cricket ban on Zimbabwe

New Zealand will ask Britain and Australia to support its call for the International Cricket Council to ban Zimbabwe from competition because of the Mugabe regime’s human rights abuses. The New Zealand Cabinet, when it meets on Monday, will consider banning the Zimbabwe cricket team from entering the country later this year.

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/ 22 June 2005

Black Caps to tour Zimbabwe

New Zealand’s national cricket team, the Black Caps, will tour Zimbabwe in August and September despite widespread international concerns about the Mugabe government’s human rights record, it was announced on Wednesday. Naming the team for the tour, New Zealand cricket chief executive Martin Snedden said no players had expressed reluctance to go.

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/ 15 June 2005

Lomu comeback put on hold for shoulder surgery

Jonah Lomu’s dreams of playing again for the All Blacks have taken another knock with news that his comeback to first-class rugby will be delayed for four more months while he recovers from shoulder surgery. Lomu will have surgery in the next few days after he injured his shoulder in the Martin Johnson testimonial match recently.

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/ 3 June 2005

Stiff test for Lions in New Zealand opener

The British and Irish Lions kick off what coach Clive Woodward calls ”the last great rugby tour” on Saturday with a match more important than the strength of their opponents suggest. Bay of Plenty, hosting the match at Rotorua, is among the weakest of New Zealand’s first division sides and wouldn’t normally be expected to tax a Lions team that includes as many as 12 test players.

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/ 24 May 2005

Giant planet is twice the size of Jupiter

Astronomers have discovered a planet that is twice as big as Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system, New Zealand researchers at the University of Auckland revealed on Tuesday. They said the newly discovered planet is 15 000 light years away from the Earth, making it one of the most distant discovered to date.