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Tag: Super

  • NC State baseball tops James Madison to win the NCAA Raleigh Regional

    NC State baseball tops James Madison to win the NCAA Raleigh Regional

    N.C. State’s Alec Makarewicz (99) celebrates hitting a solo home run in the sixth inning during N.C. State’s game against James Madison in the NCAA Raleigh Regional final at Doak Field Sunday, June 2, 2024.

    N.C. State’s Alec Makarewicz (99) celebrates hitting a solo home run in the sixth inning during N.C. State’s game against James Madison in the NCAA Raleigh Regional final at Doak Field Sunday, June 2, 2024.

    ehyman@newsobserver.com

    For N.C. State’s baseball team, it’s on to the Super Regional.

    Whether in Athens, Georgia, or in Raleigh, the Wolfpack doesn’t care. All that matters is that the Pack is still playing in the NCAA tournament, moving on.

    The Wolfpack, hosting an NCAA regional for the first time since 2018, won it in three straight games, beating James Madson 5-3 Sunday in a winners’ bracket final at Doak Field.

    Pack third baseman Alec Makarewicz, named the regional’s most outstanding player, had a solo homer and RBI-double, and right fielder Noah Soles added a solo home run in the ninth for the 5-3 lead.

    Starting pitcher Logan Whitaker gave the Wolfpack six strong innings – his only slip-ups a pair of solo home runs by JMU’s Mike Mancini – before relievers Jacob Dudan and Derrick Smith came on to finish it up. Smith fanned all three batters in the ninth to start the celebration.

    N.C. State’s Derrick Smith (25) hugs Brandon Butterworth (3) after N.C. State’s 5-3 victory over James Madison in the NCAA Raleigh Regional final at Doak Field Sunday, June 2, 2024. N.C. State’s Jacob Cozart (14) is to the right.
    N.C. State’s Derrick Smith (25) hugs Brandon Butterworth (3) after N.C. State’s 5-3 victory over James Madison in the NCAA Raleigh Regional final at Doak Field Sunday, June 2, 2024. N.C. State’s Jacob Cozart (14) is to the right. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    The Pack (36-20) will face Georgia, the No. 7 national seed, on the road in the Super Regional if the Bulldogs win the Athens Regional. If Georgia stumbles, the Pack will be hosting a Super Regional – its first at Doak Field since 2013, when N.C. State, led by Trea Turner and Carlos Rodon, made it to the College World Series.

    The Wolfpack, seeded 10th nationally, topped Bryant and then South Carolina in its first two games of the regional, getting strong starting pitching and solid relief pitching while manufacturing enough runs.

    James Madison made it to Sunday night by shutting out South Carolina 2-0 in Sunday’s first game at Doak. Another win against the Pack would have gotten the Dukes to Monday and a chance for a spot in the Super Regional.

    But the Wolfpack got the job done as Whitaker allowed four hits and struck out six in his six innings of work. Only one JMU batter did any damage against Whitaker – Manicini.

    With first base open and one out, the Pack elected to pitch to Mancini in the bottom of the eighth and Mancini drove in another run with a double to left off Dudan.

    N.C. State head coach Elliott Avent acknowledges the crowd after N.C. State’s 5-3 victory over James Madison in the NCAA Raleigh Regional final at Doak Field Sunday, June 2, 2024.
    N.C. State head coach Elliott Avent acknowledges the crowd after N.C. State’s 5-3 victory over James Madison in the NCAA Raleigh Regional final at Doak Field Sunday, June 2, 2024. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    The Dukes’ sophomore second baseman, with some pop in his bat, also had two home runs for JMU’s only runs against South Carolina on Sunday.

    Makarewicz slugged his homer to deep right field in the sixth for a 3-2 lead, then doubled in Garrett Pennington in the eighth for a 4-2 lead. The Pack had the bases loaded with no outs but could not add to the lead, but Soles homered in the ninth for a two-run lead.

    The Dukes stranded two in the bottom of the eighth as Dudan struck out Wyatt Peifer and Brenden O’Donnell, punching the air after punching out O’Donnell.

    The Pack had Makarewicz, Pennington and shortstop Brandon Butterworth named to the all-regional team along with Dudan.

    The Wolfpack in 2021 won the NCAA regional in Ruston, Louisiana, then went to Arkansas for the Super Regional. The Pack beat the Razorbacks, the No. 1 national seed, to earn the program’s third trip to the College World Series.

    The Pack was left out of the NCAA tournament in 2022, then lost out in the Columbia (SC) Regional last season. But Wolfpack coach Elliott Avent, in his 28th season, again has his team in Super with a chance to go to Omaha again.

    This story was originally published June 2, 2024, 9:16 PM.

    In more than 40 years at The N&O, Chip Alexander has covered the N.C. State, UNC, Duke and East Carolina beats, and now is in his 15th season on the Carolina Hurricanes beat. Alexander, who has won numerous writing awards at the state and national level, covered the Hurricanes’ move to North Carolina in 1997 and was a part of The N&O’s coverage of the Canes’ 2006 Stanley Cup run.

    Chip Alexander

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  • Martin Scorsese’s Super Bowl Commercial? You Can Thank His Daughter for That.

    Martin Scorsese’s Super Bowl Commercial? You Can Thank His Daughter for That.


    In his six decades of directing, Martin Scorsese has earned 10 Best Director Academy Award nominations and taken home the award once (for a little indie flick called The Departed). His films dominate every “best of all time” list—and some, like Goodfellas, have become a religion unto themselves. But despite the millions of people who have seen his films—including his most recent opus, Killers of the Flower Moon—Sunday marked his debut in a whole new genre, to one of his biggest audiences yet: the alien-filled Super Bowl commercial.

    Titled “Hello Down There,” the 90-second short film for website builder Squarespace—which debuted midway through the second quarter of Sunday’s game—sees clueless young New Yorkers too distracted by cat videos to notice the UFOs casually gliding over them. The spot’s logline reads, “What does a highly advanced civilization have to do to get noticed around here?”

    As it turns out, the answer lies in TikTok. Or, at least, for Scorsese, it has. As the epitome of advanced civilization—what else would you call the person who directed Raging Bull—Scorsese has recently been noticed by Gen Z in a whole new way, becoming the parasocial cinephile grandpa to thousands of chronically online youngsters.

    This is, of course, the handiwork of Francesca Scorsese. The director’s 24-year-old daughter has followed in his footsteps as a video maven, but her medium isn’t film, it’s vertical video. And her muse isn’t Robert De Niro or Leonardo DiCaprio—it turns out, it’s her dad. Over the past year, Francesca has become his de facto PR rep for “the youth”: his ambassador and translator for a generation that doesn’t necessarily have John Huston’s first picture or Truffaut’s Antoine Doinel saga down rote.

    Francesca first featured Scorsese in a TikTok in 2021, asking him to identify different female beauty items based on their photos. (Memorably, he mistook nipple pasties for earbuds.) Early reviews were overwhelmingly positive, with comments like “omg it’s Martin Scorsese from Shark Tale” and “This guy seems like he would make pretty decent movies idk why tho.” (Presumably, those were sarcastic—at least we hope.) Since then, Francesca has upped Scorsese’s screen time on her account, which now has over 200,000 followers and 4.8 million likes. Last summer, she went viral with a 30-second “trailer” of her dad, a compilation of short clips of the director playing with puppies, laughing with old pal Robert De Niro, and strutting around in a slick business suit, with the caption: “He’s a certified silly goose.”

    Francesca’s content often taps into Scorsese’s storied career and encyclopedic film knowledge, from a video of him “auditioning” their schnauzer, Oscar (and lauding him as a revelatory talent), to another in which he power ranks popular movies. In her videos, Scorsese is no longer a famous director with dozens of canonical projects under his belt; he’s just a guy. More specifically, he’s an incredibly adorable old guy who loves father-daughter handshakes, twinning with his dog, and watching 2001: A Space Odyssey.

    The revelation of Francesca’s videos is their ability to subvert our expectations of how a legendary filmmaker acts and participates in internet culture. For many Gen Zers, the name “Martin Scorsese” may evoke an edgy boyfriend’s Taxi Driver poster, an uncle’s old DVD collection, or a mental image of that short guy always standing next to Leonardo DiCaprio, but these are just vague associations. Sure, Scorsese is the genius behind Mean Streets and The Wolf of Wall Street, but this hardly counts for a zeitgeist-hungry generation that communicates chiefly through memes and irony.

    There has to be something more—some kind of hook—and that’s exactly what Francesca has uncovered. With pitch-perfect humor and TikTok trend savvy, she has single-handedly shaped her dad into a memeable, shareable internet figure (the highest rung of Gen Z adoration).

    The comments sections of her TikToks are laden with young users begging to be adopted into their family, referring to Scorsese as “grandpa” and praising his commitment to Dance Moms–inspired bits. As one TikTok user commented, “martin scorsese and francesca have figured out what the tiktok peeps want…and it is exactly this.”

    If anything perfectly captures Gen Z’s newfound fondness for Marty (as the cool kids call him), it’s Francesca’s video introducing him to internet slang terms. Because Scorsese’s brain presumably functions solely in film quotes and box office stats, Francesca helps him out with context clues like “Watching a movie in 70 mm hits different” and “The King of Comedy was slept on.” There’s nothing like the look on Scorsese’s face when he registers the meaning of the latter, forlornly recalling how “people hated it when it came out. … It was the flop of the year.” (Viewers then gave shout-outs to The King of Comedy in the comments to ease his spirits—perhaps another sign of how hipster film kids do, indeed, have fine taste.)

    At the heart of claims that Francesca has done the Lord’s work—or, better yet, deserves an honorary Oscar—there’s a very genuine gratitude for the conversations her posts are creating. With Killers of the Flower Moon in its second theatrical run and up for 10 Oscars next month, Scorsese has been active on the press circuit and now has some internet virality to boot. While there’s no way to quantify the effect Francesca’s TikToks may have had on Killers’ box office performance, it’s difficult to imagine that her videos have not at least piqued the interest of a few otherwise indifferent Gen Zers. (Even if 30-second TikToks pale next to his 206-minute 1920s epic.)

    In fact, when the film first hit theaters in October, fans were quick to sing her praises on Twitter and suggest she work her viral social media magic to promote the film. In reference to last year’s SAG strike, which prevented actors from promoting their projects, one tweet stated that “Francesca Scorsese emerged and is carrying killers of the flower moon promo on her back.” An exaggeration? Certainly. But an unfounded one? Absolutely not.

    Francesca has always been candid about being a huge fan of her dad’s work—she’s partial to The Irishman and The Wolf of Wall Street—and it’s hard to not melt at the evident love and admiration behind every TikTok she “forces” him into. She’s strategic with her content, but never in a way that feels insincere or overly calculated. This is no clout-chasing ruse that will end with an eye roll. Rather, one gets the sense that Francesca is her dad’s biggest cheerleader.

    Look no further than the fact that she seemingly recently convinced him to create a Letterboxd account, where he now shares curated film lists with his nearly 340,000 followers. This came after numerous commenters requested that she get Scorsese on the popular film review app. Even Letterboxd itself was in on the TikTok action, commenting from a verified company account, “Marty has taste,” on the video of him ranking films in a tournament bracket.

    Francesca may be the queen bee of film TikTok, but her content speaks to something more than just having a dad with a cinema institute named after him. As the new hub of pop culture, TikTok has the growing power to widen Gen Z’s cinematic horizons. Look no further than Turner Classic Movies’ 800,000-plus followers, or the rise of the “Wes Anderson Challenge,” which saw new Anderson converts channeling his distinctive style in 30-second videos. The most exciting aspect of “filmtok” is, perhaps, that it exists at all, especially considering the platform. Here is a limitless exploration space for kids who may not be aspect ratio experts but will at least do a proper double take when Martin Scorsese inexplicably appears on their For You pages.

    A single search of #filmtok yields a truly staggering range of content, from Nicolas Cage reaction memes to red-carpet interviews to a surely long-requested compilation of Disney actors who later played serial killers. The beauty of TikTok is that all these types of content coexist (semi) peacefully, letting users fall down rabbit holes of their choice or stumble across one of the world’s greatest filmmakers guessing what “sneaky link” means. (Spoiler alert: not personal peccadilloes.) Whether you seek genuine advice from a renowned screenwriter or simply discover a director while doom-scrolling, TikTok is the intergenerational playground for all kinds of film lore and know-how.

    While it’s safe to say that Scorsese himself is not exactly a fan of TikTok, he certainly recognizes its value to younger generations on some level. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, the director swore that he really has no idea what’s happening when Francesca records him for “those things.” He did, however, acknowledge the wide acclaim of their “Oscar the Dog” audition video, noting that “the one we did with the dog, that was known.” And though he may shake his head disapprovingly while Francesca lip-synchs to the Kardashians, there’s always a glint in his eye, a sliver of awareness that says, “Hey, if the kids are into it, why not?” The man knows that an audience is an audience, on TikTok or anywhere else, and more importantly, he trusts his daughter to do a damn good job entertaining them.

    With Marty’s Big Game debut in the rearview and the Oscars fast approaching, the father-daughter team has resumed its rightful place in the spotlight. In a teaser for the “Hello Down There” ad released by Squarespace last Monday, Francesca helps her dad transition from TikTok to the final frontier of media literacy: website building.

    “Marty & Francesca Make a Website” plays like an extended cut of the duo’s TikToks, with the same delightful back-and-forth unique to a Baby Boomer learning anything technological. In the video, Francesca encourages her dad to make a website that shows his directorial vision of an “intergalactic plea for connection,” but this proves easier said than done. (“URL,” especially, becomes a term of immense confusion.)

    However, by the end of the video, Francesca has, once again, helped her dad share his work with younger generations, this time with a font that, to Marty’s approving eye, expresses the “yearning” of his ad’s aliens. The spot ends with Scorsese telling Francesca that their website “slaps,” proving himself a star pupil of Gen Z lingo. “I really regret ever teaching you that,” Francesca replies, but her smile says just the opposite.

    Holyn Thigpen is an arts and culture writer based in Atlanta. She holds an MA in English from Trinity College Dublin and spends her free time googling Nicolas Cage.





    Holyn Thigpen

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  • The Swiftie’s Guide to the Super Bowl and the Grammy’s

    The Swiftie’s Guide to the Super Bowl and the Grammy’s


    Nora and Nathan are here to walk you through everything you need to know before two big Taylor Swift events: the Super Bowl and the Grammy’s. They give a rundown on the Chiefs and the 49ers and how the game might go for Travis Kelce (1:00), the logistics of Taylor getting from Tokyo to Las Vegas in time for the game (37:01), and what squad she might be bringing along with her (60:14). Then they preview the Grammy’s and make some predictions on what awards Taylor might be bringing home with her (1:08:15).

    Hosts: Nora Princiotti and Nathan Hubbard
    Producer: Kaya McMullen

    Subscribe: Spotify



    Nora Princiotti

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  • Pornhub's Most Popular Video Game Character In 2023 Was Chun-Li From… Fortnite?

    Pornhub's Most Popular Video Game Character In 2023 Was Chun-Li From… Fortnite?

    Image: Epic Games / Capcom / Kotaku

    It shouldn’t be surprising in 2023 that a lot of people watch porn involving video game characters, but exactly who tops the list and why might indeed be unexpected.

    It’s the end of the year, which means companies and websites around the internet are releasing tons of data on what people played, read, listened to, and more. These yearly wrap-ups have become one of my favorite parts of December as I love looking through all the data they reveal. And perhaps there’s no data more interesting than what human beings around the world are getting off on. According to at least one popular porn site, a lot of you were into Chun-Li—but not the version from Street Fighter. 

    Earlier this month, Pornhub released its annual (and very detailed) round-up of what kind of content was the most popular and most sought after on its massively successful site. In all this data, as has been the case for the last few years, is a large section dedicated to video games. Like last year, Fortnite was at the top of the list with Overwatch in second. This time around though, Genshin Impact slipped out of the top three and was replaced by Minecraft.

    A chart shows the most searched games on Pornhub.

    Image: Pornhub

    Further data provided by Pornhub revealed which specific video game characters people were searching for the most in 2023. Chun-Li topped the list, overtaking names like Tifa from Final Fantasy and Lara Croft from Tomb Raider. But weirdly, according to Pornhub’s data, most people were looking for Chun-Li from Fortnite, not Street Fighter, the series she first appeared in. Though Ryu and Chun-Li were added to Epic’s popular battle royale in 2021, it’s still kind of weird.

    To get this data, Pornhub says it collected searches that included a character name and a video game title. This was done “to avoid counting searches for pornstars who may have similar names.”

    Anyway, here’s the top ten list of most searched characters on Pornhub.

    1. Chun-Li (Fortnite)
    2. Tifa (Final Fantasy)
    3. Dva (Overwatch)
    4. Lara Croft (Tomb Raider) 
    5. Lady Dimitrescu (Resident Evil)
    6. Sonic (Sonic the Hedgehog)
    7. Ada Wong (Resident Evil)
    8. Mario (Super Mario Bros.)
    9. Widomaker (Overwatch)
    10. Mercy (Overwatch)

    Try not to think too much about Sonic ranking so high or slip into a daydream where you’re in a room of Nintendo execs when they see that Mario cracked the top of the list.

     .

    Zack Zwiezen

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  • Super League: Hull derby to open 2024 season as first home game for all 12 clubs announced

    Super League: Hull derby to open 2024 season as first home game for all 12 clubs announced

    Hull FC and Hull KR will kick off the 2024 Betfred Super League season at the MKM Stadium on Thursday, February 15; the full fixtures for next year will be revealed at 8.30am tomorrow; For the first time, watch every game of the 2024 Super League season live on Sky Sports

    Last Updated: 22/11/23 7:01pm

    Hull FC and Hull KR will get the 2024 Super League season under way with a derby clash next February

    A Hull derby will kick off the 2024 Betfred Super League season, with every match to be shown live on Sky Sports.

    Cross-city rivals Hull FC and Hull KR meet at the MKM Stadium in the season-opener on Thursday, February 15.

    The match-up was announced on Thursday evening as all 12 clubs confirmed their first home games of next year.

    Hull FC claimed the bragging rights the last time they met Hull KR in the Betfred Super League, winning 16-6 at Sewell Group Craven Park

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    Hull FC claimed the bragging rights the last time they met Hull KR in the Betfred Super League, winning 16-6 at Sewell Group Craven Park

    Hull FC claimed the bragging rights the last time they met Hull KR in the Betfred Super League, winning 16-6 at Sewell Group Craven Park

    Friday, February 16 sees three matches taking place as Leeds Rhinos host Salford Red Devils, St Helens welcome promoted London Broncos, and Leigh Leopards face Huddersfield Giants.

    Castleford Tigers’ new head coach Craig Lingard faces arguably the toughest opening game possible as they host reigning champions Wigan Warriors on Saturday, February 17.

    The other game that day see Grand Final runners-up Catalans Dragons welcome Warrington Wolves to Stade Gilbert Brutus.

    After travelling to their rivals on opening night, Hull KR face Leeds in their first home game on Thursday, February 22, at the start of Round 2.

    Highlights of the 2023 Betfred Super League Grand Final between Wigan Warriors and Catalans Dragons

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    Highlights of the 2023 Betfred Super League Grand Final between Wigan Warriors and Catalans Dragons

    Highlights of the 2023 Betfred Super League Grand Final between Wigan Warriors and Catalans Dragons

    The Broncos’ first home game back in Super League sees them host Catalans at Wimbledon’s Cherry Red Records Stadium the following night, with Warrington welcoming Hull FC to the Halliwell Jones Stadium on the same day.

    Huddersfield’s first home match is against St Helens on Saturday, February 24, while Wigan are pencilled in to face Leigh in the ‘Battle of the Borough’ at the DW Stadium.

    The second round of the 2024 Super League season is rounded off by Salford hosting Castleford Tigers on Sunday, February 25.

    The full fixture list for next year’s regular season will be announced at 8.30am on Thursday, November 23.

    Betfred Super League 2024 opening fixtures

    Round 1

    Thursday, February 15: Hull FC vs Hull KR.

    Friday, February 16: Leeds Rhinos vs Salford Red Devils, St Helens vs London Broncos, Leigh Leopards vs Huddersfield Giants.

    Saturday, February 17: Castleford Tigers vs Wigan Warriors, Catalans Dragons vs Warrington Wolves.

    Round 2

    Thursday, February 22: Hull KR vs Leeds Rhinos.

    Friday, February 23: London Broncos vs Catalans Dragons, Warrington Wolves vs Hull FC.

    Saturday, February 24: Huddersfield Giants vs St Helens, Wigan Warriors vs Leigh Leopards.

    Sunday, February 25: Salford Red Devils vs Castleford Tigers.

    Watch every match of the 2024 Betfred Super League season, including Magic Weekend, the play-offs, and men’s, women’s and wheelchair Grand Finals, live on Sky Sports. Also stream with NOW.

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  • Super Mario RPG Melody Bay music puzzle solutions

    Super Mario RPG Melody Bay music puzzle solutions

    Super Mario RPG will test your music knowledge via the Tadpole Pond music puzzle in Melody Bay.

    After arriving in Melody Bay, if you head right and step on the stone, you’ll be greeted by tadpoles that swim on a musical chart. Jumping on the tadpole stops it from moving, so you can draft a melody. You’ll earn rewards by composing specific melodies, so you’ll want to make sure to come back to Melody Bay every now and then to play a new song for the local composer.

    If you miss the timing to jump on the tadpole, don’t worry, as it’ll swim back and forth between the lines.

    For each song you play, you’ll unlock better healing items to buy from The Juice Bar in Tadpole Pond.

    Below, we show you the Tadpole Pond puzzle solutions in Super Mario RPG and what rewards you get for playing these songs.


    Melody Bay song #1: Frogfucius’ Suite #18

    A nearby tadpole in the water will actually tell you what notes the tadpoles need to be, but if you’re not good at translating notes to a chart, we’ve got your back.

    Arrange the tadpoles like so to get an Alto Card, which grants you one tier of membership to The Juice Bar in Tadpole Pond:

    Image: ArtePiazza/Nintendo via Polygon

    With the Alto Card, you can buy Frogleg Cola, a healing item that recovers 80 HP for the whole party, for 42 coins each.


    Melody Bay song #2: Mole Mountain Blues

    After you save the two mole children and get the third star, you can return to Melody Bay to play a new song, the Mole Mountain Blues. Set up the tadpoles like so, to get the Tenor Card:

    Tadpoles line up in Super Mario RPG to play Mole Mountain Blues.

    Image: ArtePiazza/Nintendo via Polygon

    With the Tenor Card, you can buy Finless Cola, a healing item that recovers 150 HP for the whole party, for 90 coins each.


    Melody Bay song #3: Monstro Town Melody

    After visiting Monstro Town, talking to the mayor, and listening to the Pink Starfish upstairs in his home, you can come back to Melody Bay to play the third and final song.

    Set up the tadpoles like so to get the Soprano Card:

    Tadpoles line up and sing the Monstro Town Melody in Super Mario RPG

    Image: ArtePiazza/Nintendo via Polygon

    The Soprano Card allows you to buy Croaka Cola for 200 coins from The Juice Bar. Croaka Cola fully restores your party, so it’s a useful and powerful item to keep around.


    For more Super Mario RPG guides, check out our party member unlock guide, beginner’s guide, or our list of all the hidden treasure locations.

    Julia Lee

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  • Kevin Sinfield announces new challenge to raise funds for MND, the disease affecting great friend Rob Burrow

    Kevin Sinfield announces new challenge to raise funds for MND, the disease affecting great friend Rob Burrow

    Kevin Sinfield to run seven ultra-marathons in seven days to raise funds for motor neurone disease; 43-year-old will start in Leeds, then head to Cardiff, Birmingham, Edinburgh, Dublin and Brighton before finishing in London; Sinfield has raised millions for MND since Rob Burrow diagnosis

    Last Updated: 08/11/23 10:30am

    Kevin Sinfield will run seven ultra-marathons in seven days in December to raise funds for MND

    Kevin Sinfield will undertake a new challenge to help those affected by motor neurone disease by running seven ultra-marathons in seven days in December.

    Sinfield has raised millions of pounds for MND charities since his former Leeds Rhinos team-mate and great friend Rob Burrow was diagnosed in 2019.

    The 43-year-old, currently defence coach of the England men’s rugby union team, will start in Leeds on December 1.

    He will then head to Cardiff, Birmingham, Edinburgh, Dublin and Brighton before finishing in London on December 7, when he runs from Twickenham Stadium to The Mall.

    Sinfield will run 27.2 miles a day – full marathon length plus an extra mile to show how people can always do even more to help friends needing support.

    Sinfield says carrying Rob Burrow over the finish line at the Leeds Marathon was 'really, really special'

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    Sinfield says carrying Rob Burrow over the finish line at the Leeds Marathon was ‘really, really special’

    Sinfield says carrying Rob Burrow over the finish line at the Leeds Marathon was ‘really, really special’

    This will be Sinfield’s fourth fundraiser, with the former Rhinos man telling the BBC: “I did say last year that the Ultra 7 in 7 would complete the trilogy, but there was always that caveat that Rocky 4 was my favourite Rocky film.”

    “For the MND community, every second counts and we will be making the most of every step on this challenge to raise awareness, funds and support for that community.

    “The MND community have always given us incredible support and we wanted to find a way we could show that support for more people around the country.

    The charities supported by this latest challenge include the Rob Burrow Centre for MND in Leeds.

    Donations will also go to the My Name’5 Doddie Foundation, the Irish MND Association, the Darby Rimmer MND Foundation, and the 4ED campaign, with the latter supporting former Leicester rugby union player Ed Slater.

    Slater, who also represented Gloucester and Nottingham, was diagnosed with MND in 2022.

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  • It’s still wild that Nintendo signed off on Super Mario RPG

    It’s still wild that Nintendo signed off on Super Mario RPG

    Nearly three decades after it was first released on Super Nintendo — and despite a handsome remake for Switch, with completely redone visuals and rerecorded music — there’s still something strangely, but not unpleasantly, off about Super Mario RPG.

    Mario looks all squat and cross-eyed; in fact, the whole Mushroom Kingdom and all its denizens have a sort of squashed, funhouse-mirror look, as if folding them into an isometric perspective has flattened them all out. Early in the game, Bowser’s castle gets run through by a giant, skyscraper-sized talking sword; when did you ever see a sword in a Mario game? Not long after, a Toad makes a joke about forgetting his bazooka at home. His what? Mario’s house is a wobbly, clapboard shack. Mario has a house. It’s all kinds of wrong.

    This adventure, first released in 1996 as Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars, was a collaboration between Nintendo and Square (now Square Enix) when both were in their mid-’90s pomp. Nintendo was winding down the SNES after an unbeatable run of in-house classics, from Super Mario World to Yoshi’s Island, while Square was months away from unleashing Final Fantasy 7 on the world. It was a meeting of near equals, and while the characters were Nintendo’s, the turf — turn-based role-playing games — was very much Square’s. The developer had the confidence to make its own tastes and personality felt in Mario RPG, in much the same way it later would with the Disney-crossover Kingdom Hearts games, and in a way few external developers working with Mario ever would again (with the recent exception of Ubisoft’s zany-but-cunning Mario + Rabbids games).

    Image: Nintendo

    So Mario RPG features many elements that feel like foreign bodies, even within the hallucinatory, anything-goes world of the Mushroom Kingdom. Square was allowed to create its own characters for the game — including Mallow, Mario’s first companion on his quest, who claims to be a frog but looks like a cross between a cloud and a cauliflower with stripy pants and a purple quiff. There’s a lovely score by the legendary Yoko Shimomura (Kingdom Hearts, Street Fighter 2) that has a lush, nostalgic quality that’s subtly but profoundly different from original Mario composer Koji Kondo’s folksy melodic playfulness.

    It all adds up to a curio: a game that has long felt like it belongs in a parallel dimension. Released just months before the Nintendo 64’s debut, original SNES copies of Super Mario RPG command high prices on the used market, and it has had only basic and sparing reissues from Nintendo since (it didn’t come to Europe at all until the Wii Virtual Console version in 2008). But it was also influential, laying the foundations for Nintendo’s later (and more tonally controlled) Mario RPG series, Paper Mario and Mario & Luigi. It has the same streamlined RPG systems as those games, the rhythmic inputs that add immediacy to the turn-based combat, and a similar, mildly meta sense of humor.

    Mario is squished flat by a Thwomp on some stairs in Super Mario RPG

    Image: Nintendo

    For whatever reason — perhaps a hunger for any and all Mario content in the wake of the Super Mario Bros. Movie phenomenon, perhaps a newfound willingness to take risks with its mascot — Nintendo is now finally ready to give Super Mario RPG its due and integrate it properly with the Mario catalog, via this full Switch remake. It’s strange to encounter this game (for the first time, in my case) in 2023 on Switch, and it’s great that Nintendo, Square Enix, and whoever developed the remake (which remains unclear, but I’ve asked Nintendo for clarification) have so carefully kept its wayward spirit alive.

    The full 3D graphical overhaul retains the original’s bizarre rendered look, wisely refusing to homogenize or standardize the designs, and retaining its off-kilter character even as it smooths out the animations. Shimomura has completely reorchestrated her score, but you can switch to the chiptune originals, if you like. There are some modern creature comforts, like a frequent autosave, but most of Mario RPG’s archaic, 27-year-old design quirks remain intact. That said, on early evidence, Square’s expert simplification of traditional RPG mechanics seems bulletproof — and the game plays very swiftly, considering its age.

    As smart as the new version is, playing Super Mario RPG feels like a portal to another time — or another timeline, perhaps. A timeline where Mario lives in a shack. I’m still not over it.

    Super Mario RPG will be released on Nov. 17.

    Oli Welsh

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  • What if Super Mario Bros. Wonder’s talking flowers were in Alan Wake 2?

    What if Super Mario Bros. Wonder’s talking flowers were in Alan Wake 2?

    Alan Wake 2 is bleak stuff. Sure, your flashlight makes the darkness a little less scary, and the full-motion video commercials are a lighthearted wink to players who seek them out. But for some, the game could benefit from a constant positive presence to raise the mood while you traverse the Overlap and beyond.

    Of course, this thought comes after playing Super Mario Bros. Wonder, where each level features a goofy talking flower character who remarks on the player’s actions, or on what’s happening in the game world. After going back and forth between the two games, it’s hard not to imagine what the talking flower would be like in Alan Wake 2.

    Image composition: Cameron Faulkner/Polygon | Source images: Remedy Entertainment/Epic Games Publishing, Nintendo EPD/Nintendo

    Beyond blurting out quips to take your mind off the dread of walking through forests at night with scarily few bullets, or when running from the Dark Presence, the talking flower could be a useful tool for marking objectives, or helping you figure out combinations to safes.

    Inevitably, I think the game would take a dark turn with this, turning the talking flower into a deceptive plot device. Eventually you wouldn’t know if you could trust what the talking flower is telling you, adding to Alan Wake 2’s deft skill of extending its dark fiction over the game’s reality. Are the Taken a threat, or are you the threat? Maybe, just maybe, it’s the talking flower.


    It’s putting thoughts into my mind, ones that I’d rather not be having.

    The chaos is reminding me of how simple things were, back when Alice and I first arrived in Bright Falls. Now, I’m stuck in the Dark Place.

    T̶̘͉̯̀̾̑̈́̈́͑̏̚̕͝h̸̝͔̭̹͎̲̦̖͉͓̊͊̒̓̎͒̑̚͜e̶̢̛̦̠̤̳͍̭̠̠͊̄̑̓̌̂̍̐̍͝ ̵͈͚̞̑͛̀̈́̅ţ̶̧̭̜̙̥̀̐̔͜ă̶̲̬̞͔̠͚̪̣̤̎̀̂̈́̕ḽ̸̬̬͎͙̥̘̈͐͗͋͋͋̍̌̀͛̕̕͠k̸̖͎̙̭̖̝̎̽̃̀͊̃̏̑̾̃͒ḭ̶̧̠͙͕̺͎͊̄̈́̾̇̈̐͋̏͘͝ń̸̢̮̩̰͙͌̆͛g̴̞͖͖͉̭͚̞͋́̒̈̃̄̾͗͂̈̎͘̚ ̵̢͎̺͎̙̭͕̹̞̑̆̈́̿f̴̨̨̧̱͖̫̱̥̖̩̝̯͇̪̀͋̒͐͗̓̎͗̂͐͜͠ĺ̸̡̦̼̖̦͔̗̳̭̫̼̳̘̱̝̎̂͛́̀̓̇̈̎͝o̷̡͓̭̞̲̯̞̘͊̈́̉͋̾̿̓̔̈̅͌͜͝ͅw̴̘͖̉̈́̽͗̏̈́̄̈́̓̈́̓̕͠ȩ̸̡̞̱̟̺̹̲͍͖̹̹̀̈́͒̆̀̊̾̉̑̽̑̕͠ͅŗ̷͉̝̘͚͉̱̫̰̈́ ̸̺̥̤̞̭͙̗͚͍̗̺͈͔̣̃͜͠ḩ̴̡̧̰͕͈̩̱̲̯͚̥͚̦́̇͜a̶̜̰̝̼̬̦̼͓͊̉̈́ṡ̸̡̟̩͎̗̘̭͕͕͍͍͖̠͜ ̵̗̬͉̜̩̂t̵̹͓͍̯̤̭͍̻̹̟͚̎͐͛͠ą̵̟̠̬̮̌̊̍̿̒̂̊͌͋̐̚͝k̶̨̛̝̻̫͕͇̙̼͎̞͕͓̥͒͂̔̽̀̑͒̏̚͜͝ȩ̴̝͓̬̝̘̘̙̤̰̫̞̤̈̎̏̐̒̋̏͋͊͝n̸̢̛̠̖͚̠͎͆̂͛̑́͠ͅ ̵̢̘̹͓͖̘̽͛̀͋̐̚m̵̛͚̊̃͂̃̆̋̓̂͛͆̋̎̃͌y̴̙͖͔̳͍͍̟̫̩͎̙̟̔͛̔̏̓̇̀̈́͆̀ͅͅͅ ̶̠͓̝͉̬̤̟̼̞͉͚͋̇̂͗́ͅp̴̨̞̲̹̩̙̫̖͉̩̠̗̜̀͜l̷̲͚̱͉͓̥̪͑̓̔͛̿̐͋͑͂̈́͘͜ã̸̢͚͓͚͔͊̓̒̈̎̆̾̎̚ç̶̟̤̟̯̘̖̝̫͎̣̹̚e̸̜͓̯͐̑̾̈́̂̉̓̆̐͝ ̶̙̖̲̮̏͌͜ͅí̸̯̇̇̇̆̄̔͋͊̾̋͠n̵̨̠̙̟͎̏́̄̓̔͗̀̚͝͝ ̶̜̞̥̭̰̼̖̞̖̭̈̂͒͒̓͑͛̾̐̽̿̕̕͝͝ŗ̴̮̜̼̔͗͋̉ͅę̷͍̥͖̞̻̗͓͓̥̎̅͑̅̾̓̾̃̿̄̕͠ä̸̛̻̎̅̔̈̈́̅̀̎̂̈́̚͝͝ļ̷͕̫̫̜̄̉́̎̐͝į̷͎͇̖̖͚̍̓̀̉̂́̏͂͑̂͌̕ͅt̷̡͉͎͓̻͙̩͍̙͈͋̏̈̏̎̉̀̕y̵͙͉̩̘̐̈́̃̄́̉̓̍̀̂̅̔͝.̵̢̡̢̭̻̝̭͎͔͖̻͔̓̀͜͜͠ͅ

    Cameron Faulkner

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  • ‘Super Mario Bros. Wonder’ Review

    ‘Super Mario Bros. Wonder’ Review

    Down the pipe and into the Flower Kingdom, Ben and Jess are talking all things Mario today with the release of Super Mario Bros. Wonder. They begin by discussing their histories with the Super Mario Bros. franchise (0:00) and its evolution in 2D/3D gameplay (12:00). Later on, they chat about their likes and dislikes of the game (30:00) before producer Devon Renaldo joins to deliver a hot take on Nintendo’s direction, the company’s upcoming releases, and the successor to the Switch (1:09:00).

    Hosts: Ben Lindbergh and Jessica Clemons
    Producer: Devon Renaldo
    Additional Production Supervision: Arjuna Ramgopal

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts

    Ben Lindbergh

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  • Secrets of Shova Mansion secret exit location in Super Mario Bros. Wonder

    Secrets of Shova Mansion secret exit location in Super Mario Bros. Wonder

    Secrets of Shova Mansion is a level in Super Mario Bros. Wonders W4 Sunbaked Desert. It has the normal stuff — a Wonder Seed, flower coins, and a flagpole at the end — but the level also has a secret exit. Finding it unlocks a path to a couple more levels and an entrance to the Special World.

    Our Super Mario Bros. Wonder guide will walk you where to find the secret exit location in Secrets of Shova Mansion, allowing you to get the secret, third Wonder Seed.


    Where to find Secrets of Shova Mansion secret exit location

    There are three Wonder Seeds to collect in Secrets of Shova Mansion. The first two — the one you get from the Wonder Flower sequence and from reaching the normal flagpole — are a bit more obvious. You can find our walkthrough of them with the rest of W4 Sunbaked Desert.

    Finding the third Wonder Seed leads to a secret exit — and opens the path to Flight of the Bloomps, Expert Badge Challenge: Invisibility 1, and this world’s entrance to the Special World.

    Image: Nintendo EPD/Nintendo

    You’ll have to play the level a second and get all the way to the end. When you drop out of the final door, there’s a Shova below you pushing a box across a small section of breakable blocks.

    Super Mario Bros. Wonder Secrets of Shova Mansion screenshot showing the route to a Wonder Seed.

    Image: Nintendo EPD/Nintendo

    Ground Pound the blocks and then push the box into the gap (taking out the Shova in the process). This will reveal a new pipe.

    Super Mario Bros. Wonder Secrets of Shova Mansion screenshot showing the route to a Wonder Seed.

    Image: Nintendo EPD/Nintendo

    Go through the pipe and run right. You’ll find another pipe there that will lead you to this level’s secret exit and third Wonder Seed.


    We’ve got guides to help you find every Wonder Seed in Super Mario Bros. Wonder. You can jump to Pipe-Rock Plateau, Fluff-Puff Peaks, Shining Falls, Sunbaked Desert, Fungi Mines, Deep Magma Bog, the Petal Isles, and Special World.

    Jeffrey Parkin

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  • Bevan French named 2023 Steve Prescott MBE Betfred Super League Man of Steel

    Bevan French named 2023 Steve Prescott MBE Betfred Super League Man of Steel

    Bevan French is the first Wigan Warriors player to win the Betfred Super League Man of Steel award since Sam Tomkins in 2012; Jack Welsby and Tom Johnstone were also nominated; Sinead Peach and Lewis King win the Women’s and Wheelchair awards

    Last Updated: 11/10/23 12:35am

    Bevan French was been named as Super League’s Man of Steel for 2023

    Bevan French has been named as this year’s winner of the prestigious Steve Prescott MBE Betfred Super League Man of Steel award.

    The Wigan Warriors stand-off, who was previously nominated for Super League’s player-of-the-year award in 2020, was given the accolade after playing a pivotal role in his side winning the League Leaders’ Shield and reaching Saturday’s Grand Final after excelling following his move from the wing to the halves this year.

    French, named in this year’s Super League Dream Team, beat off competition from Super League’s joint-leading try-scorer and star for Wigan’s opponents Catalans Dragons at Old Trafford, Tom Johnstone, and St Helens full-back Jack Welsby to claim the prize.

    The Australian is the first Wigan player to win the award since Sam Tomkins, now with Catalans, in 2012 and it marks the 12th time overall a player from the club has been honoured with the accolade since it was instituted in 1977.

    Bevan French is the first Wigan player to win Super League's Man of Steel since Sam Tomkins

    Bevan French is the first Wigan player to win Super League’s Man of Steel since Sam Tomkins

    French was named as winner at the Rugby League Awards Night in Manchester, with England international hooker Sinead Peach earning the Woman of Steel award for her role in helping York Valkyrie win the League Leaders’ Shield and claim a maiden Betfred Women’s Super League Grand Final triumph.

    England Wheelchair World Cup winner Lewis King, meanwhile, was named winner of the inaugural Wheels of Steel award for his impressive displays for London Roosters in the Betfred Wheelchair Super League.

    In total, 17 awards were handed out at Emirates Old Trafford, with Adrian Lam taking the Super League Coach of the Year prize after overseeing Leigh Leopards lifting the Betfred Challenge Cup for the first time in over half a century and guiding them to a maiden play-off appearance.

    Steve Prescott MBE Man of Steel – Bevan French (Wigan Warriors); Woman of Steel – Sinead Peach (York Valkyrie); Wheels of Steel – Lewis King (London Roosters); Betfred Championship Player of the Year – Dean Parata (London Broncos) and Lachlan Walmsley (Halifax Panthers); Betfred League One Player of the Year – Reiss Butterworth (Dewsbury Rams).

    Betfred Super League Young Player of the Year – Josh Thewlis (Warrington Wolves); Betfred Women’s Super League Young Player of the Year – Caitlin Casey (Leeds Rhinos); Betfred Wheelchair Super League Young Player of the Year – Josh Butler (Leeds Rhinos); Betfred Championship Young Player of the Year – Bill Leyland (London Broncos); Betfred League One Young Player of the Year – Ciaran Walker (Workington Town).

    Betfred Super League Coach of the Year – Adrian Lam (Leigh Leopards); Betfred Women’s Super League Coach of the Year – Lindsay Anfield (York Valkyrie); Betfred Wheelchair Super League Coach of the Year – Tom Coyd MBE (London Roosters); Betfred Championship Coach of the Year – Mike Eccles (London Broncos); Betfred League One Coach of the Year – Liam Finn (Dewsbury Rams).

    Foundation of the Year – Barrow Raiders.

    Glen’s Spirit of Super League Award – The Burrow Family.

    Lindsay Anfield won the Women’s Super League equivalent after guiding York to a successful season and England head coach Tom Coyd took the wheelchair prize for his work with London Roosters.

    Warrington Wolves winger Josh Thewlis was named as Super League’s Young Player of the Year, while Leeds Rhinos half-back Caitlin Casey took the Women’s Super League young player award and another Rhinos in Josh Butler won the wheelchair equivalent.

    As announced before the ceremony, the Glen’s Spirit of Super League Award was presented to the family of Rob Burrow MBE, for their inspirational support of the former Leeds Rhinos and England half-back since his diagnosis with Motor Neurone Disease four years ago.

    Watch the men’s Betfred Super League Grand Final and the Betfred Wheelchair Super League Grand Final live on Sky Sports this weekend. Also stream the best rugby league and more on NOW for £21 a month for six months.

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  • Abbas Miski: Wigan Warriors winger earns plaudits after four tries in Super League win over Hull KR

    Abbas Miski: Wigan Warriors winger earns plaudits after four tries in Super League win over Hull KR

    Lebanon international Abbas Miski followed up a hat-trick against Leigh Leopards by scoring four tries as Wigan Warriors defeated Hull Kingston Rovers 64-6; the visitors fielded a much-rotated side ahead of their Betfred Challenge Cup final appearance on Saturday, August 12

    Last Updated: 04/08/23 11:51pm

    Abbas Miski ran in four tries as Wigan stormed to victory over Hull KR

    Matt Peet praised ‘flawless’ Abbas Miski after the Lebanese winger scored four tries in Wigan Warriors’ 64-6 thrashing of a much-rotated Hull Kingston Rovers side at the DW Stadium.

    Peet’s men were in no mood to go easy on a Rovers matchday squad featuring three academy debutants and a trio of short-term signings with more than one eye on next week’s Betfred Challenge Cup final against Leigh Leopards.

    Miski’s quadruple followed hot on the heels of a hat-trick against Leigh Leopards last week and continued the remarkable transformation of a player who spent part of his early Wigan career on loan at Betfred Championship side Newcastle Thunder.

    “There isn’t a major flaw in his game, he’s worked so hard, he lets his rugby do the talking and he is just a great advert for perseverance and hard work,” Peet said.

    “He showed the right attitude when he went to Newcastle, and he is benefiting from that. From a coach’s point of view, he is technically where you want him to be, and he is such a well-rounded player for us.”

    Jai Field helped himself to a late hat-trick as Wigan ran in a total of 12 tries to make up for their agonising cup semi-final loss to the same team – albeit with different personnel – at Headingley less than two weeks ago.

    “We did a professional job,” Peet said. “It was a different sort of challenge for us, and it was quite difficult to prepare the group.

    Jai Field grabbed a hat-trick as Wigan thrashed Hull KR

    Jai Field grabbed a hat-trick as Wigan thrashed Hull KR

    “I want to pay tribute to Hull KR who brought a young and spirited team and while they lacked some cohesion and experience, I thought their performance was honourable and we had to earn our points.”

    Robins boss Willie Peters had no complaints about the result or performance and paid tribute to the way a side featuring just two starters from that Headingley golden-point win kept the hosts at bay for much of the first period.

    “The score didn’t reflect the effort and how hard the guys competed,” Peters said.

    “It came down to a bit of technical stuff but with Wigan being the quality side that they are, there was a high level of skill there and some really quality tries and it is all about learning for the young guys.”

    Hull KR head coach Willie Peters is now focused on next week's Challenge Cup final

    Hull KR head coach Willie Peters is now focused on next week’s Challenge Cup final

    Peters’ attention will now turn to Wembley and fashioning only Rovers’ second Challenge Cup win in their history after their Hull derby triumph in 1980.

    And Peters paid tribute to the big names he rested, who made the long journey to the DW Stadium en masse to support their new-look side from the sidelines.

    “They came into the dressing room before the game and that highlights the connection we’ve got within the group,” Peters said.

    “They met for dinner beforehand and turned up together, and that’s really pleasing to see as a coach. We’re heading into a massive game next week and it’s the teams who are most connected that win the big games.”

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  • Hull KR 34-16 Castleford Tigers: Rovers strengthen grip on Super League top-six with victory

    Hull KR 34-16 Castleford Tigers: Rovers strengthen grip on Super League top-six with victory

    Tom Opacic, Rhys Kennedy, Kane Linnett, Elliot Minchella, James Batchelor and Ethan Ryan score tries as Hull KR beat Castleford Tigers in Friday’s Super League action; Rovers back up their Challenge Cup semi-final win over Wigan with a business-like victory over the Tigers

    Last Updated: 28/07/23 10:21pm

    Rhys Kennedy was among the tries for Hull KR as they defeated Castleford on Friday

    Hull KR strengthened their grip on a top-six spot in the Betfred Super League with a 34-16 win over strugglers Castleford at Craven Park.

    Rovers scored six tries to the visitors’ three as they backed up their Challenge Cup semi-final win over Wigan with a business-like victory over the Tigers.

    While Rovers can go to Wigan next week in a relaxed frame of mind ahead of their Wembley showdown with Leigh, the 11th-placed Tigers are once again left nervous about their Super League status.

    Rovers grabbed the lead with 14 minutes gone as Tom Opacic dotted down in the right corner after they had kept the ball alive across the field through Jez Litten’s kick, which the visitors knocked on.

    Brad Schneider was on hand to collect and feed Opacic, who gave his side the lead despite the best efforts of the visitors’ defence.

    Rovers soon doubled their lead thanks to a fine sniping run by Mikey Lewis. Litten’s pass to Rhys Kennedy saw the prop go over near the posts to give Rowan Milnes a simple conversion for a 10-0 lead at the midway point of the first half.

    Rovers made it three tries five minutes later as Shaun Kenny-Dowall’s offload found Lewis and he saw Kane Linnett in support for another easy score which Milnes improved.

    Castleford were back in the game with 11 minutes left in the half as Will Tate scored from an offload close in and Riley Dean’s kick reduced the arrears to 10 points.

    Ethan Ryan was denied a try down the right for a forward pass and Castleford claimed their second score as full-back Jack Broadbent found a gap to dive over to make the score 16-10 to Rovers at the break.

    The home side added try number four two minutes after the restart as a fine run by Matt Parcell carved open the Tigers defence to set up Elliot Minchella and Milnes pushed the gap out to 12.

    James Batchelor powered his way forward before reaching to touch down to become the fifth home try scorer and Milnes’ fourth conversion made it 28-10.

    Broadbent was then shown a yellow card as he prevented Matty Storton from playing the ball close to the posts after stopping his fine run. Milnes kicked the penalty to stretch the lead.

    Rovers made the player advantage pay as Schneider looped a pass to Ryan wide on the right for their sixth try, with a little under 20 minutes remaining.

    With eight minutes to go, Greg Eden’s try in the left corner and Dean’s tricky kick from out wide were of little consolation for Castleford as the home side secured the Roger Millward Trophy.

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  • St Helens head coach Paul Wellens hits out at RFL for ‘failing to protect players’ after four Saints stars injured

    St Helens head coach Paul Wellens hits out at RFL for ‘failing to protect players’ after four Saints stars injured

    Alex Walmsley, Agnatius Paasi, Morgan Knowles and Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook were all injured in tackles by Leigh Leopards’ John Asiata; St Helens head coach Paul Wellens hit out at the RFL for lack of punishment for the tackles

    Last Updated: 25/07/23 6:56pm

    Paul Wellens read out a statement at the beginning of his press conference accusing the RFL of failing to protect players

    St Helens head coach Paul Wellens has accused the RFL of “failing to protect players” in an explosive statement after four of his players were injured during their Challenge Cup semi-final defeat to the Leigh Leopards.

    Agnatius Paasi and Alex Walmsley have been ruled out for the remainder of the season with ACL and MCL injuries respectively, Paasi missing at least nine months.

    Morgan Knowles is 50/50 to play in St Helens’ Super League clash with Leeds on Friday, while Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook looks set to miss two weeks.

    John Asiata, who tackled all four players, was not charged by the match review panel after being cited and Wellens believes the lack of punishment sets a dangerous precedent.

    “As a game, we bang the player welfare drum a fair bit and make a lot of effort and make a lot of strides as a game to protect players because ultimately we have a duty of care to protect our players at all times,” Wellens said.

    “But, in my opinion, and very few would disagree with me, this weekend, the governing body has failed in its duty to protect its players. On the weekend, we had four players injured by one player.

    “One of those has a 50/50 chance of playing this weekend, that is Morgan Knowles. Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook will not play for two weeks. Alex Walmsley is today having MCL surgery and will be out for 12 weeks and the fourth, Agnatius Paasi, has torn ankle ligaments and a torn MCL and also will undergo surgery to repair his ACL. He will not play for nine months.

    “The RFL, before the match review panel met to adjudicate on those decisions, were provided with detailed medical reports from our medical staff.

    “But when I spoke to the MRP who viewed that game they, by 6.30pm on Monday evening after the decision not to charge John Asiata was made, by that point, had still not seen those scan reports.

    “What I want to ask is why? Because that is a very different procedure to which Morgan Knowles was subjected to when he was part of a similar scenario after a game on Good Friday in which, unfortunately, Mike Cooper suffered an ACL injury.

    “I think it’s important to consider, this isn’t an emotional response after losing a cup game. I congratulate Leigh wholeheartedly for the way they played and wish them all the luck in the final.

    “But what we have got to consider when we are making decisions not to charge players who are tackling in that manner is that we give the green light to coaches, players at all levels to be able to tackle like that.”

    Highlights of the Super League match between St Helens and Catalans Dragons

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    Highlights of the Super League match between St Helens and Catalans Dragons

    Highlights of the Super League match between St Helens and Catalans Dragons

    Wellens took his comments further, revealing that if such tackling techniques continue, he would consider taking his son away from playing the community game.

    “As I sit here now as someone that loves the game, that doesn’t sit with me well and it doesn’t make me feel comfortable,” he added.

    “I have an eight-year-old son who plays at Pilkington Recs with a smile on his face but if that’s the type of tackle we are allowing in games then maybe rugby league is a game I don’t want my son playing anymore. I feel that strongly about it.

    “I feel that strongly that Agnatius Paasi, Alex Walmsley, LMS and Morgan Knowles have been severely let down by the governing body.”

    Sky Sports News has reached out to the RFL for comment.

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  • St Helens 12-14 Catalans Dragons: Super League leaders hold off Saints to strengthen grip on top spot

    St Helens 12-14 Catalans Dragons: Super League leaders hold off Saints to strengthen grip on top spot

    Tries from Tom Johnstone and Matt Ikuvalu, plus two conversions and a penalty from Adam Keighran saw Catalans move four points clear at the top of the Betfred Super League with victory over third-placed St Helens in the Round 19 opener at Totally Wicked Stadium

    Last Updated: 13/07/23 10:38pm

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    Highlights of the Super League match between St Helens and Catalans Dragons

    Highlights of the Super League match between St Helens and Catalans Dragons

    Catalans Dragons further cemented their place at the top of the Betfred Super League table as they held out for a 14-12 win over St Helens at Totally Wicked Stadium on Thursday evening.

    A stunning length-of-the-field try from Tom Johnstone and a penalty and conversion from Adam Keighran put Catalans ahead in the third-versus-first clash, but Mark Percival’s converted score ensured Saints trailed by just two points at half-time.

    Matt Ikuvalu’s converted try five minutes into the second half ultimately proved enough to seal the win as a valiant rearguard action from the French side prevented the hosts from completing a comeback despite Lewis Dodd’s late score which ensured a grandstand finish.

    The result ensured the 2021 League Leaders’ Shield winners secured a first win over St Helens at this ground for seven years, while the reigning champions were left to count the cost of failed head injury assessments for key men James Roby and Mark Percival which rule them out of next week’s Betfred Challenge Cup semi-final against Leigh Leopards.

    Story of the game

    Catalans’ performance made it all the more remarkable that they had arrived on Merseyside smarting from last week’s shock home loss to struggling Huddersfield Giants which had raised inevitable questions over their inability to stay the course.

    With Sam Tomkins reverting to full-back in place of the injured Arthur Mourgue, the visitors set about erasing those doubts during a tight opening period in which they more than matched their opponents for muscle and flair.

    Saints, creeping up the table after what has proved a sluggish campaign by their own high standards, gave nothing away for the opening quarter of an hour until a high tackle on Paul Seguier gave centre Keighran the chance to kick Catalans into a two-point lead.

    Tom Johnstone ran the length of pitch in an outstanding solo effort to get his 22nd try for Catalans this season

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    Tom Johnstone ran the length of pitch in an outstanding solo effort to get his 22nd try for Catalans this season

    Tom Johnstone ran the length of pitch in an outstanding solo effort to get his 22nd try for Catalans this season

    Jack Welsby’s persistence at the other end was rewarded with a repeat set inside the Catalans’ 20, but a kick from Jonny Lomax was intercepted deep by Keighran, who sent Johnstone cruising down the wing where he crossed unchallenged for his 22nd try of the season.

    Roby’s exit summed up a frustrating start for the home side but they were doing little wrong, and bustled their way back into the contest when they pressed through three consecutive penalties before Percival latched onto Dodd’s kick to touch down, before also kicking the extras.

    The French side extended their lead five minutes after the break when Matt Ikuvalu squirmed over in the corner and Keighran’s touchline conversion stretched their advantage to 14-6.

    Having been denied by May, Hopoate finally unlocked the Dragons defence with a clever ball inside to send Dodd over with six minutes left.

    Joey Lussick’s kick made it a two-point game and Saints almost snatched it on the hooter when Hopoate blazed down the right but a costly mix-up with Konrad Hurrell saw the Tongan fling his final pass into touch.

    What they said

    Catalans Dragons head coach Steve McNamara

    Steve McNamara felt a few on-field decisions went against his side which put their defence under unnecessary pressure but they managed to dig in to get the win over St Helens

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    Steve McNamara felt a few on-field decisions went against his side which put their defence under unnecessary pressure but they managed to dig in to get the win over St Helens

    Steve McNamara felt a few on-field decisions went against his side which put their defence under unnecessary pressure but they managed to dig in to get the win over St Helens

    “We were in front all the way through the game…but we had to overcome some adversity there. A few bits went against us, but we managed to find some spirit in there and win the game under pressure at the end.

    “It could have gone either way, but it was a very semi-final-style game.”

    St Helens head coach Paul Wellens

    Paul Wellens said there's not a lot between St Helens and Catalans and was proud of his team despite their loss

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    Paul Wellens said there’s not a lot between St Helens and Catalans and was proud of his team despite their loss

    Paul Wellens said there’s not a lot between St Helens and Catalans and was proud of his team despite their loss

    “I’m really proud of the team and their efforts. It was a red-hot game between two sides where there wasn’t much between them.

    “There are more games down the track and opportunities to pick up points. We’re never happy when we lose a game – those are the standards we set ourselves – so naturally we are disappointed, but not in terms of the fact we went down fighting.”

    Player of the match Michael McIlorum

    Player of the match Michael McIlorum says Catalans need to keep grinding out results after defeating a tough St Helens side

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    Player of the match Michael McIlorum says Catalans need to keep grinding out results after defeating a tough St Helens side

    Player of the match Michael McIlorum says Catalans need to keep grinding out results after defeating a tough St Helens side

    “It was tough and what we expected. They’ve won four titles in a row so coming here is always tough.

    “We needed a good start…but we felt like we could get through the middle and we did in the end.”

    What’s next?

    St Helens are in Betfred Challenge Cup semi-final action next Saturday when they take on Leigh Leopards at the neutral venue of the Halliwell Jones Stadium. Catalans Dragons‘ next game is in Super League Round 20 when they host Salford Red Devils on Saturday July 29.

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  • Warrington Wolves 6-22 Leeds Rhinos: Hosts fall to fifth defeat in six games as Super League slump continues

    Warrington Wolves 6-22 Leeds Rhinos: Hosts fall to fifth defeat in six games as Super League slump continues

    Sam Walters, Ash Handley (two) and Richie Myler scored tries for Leeds, three of them in the first 15 minutes, with Rhyse Martin scoring three conversions to cancel out Matty Ashton’s converted try; Wolves remain two points behind Catalans Dragons at the top of the Super League table

    Last Updated: 29/06/23 10:50pm

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    Highlights of the Betfred Super League match between Warrington Wolves and Leeds Rhinos

    Highlights of the Betfred Super League match between Warrington Wolves and Leeds Rhinos

    Faltering Warrington lost again as Leeds recorded a 22-6 Betfred Super League victory at the Halliwell Jones Stadium.

    All the damage was done in the opening 15 minutes as the Rhinos crossed for three tries and raced into a 16-0 lead.

    Winger Ash Handley scored twice in the blistering start and Sam Walters also touched down, with Rhyse Martin landing two conversions.

    Richie Myler is congratulated after scoring a try against his former side

    Richie Myler is congratulated after scoring a try against his former side

    Some excellent defending in the second half and a late Richie Myler try helped them seal victory and avenge their opening day 42-10 humbling by the Wolves.

    It was another disappointing night for Daryl Powell’s side who started their Super League campaign with eight straight victories but have won just once in their last six games.

    They claimed a consolation try through Matty Ashton midway through the second half which Stefan Ratchford converted.

    The Rhinos started where they left off in the rout of Huddersfield as they scored three tries in a blistering opening to the game.

    They were ahead after just six minutes when a super Blake Austin break against his former club saw Aidan Sezer send Walters over for the opening try.

    The Rhinos continued with some enterprising attacking play which paid dividends again five minutes later when some sharp passing allowed Handley to cross for his first try of the evening.

    And it got even better for the visitors four minutes later as more accurate passing between Cameron Smith and Martin gave Handley a walk-in try.

    Martin was on target with two conversions to give Leeds an early 16-0 lead.

    Things got worse for the home side when Sam Kasiano was sent to the sin bin for a shoulder charge but the dominant Rhinos failed to make their extra man tell as Austin had a try ruled out by the video referee for obstruction.

    Warrington rarely threatened the Leeds line in the opening 40 minutes and when they did have opportunities late in the half they could not pierce a stubborn Rhinos defence or came up with a poor kick option as they trailed by 16 points at the break.

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    With the defences very much on top in the second half the Wolves gave themselves hope of a comeback when Ashton crossed in the corner and Ratchford converted from the touchline with 17 minutes remaining.

    But Leeds made sure of the win 10 minutes from time when Myler ran in under the posts and Martin kicked his third goal of the night.

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  • Hull FC 34-6 St Helens: Jake Clifford helps hosts produce dominant Super League victory over world champions

    Hull FC 34-6 St Helens: Jake Clifford helps hosts produce dominant Super League victory over world champions

    Jake Clifford, Carlos Tuimavave, Jake Trueman, Chris Satae, Cam Scott and Darnell McIntosh all scored tries as Hull FC produced a stunning display to thrash St Helens 34-6; the victory is Hull FC’s first over St Helens since 2017

    Last Updated: 22/06/23 10:37pm

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    Highlights from the Super League clash between Hull FC and St Helens

    Highlights from the Super League clash between Hull FC and St Helens

    Jake Clifford returned to inspire Hull FC to their first win over St Helens in 17 attempts as they shrugged off the painful memory of last week’s Challenge Cup defeat with a blistering six-try performance at the MKM Stadium.

    Just five days ago Josh Griffin’s sending-off for dissent cost his side a realistic chance of claiming a rare win over Paul Wellens’ men, but Clifford – who had missed the Cup tie through concussion – delivered a 14-point haul to seal a 34-6 thrashing of the world champions.

    Clifford, who was yet to turn professional the last time Hull beat Saints in 2017, set the tone by scoring the first try with less than seven minutes gone and set up the clincher for Cam Scott, before Darnell McIntosh rounded the night off in style with a devastating 70-yard burst.

    Jake Clifford opened the scoring for Hull FC

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    Jake Clifford opened the scoring for Hull FC

    Jake Clifford opened the scoring for Hull FC

    Saints had swaggered into east Yorkshire on the back of six straight wins and suggesting they had recovered their best form in impressive recent victories over Huddersfield and Wigan, but they were distinctly second best all evening.

    The visitors’ misery was compounded by glaring errors from the usually dependable duo of Lewis Dodd and Jack Welsby, as Tony Smith’s men effectively sealed their win by storming into a 22-0 half-time lead.

    Clifford opened the scoring when he stretched over from a short pass from McIntosh, then Carlos Tuimavave added a second after a burst from the impressive Andre Savelio after Dodd carelessly booted the ball into his arms.

    Welsby’s moment to forget duly followed on 20 minutes, when he loitered over Jake Trueman’s kick, McIntosh squeezed past to flap the ball back and Trueman pounced to pat it down, with Clifford’s second conversion taking Hull’s lead to 16.

    Jake Trueman capitalised on a calamitous Saints' mistake to score for Hull

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    Jake Trueman capitalised on a calamitous Saints’ mistake to score for Hull

    Jake Trueman capitalised on a calamitous Saints’ mistake to score for Hull

    Chris Satae found it far too easy to drive over just past the half-hour mark to score Hull’s fourth, and the first-half damage could have been even worse for Saints after Davy Litten went over acrobatically in the corner but lost contact just before grounding.

    Ears no doubt ringing from Wellens’ half-time team talk, Saints summoned the immediate response they required, when James Bell crossed under the posts after a storming run from Konrad Hurrell broke the Hull line for the first time.

    With the half-time introduction of James Roby, Wellens’ men had added urgency, and there were signs of a momentum shift as Hull were forced to defend deep to repel a series of Saints attacks.

    Andre Savelio was in jubilant mood after Hull FC secured their first victory over St Helens in six years

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    Andre Savelio was in jubilant mood after Hull FC secured their first victory over St Helens in six years

    Andre Savelio was in jubilant mood after Hull FC secured their first victory over St Helens in six years

    But the hosts emerged uncowed, and after surviving another difficult set they responded in style, Scott darting onto Clifford’s clever kick to twist over for his side’s fifth try.

    Litten failed to ground another chance in the corner but McIntosh served up a fitting finale that sees his side shake off the memory of their early-season woes and shaping up for an unlikely shot at the play-offs.

    Darnell McIntosh ran the length of the field for a Hull try

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    Darnell McIntosh ran the length of the field for a Hull try

    Darnell McIntosh ran the length of the field for a Hull try

    What’s next?

    St Helens host Castleford Tigers on Friday June 30, with an 8pm start at the Totally Wicked Stadium, while Hull FC are at home to league leaders Catalan Dragons the following day (2.30pm).

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  • Lachlan Coote: Hull Kingston Rovers full-back retires on medical advice due to concussions

    Lachlan Coote: Hull Kingston Rovers full-back retires on medical advice due to concussions

    Hull KR full-back Coote won three consecutive Super League titles with St Helens between 2019 and 2021 before joining the Robins ahead of the 2022 campaign; the former Scotland and Great Britain international suffered his fifth concussion in two years at Magic Weekend

    Last Updated: 22/06/23 1:38pm

    Lachlan Coote has been forced to retire with immediate effect

    Lachlan Coote has retired with immediate effect on medical advice following a series of concussions over the past two seasons.

    Hull Kingston Rovers full-back Coote won three consecutive Betfred Super League titles with St Helens between 2019 and 2021 before joining the Robins ahead of the 2022 campaign.

    The 33-year-old’s professional career also included international recognition with Scotland and Great Britain, in addition to spells with Penrith Panthers and North Queensland Cowboys.

    “After suffering another concussion at Magic round, my fifth concussion in less than two years, I knew I was going to be faced with some tough conversations,” Coote told Hull KR’s website.

    “With all the support from my coach Willie Peters, [Hull KR CEO] Paul Lakin, [Hull KR owner] Neil Hudgell and the medical team at Hull KR, I have made a very difficult decision to retire immediately.

    “Rugby league has always come first before anything, now I think it’s time to put my health, my future, my family first.

    “I’m still finding it hard to come to terms with this decision and it has been a very emotional few days, knowing that I will not get to play alongside my team-mates again and finish off what we started.”

    Hull KR head coach Willie Peters paid tribute to Lachlan Coote

    Hull KR head coach Willie Peters paid tribute to Lachlan Coote

    Australia-born Coote made 27 appearances for Rovers, who sit seventh in the Super League after 15 games.

    He scored 161 points for the club, surpassing 1,000 career points during that time.

    “On behalf of everyone at Hull KR, we’d like to congratulate Lachlan on a wonderful 15-year career,” Hull KR head coach Peters said. “Lachlan is a proven winner and will no doubt continue that into his retirement.

    “It’s a sad situation for Lachlan having to retire halfway through the season. However, his health and family come first and the decision is the right one for him and his family.”

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  • Catalans 38-4 Hull KR: Dragons stay joint top with comfortable win

    Catalans 38-4 Hull KR: Dragons stay joint top with comfortable win

    Hull KR cannot cope with red-hot Catalans who storm to victory to stay joint top of Super League; two tries from Matt Whitley help the home side cruise to victory; a third successive loss leaves Rovers seventh in the table

    Last Updated: 10/06/23 8:52pm

    Matt Whitley (right) scored two tries for Catalans

    Catalans Dragons remain joint top of the Super League table following a straightforward 38-4 win over Hull KR in Perpignan.

    The depleted Robins, hit by injuries to senior players and missing full-back Lachlan Coote, who is still assessing his future in the game because of concussion issues, could not cope with a red-hot Dragons’ side who raced into a
    20-0 half-time lead before finishing the job in the second half.

    Catalans almost scored in the first five minutes when Australian centre Adam Keighran crossed the line but he fumbled the grounding, then second-rower Paul Seguier was held up in-goal.

    The Dragons finally got on the scoreboard in the 14th minute through Arthur Mourgue’s penalty as Rovers defended with spirit.

    Both teams sweated it out in 30-degree heat and humidity and Rovers took the game to Catalans with some impressive work by full-back Jack Walker on debut and half-backs Mikey Lewis and Jordan Abdull.

    But just when the Robins were winning the arm-wrestle, the Dragons struck with their opening try, Matt Whitley mopping up a loose pass to race 30 metres and touch down.

    Five minutes later, stand-off Tyrone May extended the advantage with a powerful short-range burst, knocking away defenders to make it 12-0 with Mourgue’s added conversion.

    Rovers received a double blow when Walker and Abdull had to leave the pitch with apparent injuries and Catalans finished the first half with 12 men after prop Julian Bousquet was sin-binned for a high tackle.

    But it did not stop Whitley scoring his second just before the interval, picking up a clever grubber kick from Mitch Pearce and Mourgue converted before Keighran added a late penalty from the half-way line.

    Rovers were rattled early in the second half when Lewis kicked directly into touch and put Catalans in the driving seat as winger Tom Johnstone headed for the left corner but he lost the ball as he dove over the line.

    Then winger Corey Hall fumbled a high kick from Pearce and, from the scrum, Mike McMeeken wrestled his way over the line to score, Mourgue adding the conversion to put the Dragons 26-0 ahead.

    The Robins pushed upfield with five successive penalties as referee Marcus Griffiths lost patience with the Dragons and sin-binned Mickael Goudemand for time wasting.

    But Les Dracs hit back immediately, Whitley breaking the Rovers’ defence and releasing Johnstone for a sprint over the line, converted again by Mourgue.

    Sam Tomkins was released from the bench, replacing Kieghran, and things went from bad to worse for the visitors when winger Sam Wood went down with a serious-looking ankle injury and had to be helped from the pitch.

    Mourgue rubbed salt into the wound by scoring a dazzling try, sidestepping through the middle of the pitch and over the line, converting it himself to make the score 38-0 10 minutes from time.

    Nobody told Ryan Hall the game was over and the winger set off on a 60-metre run to put Rovers on the scoreboard with a trademark try for a late consolation.

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