The New Zealand Herald

Winners & Losers: Phillips catches the eye with magnificen­t fielding

- Chris Rattue

Winner Glenn Phillips

He is shaping as the best fielder we’ve ever had in the New Zealand cricket side.

Phillips’ grabs in the gully against South Africa were sensationa­l.

He’s not only a superb catcher. Daring batters take on his speed and arm at their peril.

New Zealand has had a pretty good fielding reputation, probably since the early 1970s when the team that toured the West Indies included terrific outfielder­s such as Mark Burgess and Graham Vivian. Our catching reputation behind the wicket has grown over the years.

Australian coach Steve Rixon helped restore New Zealand’s cricket reputation a few decades ago by emphasisin­g the fielding art.

It’s hard to remember anyone quite like Phillips, though.

He combines all the fielding facets at a sensationa­l level.

I didn’t see much of the South African series but I did see enough to be wowed by Phillips.

I’ll be happy to turn on the telly (we don’t get test cricket in little ol’ Auckland) just to watch the man field against Australia. His fielding is a legitimate weapon.

Winner Swimming

What a week for a sport that usually sinks out of sight in this country.

Erika Fairweathe­r claimed New Zealand’s first long course world championsh­ip gold medal in Doha, and Lewis Clareburt quickly became the second Kiwi world champ.

There is a proviso, of course. Very unusually, these championsh­ips are being held in an Olympic year, which has seen them severely weakened. There is also a Russian boycott.

But a gold medal is a gold medal. And New Zealand would not have got close to this sort of incredible success — by our standards — in the past, no matter who was missing.

Swimmers in this country face so many hurdles. Clareburt had to quit his long-time coach in Wellington last year after moving to Auckland in search of acceptable training facilities.

Loser The Halberg Awards

A stupid sports concept. Can’t we just celebrate things for what they are, instead of going through this charade every year of ranking things that have virtually no meaningful relationsh­ip with each other?

Back in the day, when we only played a few sports and there were only a few major competitio­ns, it might have made sense. Maybe.

But now we’re comparing world canoeing results (does anyone else in the world take world canoeing championsh­ips this seriously?) against a major European golf title, a Supercars champion, track cycling stars, Para swimming medals etc, with a token All Black thrown in the mix.

Who cares? I’d love a top sportspers­on to say “count me out of this nonsense”. Because it is.

Loser The sports world

Athletics lost one of its finest rising stars due to the car crash death of Kenyan marathon runner Kelvin Kiptum, the world record holder.

Reading the tributes amplified how extraordin­ary his sadly brief marathon career had been.

In about 10 months, he recorded three superb victories, with the one in Chicago late last year smashing the world record set by his legendary countryman Eliud Kipchoge.

This left Kiptum just 36 seconds short of the Holy Grail, a marathon time under two hours.

The 24-year-old was an obsessive trainer who made breaking the twohour mark seem achievable.

Winner Inspiring stories like this

Ivory Coast striker Sebastien Haller scored the winning goal in the Africa Cup of Nations, just over a year after returning to the game following his recovery from testicular cancer.

The 29-year-old, who plays for a German club, had two operations and four rounds of chemothera­py.

The underdog hosts beat Nigeria 2-1 in the final of a tournament with a growing status.

Winners / Losers The New Zealand test cricketers

Nice to think New Zealand’s first series victory over South Africa might have come against a full-strength Proteas team.

It wasn’t the most convincing of second test victories either, until Kane Williamson took control, as we look ahead to the prospect of a thrilling contest against the mighty Australian­s.

But a win is a win, you can only beat who is on the field, and the emergence of understate­d Will O’Rourke raises further hope that the pace bowling stocks are healthy.

On the other side of the coin, Devon Conway’s opening form is a big worry — he is the type of batsman who should have plundered the runs against the underwhelm­ing South Africans.

Winner The NFL

Shooting tragedy at the victory parade aside, the Super Bowl was a stunning success for the NFL, the game in Las Vegas being described as the most-watched American TV event since the 1969 Moon landing.

The influence of a certain pop star is said to have played some part in the ratings success.

With Nasa and others gearing up for renewed Moon landings, the question is: will the rocket scientists get Taylor Swift involved? Stay tuned.

Winners The Phoenix . . . unstoppabl­e

The Wellington club overcame a major injury list to retain its A-League lead via a 2-1 win over Macarthur FC in Australia. They were simply hanging on by the end of the match, but hang on they did. Coach Giancarlo Italiano has found something very special in that squad.

Loser Bazball

England’s brave new world took an absolute hammering in the latest cricket test against India.

Part of ‘Bazball’s’ charm is a ‘we don’t care if we lose, so long as we are adventurou­s’ message. In a way, you never lose under that mantra, so long as the crowd plays along with the gag.

Yet the beauty of test cricket, the true test of greatness, is how players and teams can adapt to evolving situations in this arduous test of skill, stamina and strategy.

There are hints that the fawning press may be starting to turn, after the embarrassi­ng 434-run defeat.

Ben Stokes, Brendon McCullum and Co may have to start adapting before the English media does a U-turn.

Winner The chorus of protests . . .

. . . after top American golfer Jordan Spieth was disqualifi­ed for signing an incorrect scorecard at a PGA event.

Someone called it the dumbest rule in sport. It is certainly a contender.

Profession­al sports people shouldn’t have to keep their scores.

Loser Pre-season league and rugby matches

Yawn.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Glenn Phillips’ phenomenal fielding was a feature of the Black Caps’ test series win over South Africa.
Photo / Photosport Glenn Phillips’ phenomenal fielding was a feature of the Black Caps’ test series win over South Africa.
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