Weekend Herald

Frustrated Ferns captain unlikely to be last to walk, say insiders

- Football Michael Burgess Dirty Hawks claim rejected Slater comeback on hold Cabrera in probe New board at the Eels

It seems Abby Erceg won’t be a lone crusader.

Following on from the shock retirement of the Football Ferns captain this week, it’s possible further players will join Erceg in leaving the national programme or retiring prematurel­y.

The 27- year- old Erceg slammed New Zealand Football after her announceme­nt, saying NZF “undervalue­d” the women’s game and had created an environmen­t that couldn’t sustain high performanc­e.

Her frustratio­n i s reportedly shared by other current players, which should ring alarm bells at NZF.

“Abby could be the first of a number of people to walk off,” said former Fern Kristy Hill. “It might not happen right away but it will happen because the current environmen­t and demands aren’t sustainabl­e. Abby has brought daylight to the issue . . . but it’s not going away.”

Long- time Fern captain Maia Jackman ( 60 caps) echoes Hill’s concerns.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if there were more departures,” said Jackman. “The players don’t feel supported and it’s the same problem that has been cropping up for years.”

Erceg’s move was a major surprise, but not to insiders. While all has appeared well with the Ferns’ programme, and their results have been tracking well, a variety of i ssues have been simmering below the surface.

“There are many examples,” said Erceg. “I remember leading into the Rio Olympics, we had players trying to sustain a high- performanc­e lifestyle and training twice a day but they couldn’t afford to feed themselves, living on two- minute noodles and that kind of thing. Their [ iron levels] were too low . . . it was a bad situation.”

Erceg said the players were eventually helped by a hardship grant from the New Zealand Profession­al Footballer­s Associatio­n.

There were other issues, large and small, that have become cumulative over the years.

Jackman can relate to Erceg’s frustratio­ns, having been part of the Ferns group that fought for a daily allowance, before it was finally granted in 2010.

“We were always told there was no money,” said Jackman. “It is difficult for NZF — there are a lot of costs in staging games — but players need to feel supported.”

Jackman was saddened by Erceg’s move — and the consequenc­es for the Ferns — but applauds her stance.

“If someone doesn’t do something it will never change,” said Jackman. “The demands on these athletes are massive — and getting bigger — but there is not much coming back the other way.”

Hill had worked with the NZPFA since her retirement but has recently stepped away, frustrated at the lack of progress in negotiatio­ns with NZF.

“There isn’t an easy solution because it is complicate­d,” said Hill. “But the burden needs to be shared. At the moment it is almost all on the players. There is a big gap between the expectatio­ns from [ NZF] and the resources that are provided.”

Hill wonders how NZF expects the Ferns to compete with fully profession­al teams, when some players are living at a level “barely above subsistenc­e”.

A few days on from her decision, Erceg has no regrets.

“It wasn’t easy at all but it was the right one,” said Erceg. “You put so much into a four- year cycle — why would you do it again if you don’t feel valued or supported?”

She hopes things can change, and can see some easy wins for NZF.

“We have girls spending a fortune driving across Auckland twice a day for training. What about a car sponsor? Or some petrol vouchers? There must be creative ways out there.”

The Ferns face Scotland on Wednesday in the Cyprus Cup. Lydia Ko remains in touch with the leaders after a mixed opening round at the latest LPGA event in Thailand. The Kiwi world No 1 shot a two- under 70 to be tied for 22nd mixing in five birdies and three bogeys. World No 2 Ariya Jutanugarn leads after a 6- under 66. Clayton McMillan, of Bay of Plenty, will coach the NZ Barbarians Provincial XV in their June 3 clash with the Lions in Whangarei. The Steamers coach will be assisted by Roger Randle ( Waikato) and Joe Maddock ( Canterbury). The Barbarians will be selected from a pool of provincial union players across the country and assemble for one week leading into the June 3 tour opener. Track and field authoritie­s have cleared three Russian athletes to compete next month at the European indoor track championsh­ips and other events. The Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s establishe­d new criteria requiring Russian athletes to show they had been subject to compliant anti- doping regimens while the Russian track federation is suspended. The three athletes cleared Thursday are pole vaulter Anzhelika Sidorova, sprinter Kristina Sivkova and hammer thrower Alexei Sokirsky. Defending champion Sam Querrey reached the Delray Beach Open quarter- finals in Florida by hitting 13 aces and winning 24 of 25 first- serve points in a 6- 2, 6- 3 victory over Jared Donaldson yesterday. Querrey, ranked 35th and seeded No 4, saved both break points he faced and took exactly an hour to beat his 20- yearold opponent in an all- American match at the hard- court tournament. Top- seeded Gael Monfils and No 2 Jo- Wilfried Tsonga won in straight sets to reach the quarter- finals of the Open 13 in Marseille, France yesterday. Monfils beat Sergiy Stakhovsky, of Ukraine, 6- 1, 6- 4 in less than an hour, and the Frenchman next faces countryman Richard Gasquet, who is seeded sixth. Tsonga, who won the World Tennis Tournament in Rotterdam last weekend for his 13th career title, downed Illya Marchenko of Ukraine 6- 3, 6- 3. Disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong’s $ 100 million legal fight with the federal government has been set for a November 6 trial. The government wants Armstrong to pay back the $ 32 million the US Postal Service paid his team for sponsorshi­p, plus triple damages. Armstrong’s former teammate Floyd Landis initially filed the whistle- blower case in 2010, accusing him of violating the sponsorshi­p contract by taking performanc­e- enhancing drugs. The government joined the case in 2013 after Armstrong admitted cheating and was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles. Landis, who was stripped of the 2006 Tour de France title for cheating, could collect up to 25 per cent of damages awarded. Dane Caroline Wozniacki reached the semifinals of the Dubai Tennis Championsh­ips for the sixth time when she defeated Catherine Bellis 6- 3 6- 2. Wozniacki, who won the Dubai title in 2011, reached the Doha final last week and played her ninth match in nine days yesterday. She was joined in the last four by fellow former No 1, German Angelique Kerber. Bellis, the youngest player in the draw at 17, scored the biggest win of her sixmonth pro career on Wednesday when she upset her first top- 10 player, sixth- ranked Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland. Perth Wildcats Aussie NBL coach Trevor Gleeson has dismissed suggestion­s the Illawarra Hawks are a dirty side, saying they play hard but fair basketball. Adelaide import Jerome Randle lit the fuse last week when he labelled Illawarra a dirty team, while also adding that he dislikes all the Hawks players. But Gleeson refused to add fuel to the fire heading into the best- of- five grand final series against the Hawks, starting at Perth Arena tomorrow. Melbourne veteran Billy Slater is set to miss the first few rounds of the NRL as he continues his comeback from shoulder surgery. Storm coach Craig Bellamy says Slater’s recovery is tracking well but they don’t want to risk him. Melbourne and Kiwis backrower Tohu Harris is also sidelined with a stress fracture in his foot and will miss the opening weeks of the competitio­n, including their round one match with the Bulldogs next Friday night in Sydney. Former US Open and Masters golf champion Angel Cabrera is being investigat­ed for allegedly causing “minor injuries” to his ex- partner. A spokeswoma­n for the prosecutor’s office in Cordoba in western Argentina told the Associated Press yesterday Cabrera had been interviewe­d and released. Parramatta have turned another page on their NRL salary cap scandal, announcing a new seven- member board tasked with lifting the side out of dire straits. The Parramatta football club board was last year sacked in the wake of the salary saga, for which they were fined $ 1 million and docked 12 competitio­n points.

 ??  ?? Abby Erceg
Abby Erceg

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