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‘My goodness!’ – McIlroy and Fleetwood on a charge

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Late France rally not enough as Black Ferns take bronze

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New Zealand won the Bronze Final at the Women’s Rugby World Cup, surviving a late French surge to triumph 42-26 in front of more than 50,000 fans in the curtain-raiser to the final between England and Canada.

It was, however, a bittersweet success for New Zealand, the defending champions and six-times winners who were surprisingly beaten by Canada in the semi-finals.

LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 27: Players of France line up as players of New Zealand perform the Haka prior to the Women's Rugby World Cup 2025 Bronze Final match between New Zealand and France at Twickenham Stadium on September 27, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

France opened the scoring through Pauline Bourdon but it was almost all one-way traffic in the opposite direction after that as superbly-crafted tries by Ruahei Demant, Silvia Brunt, Renee Holmes and Laura Bayfield put the Black Ferns 26-7 ahead at the break.

Their 18-year-old winger Braxton Sorensen-McGee stretched that with two tries early in the second half – taking her tournament tally to 11 – before France hit back with three tries in 10 minutes by Lea Champon, Gaby Vernier and Emilie Boulard to give New Zealand a nervy finale.

England are odds-on favourites against Canada later on Saturday (4pm), when the final will be watched 82,000 fans, a huge world record for a women’s rugby match.

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Watch the Women’s Rugby World Cup final between England and Canada from 3.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player.

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Cullen – ‘There are a ton of things we need to work on’

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Leo Cullen has demanded Leinster stand up and be counted in the aftermath of their heavy defeat to the Stormers in the opening game of the BTK United Rugby Championship.

The defending champions were held scoreless in the league for the first time since 2008 and conceded four tries to John Dobson’s dominant charges.

“Lads need to show what they’re made of. We all need to show what we’re made of, players and coaches,” said Cullen after the 35-0 defeat in Cape Town.

“If you’re not winning contact points or gaining some level of pressure on the opposition, which we didn’t really apply any pressure at any stage.

“It was 6-0 at half-time when we were probably hanging in there.

“I thought the guys hung in well. But then we’re not particularly accurate in terms of how we chase the game after that.”

Leinster, who conceded 16 penalites, lost three lineouts and two scrums, in addition to having Max Deegan and Tommy O’Brien sent to the bin in the second-half, take on last season’s beaten finalists Bulls next Saturday in Pretoria (5.30pm Irish time).

26 September 2025; Andrew Sparrow of Leinster after the United Rugby Championship match between DHL Stormers and Leinster at DHL Stadium in Cape Town, South Africa. Photo by Shaun Roy/Sportsfile
Prop Andrew Sparrow won his first Leinster cap

“Listen, there are a ton of things we need to work on,” added the head coach,

“Over here, the set-piece battle is going to be huge.

“So, making sure we put in a big week in terms of how we prepare set-piece wise.

“Just in terms of a lot more accuracy across the board, some of that contact work as well.

“Lots of work. Lots of work this week.

“We’ll be up in Pretoria over there for a full week. Acclimatise to altitude and all the rest.

“Listen, the players are all saying the right stuff in the dressing room. They know what’s gone on there.

“The best intentions going into a game and then this is your first game of the season and you’re like, ‘oof, there’s a whole different level out there’.

“We know it’s tough over here.”

26 September 2025; Leinster head coach Leo Cullen and Luke McGrath of Leinster are interviewed after their side's defeat in the United Rugby Championship match between DHL Stormers and Leinster at DHL Stadium in Cape Town, South Africa. Photo by Shaun Roy/Sportsfile
Leo Cullen and Luke McGrath (r) speak to the media after the game

Leinster, captained by Luke McGrath, were without their Lions contingent and the injured Caelan Doris, were overpowered throughout.

“The system only works if we’re physical and I thought we got physically dominated today, if I was being really honest,” said McGrath.

“They got over the gain-line much easier. Our defence, we made a lot of mistakes in defence, which put us under pressure.”

Cullen added: “Listen, it’s Round 1 of 18. Zero points, 35-0. It’s a credit to the Stormers. They were just far better than we were today.

“I’m not taking a huge amount from this game.

“We know we’ve got quality in our group. Just dust yourself off and you go again.

“Bottle up a little bit of the pain of that because nobody likes going through that type of defeat where you lose 35-0.

“I’m struggling to remember the last time that’s happened to us.”

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Alcaraz hails ‘best physio in world’ after victory

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Carlos Alcaraz said he had the “best physio in the world” after shrugging off concerns about an ankle injury to beat Zizou Bergs in the second round of the Japan Open.

The world number one had said he was “scared” after landing awkwardly during his first-round win over Sebastian Baez on Thursday.

But the 22-year-old Spaniard looked in little trouble as he cruised to a 6-4 6-3 victory over unseeded Belgian Bergs to set up a quarter-final against Brandon Nakashima in Tokyo.

“I could play, I would say, normally,” said Alcaraz, who won the US Open last month.

“I was worried about some movements on the court where I could feel the ankle, but in general I think I played a great match.

“I said before and I’m going to say it again – I have the best physio in the world, who I trust 100%, and the work he has done for the ankle I think has been great.”

Elsewhere, world number two Jannik Sinner was taken to three sets by 23-year-old French qualifier Terence Atmane in the China Open, winning 6-4 5-7 6-0 to reach the quarter-finals.

The Italian, who lost to Alcaraz in the final of the US Open but has won the Australian Open and Wimbledon this season, wobbled in the second set after twice leading by a break.

Atmane produced one of the surprise runs of the season to reach the semi-finals of the Cincinnati Masters in August, where he lost to Sinner.

But after powering his way to a decider in Beijing, he began to struggle with cramp, allowing Sinner to breeze through the third set to set up a last-eight match against Hungary’s Fabian Marozsan.

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