Joy for Samoa as Harmony Vatau kicks their first World Cup points for 11 years | Andy Bull

A picture


You can keep the 92 points England scored,Let’s talk about Samoa’s three,It’s been 11 years since Samoa recorded a point in a World Cup match,They didn’t qualify for the tournaments in 2017 or 2021, and they were whitewashed 73-0 by Australia in the first round of this one on the opening weekend,So Franklin’s Gardens fell awfully quiet when the team won a scrum penalty just inside England’s half in the 42nd minute, 32m out, and straight in front of the posts.

Everyone knew what was at stake in that next moment, and it was a hell of a lot more than cutting three points off England’s lead,Their coach, Ramsey Tomokino, was expecting them to tap-and-go, they had prepared for it in the week, but on the pitch their captain, Sui Pauarasia, turned to her young fly half, Harmony Vatau, and said: “You got this?” instead,“She’s a pretty shy player,” Pauarasia said afterwards, “but she looked back at me and nodded,” The team were so surprised by it that no one thought to bring on a kicking tee, and the players had to scream at the water-carriers waiting on the sidelines to get it on quickly because the shot clock was already ticking,The ball flew straight and true, right between the uprights.

The place erupted.In the stands, the handful of fans who had travelled around the world to be here started screaming and shouting in celebration, the Samoa team broke out dancing as they ran back to their half.“Just to see the jubilation on the face of Harmony and the girls was heartwarming,” Tomokino said.He really wanted the team to score a try, something they haven’t managed in three games against England across the last two and a half decades, but the looks on players’ faces told you that they were thrilled just to have their first points.Samoa had Glory.

She was playing prop forward.And they had Faith.She was packing down at hooker.Now they had hope, too.What they didn’t have was any time, or money.

And it takes both to play like the Red Roses do,It takes time and money to scrum like that, to run through the endless drills, and pay for the coaches, analysts, and strength and conditioning coaches who help them learn how to do it,It takes time and money to learn their set-piece routines, time and money to develop the team cohesion which underpins their intricate attacking patterns and defensive plays they use,It takes time and money to learn to kick the ball like Helena Rowland, or to throw it in the wet like Lucy Packer, or handle it like Jade Shekells and Megan Jones,Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionSamoa are amateurs – their squad includes a property manager, a primary school teacher and a police officer – and the only reason they’re out there playing is for the love of representing their country.

Most of them have to play rugby league if they want to make a living out of sport.There isn’t any cash in Samoan men’s rugby, let alone the women’s game.The governing body has been on the edge of bankruptcy ever since the pandemic.It has been living off its overdraft ever since, a situation, World Rugby argues, that is largely down to a serial mismanagement of distributed funds.It had to cancel the men’s European tour last autumn because it couldn’t afford it.

There have been times when the Samoan women have considered themselves lucky to get paid anything at all.The £1,500 appearance fee paid to each of the England players in this match would cover what the entire Samoa squad has received in full for playing in some recent tournaments.A lot of them had to set up crowdfunding pages to help cover the shortfall in earnings they’re suffering while they are playing over here, so they would have enough to cover their domestic bills.More than once, Tomokino has had to pay operational expenses out of his own pocket.“Our girls have worked really hard to be here,” he said.

“To walk off the bus and be applauded like that, we’ve never had that, we’ve never had the opportunity to play in front of 14,000 like we did tonight, and our girls deserve it.” He broke down crying as he spoke.“I know there was a worry that England’s score could get to triple figures, and I know people have been talking about whether that is good for the game or not, but I think what’s good for the game is that we’re here and we’re getting better.”All they want is a fair shot, just like the one they took to score those three points.“We’ve been longing to be part of a professional competition for some time,” Tomokino said.

“I know if we get given these same opportunities we will be a far stronger team,I long for the day where the competition for the women is like it is for the men, the sooner we can get to there, the better,”
societySee all
A picture

British baby dies from whooping cough as vaccination rates fall

A baby in the UK has died from whooping cough, marking the first such death in the country this year.The infant’s mother had not been vaccinated against the highly infectious disease, which affects the lungs and airways. This death occurred as vaccination rates among children and pregnant women in the UK have fallen to their lowest levels in 15 years.Whooping cough, or pertussis, can be fatal for babies, who are at the highest risk of severe illness or death. The child, thought to be under the age of one, was taken ill and died between March and June this year, according to the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), which is responsible for protecting the public from infectious diseases and other threats

A picture

Weight loss drugs can halve heart patients’ risk of early death, study finds

Weight loss drugs can reduce by half the risk of heart patients being hospitalised or dying early, according to the largest study of its kind.The class of drugs, known as GLP-1 agonists, have been found to offer “dramatic benefits” to heart patients, significantly cutting their risk of falling seriously ill or dying prematurely from any cause.The discovery, revealed at the world’s largest heart conference in Madrid, means they could be given to millions of heart patients to help them stay out of hospital and live longer.Weight loss drugs mimic the glucagon-like peptide (GLP) 1 hormone, which makes people feel full, and were initially developed to treat diabetes. In recent years evidence has emerged suggesting they could prove to be lifesaving across a range of conditions beyond obesity

A picture

UK anti-slavery commissioner launches investigation into ‘pimping websites’

The independent anti-slavery commissioner has launched an investigation into so-called pimping websites amid concern at the level of exploitation of trafficked and vulnerable women on those platforms.Eleanor Lyons will interview women who say they have been trafficked into sex work and advertised on adult services websites such as Vivastreet that allow users to browse images and videos of women selling sex in their local area.The investigation follows on from a 2021 Scottish parliamentary study on commercial and sexual exploitation, which found that the ease and speed with which pimps and traffickers can now advertise their victims to potential customers had “turbocharged the sex-trafficking trade”.“Adult service websites, where you can go online, type in your postcode and find hundreds of women for sale, are a hotbed for trafficking,” Lyons said. “We will do a full call for evidence on why these websites are so damaging

A picture

New drug hailed as ‘gamechanger’ in tackling stubbornly high blood pressure

Doctors are hailing a new pill for patients with high blood pressure resistant to existing medication as a “gamechanger” and a “triumph of science”.Globally, more than 1.3 billion people have hypertension. In half of them, their high blood pressure is uncontrolled or resistant to existing treatments. They face a much higher risk of heart attack, stroke, kidney disease and early death

A picture

‘Sliding into an abyss’: experts warn over rising use of AI for mental health support

Vulnerable people turning to AI chatbots instead of professional therapists for mental health support could be “sliding into a dangerous abyss”, psychotherapists have warned.Psychotherapists and psychiatristssaid they were increasingly seeing negative impacts of AI chatbots being used for mental health, such as fostering emotional dependence, exacerbating anxiety symptoms, self-diagnosis, or amplifying delusional thought patterns, dark thoughts and suicide ideation.Dr Lisa Morrison Coulthard, the director of professional standards, policy and research at the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy, said two-thirds of its members expressed concerns about AI therapy in a recent survey.Coulthard said: “Without proper understanding and oversight of AI therapy, we could be sliding into a dangerous abyss in which some of the most important elements of therapy are lost and vulnerable people are in the dark over safety.“We’re worried that although some receive helpful advice, other people may receive misleading or incorrect information about their mental health with potentially dangerous consequences

A picture

Exercise and therapy can mend a broken heart, study suggests

Doctors may have discovered the secret to mending a broken heart in a world-first clinical trial.Hundreds of thousands of people worldwide are living with takotsubo cardiomyopathy, known as broken heart syndrome, which causes the heart muscle to change shape and suddenly weaken. It is usually triggered by severe emotional or physical stress, such as losing a loved one.Patients may experience symptoms similar to a heart attack and face twice the risk of dying early compared with the general population. Some experience heart failure, resulting in debilitating symptoms such as fatigue, as well as a shorter life expectancy