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Razor’s All Blacks lacked sharp edge but sacking Robertson does not guarantee revival | Robert Kitson

about 21 hours ago
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As a keen surfer Scott Robertson is well aware how abruptly situations can change.One minute you are riding the perfect wave, the next you’re being dumped from a great height and having your world tipped upside down.Which is essentially how “Razor” will now be feeling after being ousted as All Blacks head coach barely two years into his tenure.On the surface he was everything New Zealand rugby could have wished for.The serial domestic winner who had guided the Crusaders to seven successive Super Rugby titles, the empathetic everyman with the break-dancing skills to match.

If anyone could connect with younger generations and encourage everyone to fall in love with the ABs again, surely he was da man?Instead he has been swallowed up and spat out after only 27 Tests.An internal review into the All Blacks’ problematic year uncorked a torrent of salty feedback that proved impossible to ignore.New Zealand Rugby’s chair, David Kirk, sought to dampen reports that the All Blacks’ best player, Ardie Savea, had threatened to jump ship if Robertson remained but the swiftness of the union’s response, despite currently having no permanent chief executive in place, suggested player unrest was indeed a factor.It invites several questions, none of them comfortable.As Manchester United can testify, sacking the top man does not guarantee instant smooth sailing.

Robertson’s record was not disastrous – he oversaw 20 victories, a 74% ratio that was statistically an improvement on his predecessor Ian Foster’s 69.6% winning return – but, as anyone who watched the All Blacks face England in November can attest, there was clearly something not quite right.As much as England’s 33-19 win was a striking result, New Zealand were transparently not their usual forbidding selves.Whatever Razor was muttering into the ears of his backs, in particular, was definitely not working; when an All Black backline looks so visibly short of cohesion and rhythm there is trouble at mill.Add to that the humbling 43-10 defeat at home by a rampant South Africa, the heaviest in the All Blacks’ 120-year history, plus a first-ever loss in Argentina and the review was never likely to be cosy.

“I think trajectory is a good word to apply, we just weren’t seeing the trajectory,” said Kirk.“We were falling a bit short of the excellence that we’re looking for, it never really got addressed over the year.”The former World Cup-winning captain also acknowledged the All Blacks “are not on track the way they need to be on track” for the 2027 tournament, which is as close as a senior New Zealand rugby official will ever come to admitting the wheels of the national team have fallen off.It is one thing to lose a Test match or two, quite another when the All Blacks’ once globally famous “culture” is perceived as not fit for purpose.Particularly when Razor was supposedly the feelgood antidote to the more buttoned up regime of Foster whose side, remember, lost the 2023 World Cup final by only a point.

“My job is to connect them and make them believe,” Robertson told some of us in a small room in Dunedin in the summer of 2024,“What does it look like? How does it feel? How are people going to own it?”So much for such worthy intentions,If ever there was a stark illustration that coaching domestically and at Test level require a different skillset, Razor’s short-lived tenure in charge of the All Blacks is probably it,There is still time – of course there is – to resurrect the drooping silver fern,Jamie Joseph, the early favourite for the job, and Dave Rennie have significant experience of the international game, while the rugby IQ potentially at NZR’s disposal remains extensive.

Joe Schmidt, Vern Cotter, Chris Boyd, Warren Gatland, Wayne Smith, Pat Lam – there are plenty of seasoned coaches out there who know exactly how to reassemble an underperforming rugby team and make it tick.Even the Boks have a Kiwi guru – Joseph’s old colleague Tony Brown – now shaping their attacking strategy.The right mix is crucial.The game is changing rapidly; what worked last week can be instantly picked apart by every analyst in the world.What was once New Zealand’s secret weapon – the aura that made opponents nervous about facing them even before they took the field – has also faded.

Rebuilding any international team is hard, let alone an All Black squad in which key men such as Beauden and Scott Barrett, Codie Taylor and Savea are all aged between 32 and 34.On the flip side, for all their huffing and puffing, New Zealand are still ranked second in the world, ahead of England and Ireland.It is way too early, accordingly, to write them off as 2027 World Cup contenders in Australia.As South Africa have proved in the past, a mid-cycle jolt can sometimes concentrate minds and prove highly beneficial.Maybe someone such as Joseph – the former All Black flanker who coached Japan and is now back with the Highlanders – will rediscover the “edge” that, ironically, Razor could not supply.

What does seem certain is that the latter will attract interest from club suitors, including one or two in the UK.Harlequins, among others, are in the market for a heavy hitter capable of providing fresh impetus.Notwithstanding the lack of surfing on the Thames, you suspect Robertson would need little persuading to hop on the first available flight north.
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Bank of England governor calls for fightback against populism; South East Water restores service to most Kent and Sussex homes – business live

Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey has said policymakers should “challenge” populists who try to discredit them.In a speech published today, Bailey told the Bellagio Group of economists, central bankers and finance officials that populism affects the international system.He said on Tuesday:Part of the purpose of international agencies is that from time to time they have to tell us what we don’t want to hear, let alone act upon.Of course, they have to be accountable for the accuracy and quality of the assessment. But, accepting that, we have to call out messenger shooting

about 2 hours ago
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Top two executives at City & Guilds placed on leave

The two most senior executives at City & Guilds have been put on leave shortly after a scandal over millions of pounds of bonuses triggered a Charity Commission investigation into the vocational training body.City & Guilds has told staff that its chief executive, Kirstie Donnelly, and the chief financial officer, Abid Ismail, will be “absent from work for a short period”.Last week, the charity watchdog launched a statutory inquiry into City & Guilds’ sale of its qualification awards business to a private company last year. The investigation will examine a range of problems, including “concerns raised in public reporting relating to the sale and bonuses awarded to its executives”.The inquiry was announced after the Guardian revealed last month that City & Guilds executives received million-pound bonuses after the charity privatised its business arm

about 3 hours ago
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TikTok to strengthen age-verification technology across EU

TikTok will begin to roll out new age-verification technology across the EU in the coming weeks, as calls grow for an Australia-style social media ban for under-16s in countries including the UK.ByteDance-owned TikTok, and other major platforms popular with young people such as YouTube, are coming under increasing pressure to better identify and remove accounts belonging to children.The system, which has been quietly piloted in the EU over the past year, analyses profile information, posted videos and behavioural signals to predict whether an account may be belong to a user under the age of 13.As well as analysing information the account holder provides about themselves, the technology looks at behaviour such as the videos a user publishes, and “other on-platform behaviour”.TikTok said accounts flagged by the system would be reviewed by specialist moderators rather than face an automatic ban, and may then be removed

about 5 hours ago
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X still allowing users to post sexualised images generated by Grok AI tool

X has continued to allow users to post highly sexualised videos of women in bikinis generated by its AI tool Grok, despite the company’s claim to have cracked down on misuse.The Guardian was able to create short videos of people stripping to bikinis from photographs of fully clothed, real women. It was also possible to post this adult content on to X’s public platform without any sign of it being moderated, meaning the clip could be viewed within seconds by anyone with an account.It appeared to offer a straightforward workaround to restrictions announced by Elon Musk’s social network this week. These had been welcomed by the prime minister, Keir Starmer, who had described the photographs generated by Grok as “disgusting” and “shameful”

about 7 hours ago
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Max Verstappen admits new F1 season is step into unknown amid rule changes

Red Bull formally began their tilt at the forthcoming Formula One season, unveiling the livery for their challenger, the RB22, in a showcase event in Detroit on Thursday, with Max Verstappen admitting the sweeping regulation changes for 2026 will be a step into the “unknown”.Before a highly anticipated season, with a swathe of big rule changes presenting a challenge across the grid, Red Bull are the first in what is due to be a hectic period of launches before pre-season testing begins.The four-time champion Verstappen finished second in last year’s championship, two points behind McLaren’s Lando Norris, but the Dutchman had to extract the maximum from a car that was off the pace for the opening half of the season.The team continued development of the car well into the season in order to better understand how it fed into this year’s model and Verstappen was eager to climb behind the wheel.“It’s all still a bit unknown,” said Verstappen in Detroit alongside his new teammate, Isack Hadjar

about 3 hours ago
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NFL divisional round predictions: which No 1 seed is set for an unpleasant shock?

The postseason continues with the Broncos and Seahawks entering the fray, but there could be trouble for one of the frontrunnersWhat the Bills need to do to win: Keep winning short-yardage situations. The tush push on fourth down that propelled Josh Allen 10 yards and helped secure Buffalo’s win over Jacksonville last weekend epitomised how the Bills dominated the game’s crucial moments. The Bills converted four of their five third downs with four yards or to go last Sunday, and they finished fifth in third-down rate in the regular season in the same situations. Denver were eighth this season in third-and-short defensive efficiency (50.6%)

about 4 hours ago
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UK economy beats forecasts with 0.3% growth in November; Ofwat investigating South East Water over outages – as it happened

about 21 hours ago
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South East Water boss in line for £400,000 bonus despite outages

1 day ago
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New York bakery staff push for union, claiming they were forced to bake for Israeli fundraisers

1 day ago
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Growth figures give boost to Reeves – but it’s too early to get carried away

1 day ago
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UK economy grew by better-than-expected 0.3% in November despite budget uncertainty

1 day ago
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‘The consumers are still out there’: why a bankruptcy for Saks Global may not spell the end

1 day ago