Tianjin, China (June 6).— Australia is well placed in its quest for Olympic gold next year following a successful visit to China for the World Water Polo League preliminary round.
The Aussie Stingers women thrashed Japan 14-1 in their sixth and
final encounter to head into next month’s Super Finals in Montreal,
Canada, with a clean sheet.
Head coach Greg McFadden has now used
nearly 40 players at senior international level in the past three years
and he is satisfied that the depth will stand them in good stead in the
lead-up to Beijing.
“It’s pleasing that the depth of senior women’s water polo in Australia has been confirmed with some strong results since 2005.”
McFadden
gave many of his younger players plenty of pool time in Tianjin with
five of those set to play the junior world championships in Portugal
later next month.
In a unique move for the final game with Japan,
McFadden stepped down and gave star player Kate Gynther the chance to
coach the team.
The win was achieved with her and Gemma Beadsworth sitting on the sideline.
Goalkeeper
Victoria Brown stopped 14 shots while the Stingers closed out Japan on
all five occasions on extra while converting two from four.
McFadden said his team played well in patches with most games seeing Australia with a commanding lead by halftime.
Australia
and China will join reigning champion United States of America and
Canada in Montreal with the top two teams from Europe, yet to be
determined.
Results:
FINA World League, Tianjin, China, day 6:
Australia
14 (A Fraser 3, S Smith, J Santoromito, R Webster 2, N Cuffe, E
Douglass, K Finucane, S Mills, H Lincoln-Smith) Japan 1, China 13 New
Zealand 7.
Final points: AUS 18, CHN 11, JPN 7, NZL 0.
Tianjin, China (June 3).—
Five in a row for Stingers in World League
Australia further dominated its World Water
Polo League section with a 9-5 victory over China for a fifth
consecutive win here last night.Already qualified for the Super Finals in Canada next month, head coach
Greg McFadden rotated his experienced Stingers with his junior players
throughout the match, playing the groups together in the Asia-Oceania
women’s division encounter.
By changing six players at a time, the game was erratic but still
showed the strength of Australia’s depth against a physically tough
opponent.
Goalkeeper Alicia McCormack made a fantastic 15 saves as the Stingers’ defence proved once again the key contributor to victory.
In the other match, Japan headed off New Zealand 11-10.
The Stingers finish their preliminary build-up to Canada with a clash against Japan this evening before returning home.
Results:
FINA World League, Tianjin, China, day 5:
Australia 9 (N Cuffe 3, S Smith 2, G Beadsworth, G Santoromito, H Lincoln-Smith, K Gynther) China 5, Japan 11 New Zealand 10.
Progress points: AUS 10, CHN 6, JPN 4, NZL 0.
Tianjin, China (June 2).—
Aussie Stingers qualify for World League Super Finals
Australia qualified for the World Water Polo League Super Finals with a fourth consecutive victory in the Asia-Oceania women’s division here last night.
By downing New Zealand 16-8, the world No 2 Aussie Stingers have earned
a shot at the Super Finals in Montreal, Canada on July 4-8 where the
top six teams in the world will gather.
After a poor defensive opening quarter, the Stingers lifted a notch in
the second quarter and swatted off the Kiwis in the third period before
drawing the last eight minutes.
Head coach Greg McFadden said the first quarter was the worst: “Our
defence was poor and we let in some silly goals on extra. New Zealand
got uncontested goals.
“In the third quarter we really picked at 5-0 with the girls turning the game around.”
The Stingers scored just one from five on extra but converted all four
penalty shots. New Zealand had a creditable three-from-five conversion
rate on extra as well as scoring its only penalty attempt.
Kate Gynther, twice the highest goal-scorer at a Super Finals series,
blasted in six goals while centre forward Gemma Beadsworth grabbed
four. Goalkeeper Victoria Brown made eight saves.
By qualifying for Montreal, McFadden said he would concentrate on
giving his younger players plenty of pool time in the remaining two
games against China and Japan.
These two countries fought out a 7-all draw by full time but China won the penalty shootout 5-4 to claim the match.
Results:
FINA World League, Tianjin, China, day 4:
Australia 16 (K Gynther 6, G Beadsworth 4, N Cuffe, G Hadley 2, S
Fraser, S Mills) New Zealand 8, China 12 Japan 11 in penalty shootout
(FT: 7-7).
Progress points: AUS 8, CHN 6, JPN 2, NZL 0.
Tianjin, China (June 1).—
Stingers clean out Japan in third World League match
Nikita Cuffe’s six-goal effort helped
Australia thrash Japan 19-2 in their Women’s World Water Polo League
match here last night with a brilliant performance.
Head coach Greg McFadden expected Japan to be their toughest opponent
in the four-team Asia-Oceania qualifier for the Super Finals in
Montreal, Canada next month.
“We played really well for the first three quarters and things we practised in the morning were put into place in the game.
“In the fourth quarter we threw in the juniors and they kept the game
scoreless for five minutes. Then we put in the seniors and they
scored three goals in three minutes,” McFadden said.
“We were expecting our toughest game but they were so small and couldn’t match up.”
The statistics tell the story of the game with the Aussie Stingers
converting 19 from 29 shots, seven from eight on extra while defending
nine from 10 of Japan’s extra-player situations.
Goalkeeper Alicia McCormack was sensational with 13 saves and one steal.
The quarters went 5-0, 7-1, 4-1 and 3-0.
The Stingers tonight meet New Zealand in a do-or-die match for the
Kiwis. Should Australia win it was qualify for the Super Finals with
two matches in hand while the Kiwis, who lost to China 10-8, need to
win to stay in the hunt.
Results:
FINA World League, Tianjin, China, day 3:
Australia 19 (N Cuffe 6, S Fraser, G Hadley 4, J Moran, J Santoromito,
K Gynther, K Finucane, H Lincoln-Smith) Japan 2, China 10 New Zealand 8.
Progress points: AUS 6, CHN 4, JPN 2, NZL 0.
Tianjin, China (May 31).—
Stingers beat China in second World League match
Solid defence was again the key as the Aussie
Stingers women’s water polo team beat China 11-6 on day two of World
League play here last night.
The defence set up many counter-attacking opportunities but not all met with success, according to head coach Greg McFadden.
“We had a lot of opportunities but poor finishing let us down. We just failed to put the ball away,” he said.
It was a physical game and McFadden said he was happy with the overall
performance, singling out goalkeeper Victorian Brown, who made eight
saves and two steals.
Nikita Cuffe and Kate Gynther, with three goals each, Gemma Beadsworth and Erin Douglass were other standouts, he said.
Australia won all the quarters — 3-1, 2-1, 3-2 and 3-2.
Tonight’s opponent is Japan, who beat New Zealand 13-9.
Results:
Women’s World League, Tianjin, China, day 2:
Australia 11 (N Cuffe, K Gynther 3, G Beadsworth 2, J Santoromito, E Douglass, K Finucane) China 6, Japan 13 New Zealand 9.
Progress points: AUS 4, CHN 2, JPN 2, NZL 0.
Tianjin, China (May 30).—
Stingers beat New Zealand in opening World League game
The Aussie Stingers women’s water polo team
thumped New Zealand 14-6 in their opening game of the World League here
last night.But it was the second half head coach Greg McFadden was unhappy with as
the Stingers led 12-3 at halftime and failed to swim away with the game.
The Kiwis won the second half 3-2 and kept the game scoreless in the final quarter.
“I was disappointed at our lack of composure at crucial periods and not
being able to take them to the cleaners in the second half.
“It was the first game back (after April’s FINA World Championships
where they took out the silver medal) and there were a lot of young
players in the team.”
He was pleased with the opening half and is looking for a better performance in the match with China later tonight.
China beat Japan 8-6 in their first game of the Asia-Oceania division
from which the top two teams go directly to the Super Finals in
Montreal, Canada on July 4-8.
Results:
FINA World League, Tianjin, China, day 1:
Australia 14 (G Beadsworth 5, G Hadley 2, N Cuffe, J Moran, S Fraser, K
Gynther, E Douglass, K Finucane, S Mills) New Zealand 6, China 8 Japan
6.
Tianjin, China (May 29).—
Stingers to open World League campaign against New Zealand
Australia returns to the scene of its 2006
FINA World Cup triumph when it plays New Zealand on the opening day of
the women’s World League water polo here tonight.The Aussie Stingers, now ranked second in the world after their
silver-medal effort at the FINA World Championships in Melbourne in
April, will be using this year’s World League to blood new players and
give fringe players a further taste of international competition, said
head coach Greg McFadden.
“I’m not greatly concerned with the results as our Beijing Olympics
preparation starts on September 1 when we go into a residential
training camp at the AIS for three months.”
The Stingers are playing the Oceania-Asia division of the World League,
which they have won the past two years, and should move on as one of
the top two from the division to the eight-team Super Finals in
Montreal, Canada on July 4-8.
The Stingers will play China tomorrow and Japan on Thursday before the rotation starts again on Friday.
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