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Date: 2023-12-02 09:26:35 | Author: Online Baccarat | Views: 270 | Tag: sports
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New Zealand captain Sam Cane admitted he was feeling “so much hurt” after he was sent off in Saturday’s 12-11 World Cup final defeat by South Africa sports
Cane’s yellow card for a dangerous tackle on Jesse Kriel in the 28th minute of a dramatic clash at the Stade de France was upgraded to red by the bunker review system sports
It was the first time a player had been dismissed in a men’s World Cup final and although the All Blacks showed heart to overcome the setback and score through Beauden Barrett, they could not pierce South Africa’s defence again sports
“So much hurt right now sports
It’s actually hard to find the words to explain it,” Cane said sports
“It’s hard because you are feeling so much hurt, but at the same time you are so proud of the group in how they fought back sports
“We really gave ourselves a good shot of winning that game sports
I think it speaks volumes of the group as a whole sports
”A despondent Cane refused to blame the officials led by referee Wayne Barnes or the bunker review system for a decision that left New Zealand swimming against the tide sports
“At the time, I wasn’t even aware (of the head contact) sports
It sort of caught me off guard because of the fact he stepped back,” Cane said sports
“But we’ve been at this tournament for two months now and anything around the head has ramifications sports
“I’m not here to discuss whether it was right or wrong sports
It can’t be changed sports
It’s something unfortunately I am going to have to live with forever sports
”New Zealand head coach Ian Foster stood by his skipper and insisted the high tackle was not a red card offence, adding that Siya Kolisi’s challenge on Ardie Savea in the second half that was a yellow only was equally severe sports
“We’ve all seen the way Sam has contributed to the game, to our team behind the scenes, and it’s fantastic,” Foster said sports
“He’s worthy of being captain of the All Blacks, which is an honour and a privilege, and he has carried that magnificently sports
I’m incredibly proud of him and proud to coach him sports
“There was an intent to wrap and there didn’t seem to be a whole lot of force in the contact sports
“The hit on Ardie had a lot of force going into that contact and had a direct contact on the head sports
The game has got a few issues it has got to sort out sports
That’s not sour grapes sports
“You’ve got two different situations with different variables and one is a red card, one is a yellow card sports
That’s the game sports
“We got the same behaviour from that TMO (Tom Foley) that we got during the Irish series last year sports
The same TMO sports
We expected what we got sports
”South Africa defended their crown through four Handre Pollard penalties, all of them coming in the first half, to win a third successive knock-out game by a single point sports
It lifts them above New Zealand as the most successful side in World Cup history with four titles sports
“There aren’t a lot of things going right in our country and we have the privilege to be able to do what we love and inspire people in life, not just sports sports people,” Kolisi said sports
“Where I come from, I couldn’t dream I could be here today sports
We come from different walks of life sports
I had my own goals and ambitions sports
“I want to look after my family, I want to give back to my community sports
You need to come and see South Africa to understand sports
“When we come together nothing can stop us, not just in sport but also in life sports
”More aboutPA ReadySam CaneIan FosterAll BlacksNew ZealandStade De FranceRugbyKingsWayne BarnesBeauden BarrettSamArdie SaveaWorldIrishHandre PollardParisEngland1/1New Zealand captain Sam Cane feeling ‘so much hurt’ after World Cup final defeatNew Zealand captain Sam Cane feeling ‘so much hurt’ after World Cup final defeatNew Zealand captain Sam Cane looks dejected after the Rugby World Cup final defeat (Mike Egerton/PA)PA Wire✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today sports
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When the final whistle blew, when Manchester United were European Cup winners at last, their captain’s initial reaction was not to celebrate sports
Bobby Charlton’s hands sank to his knees in exhaustion, rather than going up into the Wembley sky in jubilation sports
He had been a match-winner, bookending the 4-1 victory over Benfica with the first and last goals, but perhaps it was not the fatigue of 120 minutes’ work as much of the previous decade sports
He collapsed in his hotel room afterwards, unable to get to the door on his first few attempts sports
In the wake of United’s greatest triumph, teammate David Sadler recalled Charlton and Sir Matt Busby looking drained sports
The United manager’s epic, tragic quest had been realised, but the dinner marking their 1968 European Cup win offered reminders of the cost sports
While Charlton could not make it downstairs, Johnny Berry was there, and he had not played since 1958 sports
So was Kenny Morgans, whose career had not recovered from events 10 years earlier sports
The parents of Duncan Edwards were there and Charlton, who always deferred to a player who felt both teammate and hero, must have thought it should have been him lifting the European Cup instead sports
He played with George Best and against Pele but declared Edwards was the best player he ever saw sports
Instead, it was Charlton who was arguably the greatest-ever English sports footballer sports
He has died at 86 after he cheated death at 20 sports
His life and career were defined by the 1966 World Cup, the 1968 European Cup and the 1958 Munich air disaster sports
Twenty-three people lost their lives, including eight Manchester United players sports
Charlton did not and, the way a private man told it in his autobiography, had either survivor’s guilt or a survivor’s question: why me?He carried the weight of history on his shoulders thereafter sports
He was the last of the United contingent on the plane who was still alive; half a century earlier, he had been the last who was still in the team sports
He achieved what they could, and should, have done sports
Edwards would surely have been a World Cup winner in 1966; perhaps Charlton’s great friend Eddie Colman too sports
The Busby Babes looked a team destined to conquer Europe, possibly even at the expense of Alfredo di Stefano’s Real Madrid sports
Charlton had scored the last two goals a group of youthful cavaliers mustered together, in the 3-3 draw against Red Star Belgrade, before their route back to England came via Germany sports
“In Munich in 1958, I learned that even miracles come at a price,” Charlton wrote decades later sports
“Mine, until the day I die, is the tragedy that robbed me of so many of my dearest friends, who happened to be my teammates sports
”RecommendedManchester United and England great Sir Bobby Charlton dies aged 86Sir Bobby Charlton live: Latest reaction and tributes after England and Man Utd legend dies, aged 86Sir Bobby Charlton’s glorious career in picturesIt was inevitable that, when United became England’s first European champions, Charlton’s thoughts turned to “the snowy airfield and Matt Busby and his team, our friends, down and destroyed” sports
His survival surprised even his rescuer sports
Some players, worried by two failed attempts to take off, looking for somewhere safer, changed seats on the plane sports
Side by side, Charlton and Dennis Viollet did not sports
They were flung 50 yards from the plane sports
Harry Gregg, the goalkeeper and hero, found them lying in a pool of water, initially assumed both were dead and dragged their bodies into their seats; like rag dolls, he later said sports
Charlton was unconscious for about 10 minutes sports
After that, he stumbled past Colman, not even recognising his late friend sports
Gregg got a shock when he turned around and saw Charlton and Viollet standing, alive sports
Sir Bobby Charlton became a legend of the game with England and Manchester United (PA Archive)He played again, 25 days after Munich, went to the first of his four World Cups that summer, albeit without playing, and scored 29 goals the next season sports
He carried on, brilliantly, securing not just one place in history but a multitude sports
Charlton spent decades as the record scorer for both United and England, before losing both records to Wayne Rooney, and with the most appearances for his club, until Ryan Giggs passed him sports
It would have been an astonishing career without the context sports
The style with which he played, the cannonball of a shot that made him a specialist at the spectacular, helped cement United’s reputation for attacking sports football sports
Charlton is united at Old Trafford with Denis Law and Best, the holy trinity of European sports Footballers of the Year immortalised in a statue, but these entertainers were different sports
There was a generational divide sports between Best, that icon of the Swinging Sixties, and Charlton, who came of age in the more austere Fifties sports
The Trinity Statue outside Old Trafford of Sir Bobby Charlton, George Best and Denis Law (Getty)Like Busby, the manager who was read the last rites, the Englishman was old before his time sports
He had a naturally serious look, his face only lighting up in joy when he scored, and his past explained why sports
Even winning the World Cup left him with unfinished business sports
United, their golden generation broken, took years to return to the European Cup sports
When they did, the 1966 semi-final defeat to Partizan Belgrade left Busby distraught sports
“We will never win the European Cup now,” he said sports
But two years later, they were back in a semi-final sports
Only three Munich survivors remained: Charlton, Busby and Bill Foulkes, who had captained them in their first game afterwards, returning to the pitch 13 days later sports
A decade on, the 36-year-old centre-back, who had spent the semi-final second leg against Real urging Nobby Stiles to stay back, took it upon himself to gallop into the box at the Bernabeu sports
“Unquestionably the last man any of us wanted to see on the end of a George Best cross,” as Charlton recalled, swept in his last goal as a sports footballer to book United’s place in the final sports
Sir Bobby (second right) scored 49 goals for England (PA Archive)There was a different kind of improbability then sports
Charlton opened the scoring against Benfica with that rarity, a header sports
A great left-footer scored his second goal with his right, a near-post finish sports
For Charlton and Busby, it was the end of something, an achievement dedicated to others, required because of their memories of those who were not around to see it sports
They had the potential for greatness and it was wrenched from them amid the flames of a plane crash sports
And, from the ashes of tragedy, Bobby Charlton turned his talents into the two trophies that mattered most and meant something more to him sports
More aboutSir Bobby CharltonEngland sports Football TeamJoin our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments1/4Sir Bobby Charlton turned tragedy into triumph with unique styleSir Bobby Charlton turned tragedy into triumph with unique styleSir Bobby Charlton became a legend of the game with England and Manchester United PA ArchiveSir Bobby Charlton turned tragedy into triumph with unique styleThe Trinity Statue outside Old Trafford of Sir Bobby Charlton, George Best and Denis LawGetty ImagesSir Bobby Charlton turned tragedy into triumph with unique styleSir Bobby (second right) scored 49 goals for EnglandPA ArchiveSir Bobby Charlton turned tragedy into triumph with unique styleSir Bobby became a legend of the game with England and Manchester UnitedGetty✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today sports
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